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Glendale: Groups to fight bill blockade

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  • Glendale: Groups to fight bill blockade

    Glendale News Press
    LATimes.com
    July 20 2004

    Groups to fight bill blockade
    Armenian Americans want Congressional Republicans to back off
    opposition to bill that would recognize the Armenian Genocide.


    By Josh Kleinbaum, News-Press


    DOWNTOWN GLENDALE - While more than 30,000 people marveled at classic
    cars and grooved to Dick Dale's guitar licks, Armen Carapetian did
    what he could to make sure Congress continued to acknowledge the
    Armenian Genocide.

    At Glendale's Cruise Night on Saturday, Carapetian and other members
    of the Armenian National Committee circulated petitions encouraging
    the Republican leadership in the U.S. House of Representatives to
    back off of its objection to recognition of the Armenian Genocide.
    The White House also opposes the bill.

    And so begins the fight to save the Schiff Amendment to a foreign aid
    bill.

    On Thursday, the House approved an amendment to the Foreign
    Operations Appropriations Bill sponsored by Rep. Adam Schiff
    (D-Glendale) that would prevent Turkey from using foreign aid funds
    to lobby against a House resolution that would recognize the Armenian
    Genocide from 1915 to 1923.

    The amendment is more symbolic than substantive. Foreign countries
    are not allowed to use such funds to lobby Congress for anything. But
    by proposing the vote in a late session Thursday, Schiff brought a
    genocide-related vote to the House floor for the first time.

    "Something should be done," said George Asaker, sitting outside at a
    Brand Boulevard coffee shop. "They recognized the Jewish [Holocaust],
    they should recognize the Armenian Genocide and anything else."

    >From 1915 to 1923, 1.5 million Armenians were killed by the Ottoman
    Turks. Turkish officials claim the number of deaths is overstated,
    and that the deaths were not the result of genocide. Because Turkey
    is a military ally, the United States has never acknowledged it as a
    genocide.

    Bush Administration officials immediately began fighting Schiff's
    amendment. The State Department, Speaker of the House J. Dennis
    Hastert (R-Ill.), House Majority Leader Tom DeLay (R-Texas) and House
    Majority Whip Roy Blunt (R-Mo.) all issued statements condemning
    Schiff's amendment and promising to remove the amendment from the
    final version of the bill. The Senate must approve its version of the
    bill, and then a joint Senate-House committee will piece together the
    final version.

    In Glendale, Carapetian and others began circulating their petitions,
    hoping enough support could persuade the Republicans to back off.
    They collected 1,500 in the Glendale area. Through the Armenian
    National Committee's website, another 10,000 people signed online
    petitions, which were faxed directly to the offices of Hastert, DeLay
    and Blunt.

    "The House leadership and the president, unfortunately, don't see
    this as an important issue," said Carapetian, the government
    relations director for the Armenian National Committee's Western
    Region. "They are willing to disrespect over a million of their own
    citizens and residents of this country for the sake of relations with
    a country that is really not a true ally of the U.S.

    "We've been getting a lot of phone calls. We've gathered hopefully
    hundred of signatures here. The public outcry has been focused on the
    congressional leaders."
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