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Congressional Record: RECOGNIZING THE ARMENIAN GENOCIDE

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  • Congressional Record: RECOGNIZING THE ARMENIAN GENOCIDE

    Congressional Record: March 17, 2005
    >>From the Congressional Record Online via GPO Access [wais.access.gpo.gov]


    RECOGNIZING THE ARMENIAN GENOCIDE

    ______


    HON. JAMES R. LANGEVIN

    of rhode island

    in the house of representatives

    Wednesday, March 16, 2005

    Mr. LANGEVIN. Mr. Speaker, I rise today to commend U.S. Ambassador to
    Armenia John Evans for properly labeling the atrocities committed by
    the Ottoman Empire against the Armenians as genocide and to urge the
    President to follow his example and accurately characterize this crime
    against humanity in his commemorative statement next month.
    Ambassador Evans recently completed his first U.S. visit to major
    Armenian-American communities to share his initial impressions of
    Armenia and our programs there. During his public exchanges with
    Armenian-American communities throughout the United States late last
    month, Ambassador Evans declared that ``the Armenian Genocide was the
    first genocide of the twentieth century.''
    By employing this term, the Ambassador is building on previous
    statements by Presidents Reagan and Bush, as well as the repeated
    declarations of numerous world-renowned scholars. In effect, Evans has
    done nothing more than succinctly name the conclusions enunciated by
    those before him.
    In 1981, President Reagan issued a presidential proclamation that
    said in part: ``like the genocide of the Armenians before it, and the
    genocide of the Cambodians which followed it--and like too many other
    persecutions of too many other people--the lessons of the Holocaust
    must never be forgotten . . .'' President Bush, himself, has invoked
    the textbook definition of genocide in his preceding April 24th
    statements by using the expressions ``annihilation'' and ``forced exile
    and murder'' to characterize this example of man's inhumanity to man.
    Furthermore, Evans' remarks correspond with the signed statement in
    2000 by 126 Genocide and Holocaust scholars affirming that the World
    War I Armenian Genocide is an incontestable historical fact and
    accordingly urging the governments of Western democracies to likewise
    recognize it as such. The petitioners, among whom is Nobel Laureate for
    Peace Elie Wiesel, also asked the Western Democracies to urge the
    Government and Parliament of Turkey to finally come to terms with a
    dark chapter of Ottoman-Turkish history and to recognize the Armenian
    Genocide.
    The Ambassador's declarations also conform to the summary conclusions
    of the International Center for Transitional Justice (ICTJ) when it
    facilitated an independent legal study on the applicability of the 1948
    Genocide Convention to events that occurred during the early twentieth
    century. The ICTJ report stated 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.''
    The Armenian people's ability to survive in the face of the
    repression carried out against them stands as a monument to their
    endurance and will to live. Therefore, it is critically important that
    the United States speak with one voice in condemning the horrors
    committed against the Armenians. Only by working to preserve the truth
    about the Armenian Genocide can we hope to spare future generations
    from the horrors of the past.
    In conclusion, Mr. Speaker, I join the Armenian Caucus Co-Chairs,
    Representatives Frank Pallone and Joe Knollenberg, in applauding the
    statements of Ambassador Evans and others, and in urging the President
    to reaffirm the U.S. record on the Armenian Genocide.

    ____________________
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