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Rep. Langevin Says It's "Critically Important" For U.S. To Recognize

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  • Rep. Langevin Says It's "Critically Important" For U.S. To Recognize

    REP. LANGEVIN SAYS IT'S "CRITICALLY IMPORTANT" FOR U.S. TO RECOGNIZE ARMENIAN GENOCIDE

    WASHINGTON, MARCH 21, NOYAN TAPAN. Representative James Langevin
    (D-RI), a well-known champion of Armenian issues, is urging President
    Bush to follow the example of other leading U.S. public officials
    and formally recognize the Armenian Genocide in his statement of
    remembrance next month, the Armenian Assembly of America reported.
    Langevin, in a statement issued on March 17 to Congress, urged Bush
    to properly label the atrocities as U.S. Ambassador to Armenia John
    Evans so candidly did during his meetings with Armenian-Americans
    throughout the U.S. last month. During those public exchanges,
    Evans declared that "the Armenian Genocide was the first genocide of
    the twentieth century." "By employing this term, the Ambassador is
    building on previously made statements by Presidents Regan and Bush,
    as well as the repeated declarations of numerous world-renowned
    scholars," Langevin said. "In effect, Evans has done nothing more
    than succinctly name the conclusions enunciated by those before him."
    Langevin, a member of the Congressional Caucus on Armenian Issues,
    noted that Evans' remarks correspond with the signed statements of over
    120 renowned Holocaust and Genocide scholars on the "incontestable
    fact of the Armenian Genocide," and that of the International Center
    for Transitional Justice on the use of the term Armenian Genocide,
    which states that: "The Events, viewed collectively, can thus be said
    to include all of the elements of the crime of genocide as defined in
    the Convention, and legal scholars as well as historians, politicians,
    journalists and other people would be justified in continuing to so
    describe them." Langevin also said that the ability of Armenians
    to survive in the face of repression is a testament to their will
    to survive. "Therefore, it is critically important that the United
    States speak with one voice in condemning the horrors committed
    against the Armenians," he concluded. In other news, Langevin this
    week signed his support to a congressional letter to President Bush,
    asking that he acknowledge this crime against humanity. The letter,
    initiated by Armenian Caucus Co-Chairmen Joe Knollenberg (R-MI) and
    Frank Pallone, Jr. (D-NJ), currently has the backing of 75 Members
    of the House of Representatives.
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