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Rep. Kennedy Calls On Administration To Confront Turkey's Denial OfA

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  • Rep. Kennedy Calls On Administration To Confront Turkey's Denial OfA

    REP. KENNEDY CALLS ON ADMINISTRATION TO CONFRONT TURKEY'S DENIAL OF
    ARMENIAN GENOCIDE

    WASHINGTON, March 22 (Noyan Tapan). The Armenian Assembly of America
    praised Rep. Patrick Kennedy (D-RI), a member of the Congressional
    Caucus on Armenian Issues, for calling on the Bush Administration to
    openly deal with Turkey's continued policy of denial of the Armenian
    Genocide and to support a congressional resolution reaffirming this
    crime against humanity. Kennedy, in a statement issued last week
    before Congress, said the Administration's reluctance to address
    the issue stems from its refusal to alienate Turkey at a time when
    Washington is seeking to repair relations with Ankara. "This approach
    sends absolutely the wrong signal to Turkey and to the rest of the
    world," Kennedy stated. "As we promote relations based upon shared
    values, the United States must never forget the essential value of
    facing history directly." Kennedy also added that the present day
    Turkish government must stop its shameful policy of denial of the
    Armenian Genocide. "The Turkish government spends millions of dollars
    annually to lobby other governments to advance its revisionist cause,
    claiming that the subject is sensitive and that acknowledgement would
    undermine relations with Turkey," Kennedy said. Last week, Turkish
    Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan renewed calls for further study
    of the Armenian Genocide, telling Reuters "If there is a need for
    a political settling of accounts with history after such a study,
    we, the government and the opposition, are ready to do just that."
    Assembly leaders, for their part, joined Armenia's Foreign Minister
    Vartan Oskanian in calling the study pointless given the scholarly
    community's publicly stated conclusions confirming the events as
    Genocide. "Periodic calls by various Turkish administrations for
    historical debate simply delay the process of reconciling the truth,"
    Oskanian recently said in a speech before the U.N. Commission on
    Human Rights. "The facts are clear. The historical record is clear.
    We know well what happened to our forebears." The Assembly in recent
    weeks has pointed to such public affirmations, as well as those of
    leading U.S. public officials such as Ambassador to Armenia John
    Evans, as part of its campaign to urge President Bush to recognize
    the Armenian Genocide in his statement of remembrance next month.
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