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  • Members Of U.S. Congress Speak Out Against Turkish GovernmentCrackdo

    MEMBERS OF U.S. CONGRESS SPEAK OUT AGAINST TURKISH GOVERNMENT CRACKDOWN ON ARMENIAN GENOCIDE CONFERENCE

    YEREVAN, MAY 31. ARMINFO. "The sad reality, is that when it comes to
    facing the judgment of history about the Armenian genocide, Turkey,
    rather than acknowledging the truth, has instead chosen to trample on
    the rights of its citizens," said U.S. Congress Rep. Pallone. Members
    of Congress this week expressed outrage and disappointment at the
    Turkish Government's recent decision to quash a planned academic
    conference on the Armenian Genocide, reported the Armenian National
    Committee of America (ANCA).

    The event, organized by scholars from Turkey's Bilgi, Bogazici
    and Sabanci Universities, was scheduled to take place May 25-27th
    at Bosphorus University. In remarks of the House floor yesterday,
    Congressional Armenian Caucus Co-Chair Frank Pallone (D-NJ) commented
    that the government's forced cancellation of the conference "further
    affirms the speculation that the image that the Turkish Government has
    attempted to create for itself is nothing more than a desperate attempt
    to create a facade. Contrary to what Turkish Prime Minister Erdogan
    and other Turkish officials would have us believe, the Government of
    Turkey is not democratic, is not committed to creating a democracy,
    is not making an effort to create better relations with Armenia and
    is definitely not ready to join the European Union."

    Rep. Pallone went on to explain that the U.S. "cannot sit by and
    allow any nation that we consider an ally and a nation that is
    desperately seeking admission into the European Union to behave in
    such a manner. To bring this development into perspective, consider
    that according to current law in Turkey, dozens of U.S. Senators and
    hundreds of Congressmen would be punished simply for having voted for
    Armenian genocide resolutions, spoken about the lessons of this crime
    against humanity or commemorated the victims of the atrocity. So,
    too, would the American academic establishment, human rights groups,
    the mainstream media and just about everyone else aside from the
    Turkish Embassy and its paid lobbyists here in Washington, D.C."

    Rep. George Radanovich (R-CA), who spearheaded a successful effort
    in 1996 to cut foreign aid to Turkey based on their ongoing denial
    of the Armenian Genocide, stated: "Turkish government pressure on
    historians from Bilgi, Bogazici and Sabanci Universities to cancel the
    Armenian Genocide conference is yet another indication of the Turkish
    government's repression of freedom of speech and lack of respect
    for academic freedom. The action exposes as a hollow gesture Prime
    Minister Erdogan's call for a dialogue between Turkish and Armenian
    historians. The Turkish government's labeling of Turkish academics
    as 'traitors' simply for discussing the Genocide amongst themselves
    underscores the need for those of us here, in the United States,
    to call on Ankara to end its campaign of genocide denial."

    Urging Turkey to end its ongoing denial of the Armenian Genocide,
    Michigan Republican Thaddeus McCotter argued, "Only honesty can begin
    to ease the ache of this evil perpetrated upon the Armenian people,
    and to further guard against a recrudescence of genocide anywhere
    in our world. Thus, any delay in acknowledging and apologizing for
    their nation's abhorrent historical crime only serves to embolden
    other proponents of genocide, and to implicate this generation of
    Turks in the sins of the past."

    The Conference, titled "Ottoman Armenians During the Decline of the
    Empire: Issues of Scientific Responsibility and Democracy," was jointly
    organized by the Comparative Literature Department of Bilgi University,
    the History Department of Bogazici University and the History Program
    at Sabanci University. Originally set to take place May 25th-27th at
    Bosphorus University, the schedule was to include over 30 papers by
    Turkish scholars from Turkey and abroad.

    In the days leading up to the conference, Turkish Government officials
    spoke stridently against the conference and its organizers. Turkish
    Justice Minister Cemil Cicek, in a speech before the Turkish Parliament
    on Tuesday, went so far as to accuse the academics of "treason." The
    Minister described the conference as a "a stab in the back to the
    Turkish nation." Cicek expressed regret that, as Justice Minister,
    he could not personally prosecute the organizers and participants.

    The government crackdown on the conference is the most recent chapter
    in the Turkish government's 90-year campaign of genocide denial. This
    effort has intensified in recent years. In 2003, Education Minister
    Hikmet Cetin issued a decree making student participation in a
    nation-wide essay contest denying the Armenian Genocide compulsory.
    The most recent revisions to the Turkish Penal Code criminalize
    references to the Armenian Genocide and the removal of troops from
    Turkish occupied northern Cyprus.
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