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Ryde City Council Unanimously Passes Motion Marking the 90th

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  • Ryde City Council Unanimously Passes Motion Marking the 90th

    Armenian National Committee of Australia Inc.
    The Peak Public Affairs Committee of the Armenian-Australian Community
    259 Penshurst Street, P.O. Box 768, Willoughby NSW 2068
    Tel: (02) 9419 8264 Fax: (02) 9411 8898
    Email:[email protected]


    PRESS RELEASE 12 April 2005
    Contact: Dr Tro Kortian
    (mob) 0412 197364



    Ryde City Council unanimously passes Motion marking
    90th Anniversary of Armenian Genocide



    SYDNEY On April 24 of this year, on the eve of the 90th anniversary of
    the ANZAC landings, Armenians the world over, including the many
    thousands of Armenian-Australians living in Sydney, will commemorate
    the 90th anniversary of the Armenian genocide. They will recall that,
    in 1915, the Ottoman Empire set in motion a plan to exterminate the
    entire Christian Armenian population living on their ancestral lands
    of Eastern Anatolia, part of what is today the Republic of
    Turkey. This state-sponsored program resulted in the brutal
    extermination of some 1.5 million Armenian men, women and children.


    This evening Ryde City Council unanimously passed the following Motion
    commemorating the Armenian Genocide, moved by Clr Yedelian, the first
    Australian Councillor of Armenian ancestry:



    That this Council:

    (1) acknowledges this year as marking the occasion of the 90th
    anniversary commemoration of the Genocide of the Armenians
    perpetrated by the then Ottoman Government between the years
    1915-1922;

    (2) joins with the Armenian community of Ryde in honouring the memory
    of the 1.5 million men, women and children who died in the
    first genocide of the twentieth century;

    (3) recognises 24 April every year as a day of remembrance of the
    Armenian genocide;

    (4) condemns the genocide of the Armenians and all other acts of>
    genocide committed as the ultimate act of racial, religious and
    cultural intolerance;

    (5) calls on the Commonwealth Government to officially condemn:

    (i) the genocide of the Armenians

    (ii) any attempt to deny such crimes against humanity.



    In stark contrast to post-Nazi Germany which has acknowledged and
    sought to atone for the crimes of the Nazi regime, successive Turkish
    governments have refused to come to terms with their own history.
    Instead they have maintained a morally bankrupt campaign of genocide
    denial, and have benefited from all the fruits of that crime with
    impunity. Modern day Turkey today, which is seeking admission into
    the European Union, has recently legislated that it is a crime to
    state that there was a genocide of the Armenians during World War I.



    In her statement in support of the Motion, Ms Taline Soghomonian of
    the Armenian National Committee of Australia (`ANCA') said;- `There is
    perhaps no more poignant evidence of the consequences of such
    impunity, and the importance of commemorative motions such as the one
    before this Council tonight, than the chilling statement by Hitler in
    1939 as he embarked on his genocidal deeds in Europe during World War
    II ` "Who remembers now the destruction of the Armenians?"' (The full
    statement is attached below).



    In a resounding, albeit belated, response to this cynical statement by
    Hitler, a growing number of countries around the world and
    multinational organisations, such as the European Parliament, the
    Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe, the French and
    Canadian Parliaments and the NSW Parliament, have commemorated and
    reaffirmed the historical fact of the Armenian Genocide.



    Dr Tro Kortian, President of the ANCA said `It is fitting tonight that
    a city such as Ryde, which has such a large and growing constituency
    of Armenian-Australians, will add its voice to this call and help to
    ensure that the Armenian Genocide is never allowed to be denied or
    forgotten. This is the highest tribute we can pay to the victims of
    the Armenian Genocide and all other acts of genocide. I commend
    Councillor Yedelian for moving this Motion and all the Ryde City
    Councillors who have supported its passage. We trust that the Prime
    Minister, who has his own electorate office in the City of Ryde, takes
    heed of the call made to the Federal Parliament in that Motion.



    Statement by the

    Armenian National Committee of Australia, Inc





    Dear Mayor and Councillors



    As a resident of the City of Ryde, and as a member of the leading
    Armenian-Australian grass-roots public affairs organisation, the
    Armenian National Committee of Australia, I greatly appreciate this
    opportunity to speak in support of this important Motion.



