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California lawmakers hope to raise awareness about Armenian genocide

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  • California lawmakers hope to raise awareness about Armenian genocide

    California lawmakers hope to raise awareness about Armenian genocide

    Scripps Howard News Service
    May 27, 2004, Thursday

    SACRAMENTO, Calif. -- When Adolf Hitler was planning his 1939 invasion
    of Poland and the extermination of Jews, he wasn't worried about the
    consequences of his brutality.

    "Who, after all, speaks today of the annihilation of the Armenians?"
    he asked.

    Nearly a century later, the effort to raise awareness about the 1915
    genocide of 1.5 million Armenians reached the California state Senate
    on Wednesday. California is home to hundreds of thousands of people
    with Armenian ancestry.

    "I grew up knowing of that experience," said Sen. Chuck Poochigian,
    R-Fresno, whose great-grandparents were murdered in the Turkish-led
    genocide.

    By a vote of 37-0, the Senate agreed with Poochigian to exempt from
    taxes any insurance settlement payments to heirs and beneficiaries
    of Armenian genocide victims.

    The measure puts descendants of the Ottoman Empire-era atrocities
    on par with those from the Holocaust, German labor camps and
    Japanese-American internment camps. Those survivors and heirs also
    don't pay taxes on reparations or insurance payments.

    In January, New York Life Insurance Co. reached a $20 million
    settlement with heirs and beneficiaries of about 2,400 Armenian
    genocide victims who took out policies between 1875 and 1915.

    Armenian groups say policy documents were lost and destroyed during
    the massacre. This year's measure follows a 2000 bill by Poochigian
    that extended the statute of limitations for lawsuits to be filed
    against insurance carriers for unpaid claims.

    The state expects a loss of $500,000 to $700,000 in tax revenue because
    of the bill. But Poochigian said the bill is bigger than the modest
    tax relief it provides.

    "It's a matter of simple justice that they get these payments,"
    he said.

    The bill heads to the Assembly, where it will receive strong -
    and emotional - backing by Assemblyman Greg Aghazarian, R-Stockton,
    whose grandparents fled the region in 1915, eventually settling in
    California in the 1950s.

    "It's important to keep the awareness of this high," he said.

    Turkey, a U.S. ally, rejects the genocide claim and maintains that
    Armenians were killed in civil unrest during the collapse of the
    Ottoman Empire.

    (Distributed by Scripps-McClatchy Western Service,
    http://www.shns.com.)
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