    On April 24 of this year, on the eve of the 90th anniversary of the
    ANZAC landings, Armenians the world over, including the many thousands
    of Armenian-Australians living in the City of Ryde, will commemorate
    the 90th anniversary of the Armenian genocide. They will recall that,
    in 1915, the Ottoman Empire set in motion a plan to exterminate the
    entire Christian Armenian population living on their ancestral lands
    of Eastern Anatolia, part of what is today the Republic of
    Turkey. This state-sponsored program resulted in the brutal
    extermination of some 1.5 million Armenian men, women and children.

    Using the cover of the First World War, the ultra-nationalist Young
    Turk regime that ruled the Ottoman Empire unleashed a campaign to
    uproot and destroy the Armenian population which stood in the way of
    their plans to set up a `Pan-Turkic' empire. Observers and the press
    throughout the world, including here in Australia, were shocked at the
    horrific stories of entire towns, villages and cities emptied of their
    Armenian inhabitants. Henry Morgenthau, the American ambassador to
    Turkey at the time, termed the Turkish crime against the Armenians
    "race murder." It was the destruction of an entire ancient
    civilisation.



    In addition to the eye-witness testimonies of the genocide survivors
    and other witnesses, the national archives of the United States of
    America as well as all major European states, whether friend or foe of
    the then Ottoman Empire during World War I, hold substantial documents
    attesting to this crime against humanity.


    The Polish-Jewish legal scholar, Raphael Lemkin, who coined the term
    `genocide' and was instrumental in establishing the UN Convention on
    the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide, cited the
    Armenian Genocide together with the Jewish Holocaust as prototypes of
    this newly defined crime against humanity.



    Despite this overwhelming and irrefutable evidence, and in stark
    contrast to post-Nazi Germany which has acknowledged and sought to
    atone for the crimes of the Nazi regime, successive Turkish
    governments have refused to come to terms with their own history.
    Instead they have maintained a morally bankrupt campaign of genocide
    denial, and have benefited from all the fruits of that crime with
    impunity.



    Modern day Turkey today, which is seeking admission into the European
    Union, has recently legislated that it is a crime to state that there
    was a genocide of the Armenians during World War I. Those brave
    Turkish citizens who have dared to speak out have faced persecution,
    threats and imprisonment. In recent months, the admission in a press
    interview by the famous Turkish writer Orhan Parmuk that 1 million
    Armenians had in fact been killed, led to disturbing reactions such as
    attacks on the writer and calls by government officials for the mass
    burning of his books.



    As Baroness Caroline Cox, Deputy Speaker of the House of Lords stated
    in a speech in the House of Lords in 1999 ` If nations are allowed to
    commit genocide with impunity, to hide their guilt in a camouflage of
    lies and denials, there is a real danger that other brutal regimes
    will be encouraged to attempt genocides. Unless we speak today of the
    Armenian genocide and unless the Government recognises this historical
    fact, we shall leave this century of unprecedented genocides with this
    blot on our consciences."



    There is perhaps no more poignant evidence of the consequences of such
    impunity, and the importance of commemorative motions such as the one
    before this Council tonight, than the chilling statement by Hitler in
    1939 as he embarked on his genocidal deeds in Europe during World War
    II ` "Who remembers now the destruction of the Armenians?"



    In a resounding, albeit belated, response to this cynical statement by
    Hitler, a growing number of countries around the world and
    multinational organisations, such as the European Parliament and the
    Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe, have commemorated and
    reaffirmed the historical fact of the Armenian Genocide.



    I am proud to say that the New South Wales Parliament in 1997 joined
    its voice to this international chorus by multinational, national,
    state or provincial and municipal legislative bodies. It is fitting
    tonight that a city such as Ryde, which has such a large and growing
    constituency of Armenian-Australians, will add its voice to this call
    and help to ensure that the Armenian Genocide is never allowed to be
    denied or forgotten. This is the highest tribute we can pay to the
    victims of the Armenian Genocide and all other acts of genocide.



    I commend Councillor Yedelian for moving this Motion and all the
    Councillors who have supported its passage. Finally, we trust that the
    Prime Minister, who has his own electorate office in the City of Ryde,
    takes heed of the call made to the Federal Parliament in that Motion.



    Thank you.
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