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ANCA Warns Armenian American Groups about TARC/ICTJ Threat to Armeni

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  • ANCA Warns Armenian American Groups about TARC/ICTJ Threat to Armeni

    Armenian National Committee of America
    888 17th St., NW, Suite 904
    Washington, DC 20006
    Tel: (202) 775-1918
    Fax: (202) 775-5648
    E-mail: [email protected]
    Internet: www.anca.org

    PRESS RELEASE
    March 30, 2005
    Contact: Elizabeth S. Chouldjian
    Tel: (202) 775-1918

    ANCA WARNS ARMENIAN AMERICAN COMMUNITY GROUPS
    ABOUT TARC/ICTJ THREAT TO THE ARMENIAN CAUSE

    WASHINGTON, DC - Responding to the Turkish government's
    increasingly aggressive campaign to deny justice for the Armenian
    Genocide, the Armenian National Committee of America (ANCA) this
    week circulated a letter warning all the leading Armenian American
    organizations about the "quiet, but profoundly dangerous, campaign
    by Turkey aimed at the very heart of our community's struggle to
    secure full recognition, proper commemoration, and a just
    resolution of the Armenian Genocide."

    The full text of the two-page March 28th letter from ANCA Chairman
    Ken Hachikian is provided below.

    -------------------------------------------------------------------

    M E M O

    To: Armenian American Organizations
    From: Ken Hachikian, Chairman
    Date: March 28, 2005
    Re: TARC/ICTJ Report

    I would like to convey to you our deep concern about a quiet, but
    profoundly dangerous, campaign by Turkey aimed at the very heart of
    our community's struggle to secure full recognition, proper
    commemoration, and a just resolution of the Armenian Genocide.

    Successive U.S. administrations have sought to appease Turkey's
    sensitivities on this issue through the use of evasive wording each
    April 24th and opposition to Congressional legislation on the first
    genocide of modern history. We have, however, succeeded in
    building Congressional opposition to Turkey's policy of denial,
    kept this issue on the U.S. legislative agenda, and, particularly
    in light of the recent strains in U.S.-Turkish relations,
    approached the critical mass necessary to overcome the opposition
    to proper U.S. recognition of the Armenian Genocide. It is exactly
    this momentum that is now being attacked by Turkey and its allies
    in the Administration.

    The Turkish government's motivation in this matter is clear.
    Recognizing the failure of its campaign of genocide denial, Ankara
    has fallen back to exploring a position of acknowledgment without
    consequences. These efforts enjoy the support of well-placed State
    Department and Pentagon officials - adherents of outdated Cold War-
    era thinking about the U.S.-Turkey relationship. These American
    and Turkish officials have sought to create the false impression of
    Armenian backing for this patently anti-Armenian undertaking by
    securing the nominal support of a handful of Armenians. In this
    way, they seek to disguise the true nature of their initiative and
    to add a measure of undeserved credibility to a campaign crafted
    specifically to deny justice to the Armenian people.

    The main vehicle for the Turkish government's effort toward this
    end has been the discredited Turkish Armenian Reconciliation
    Commission (TARC), a group substantially funded by the State
    Department and rejected by Armenians worldwide. A study
    commissioned several years ago by TARC is being used as an
    instrument of this current "genocide without justice" campaign. It
    should be noted that, although a New York-based group called the
    International Center for Transitional Justice (ICTJ) apparently
    helped TARC identify an author for this study, the report was - at
    ICTJ's own admission - written entirely independently of the ICTJ.
    Despite repeated requests for transparency, neither the ICTJ, nor
    anyone affiliated with TARC has, so far, revealed the author or
    authors.

    This paper confirms the obvious: the systematic and deliberate
    annihilation of 1.5 million Armenians is indeed a case of genocide
    under the U.N. Genocide Convention. The anonymous author(s),
    however, go on to find that the Armenian nation has no recourse
    under the Convention. Although the report specifically states that
    its scope is limited to the Genocide Convention alone and that it
    does not endeavor to determine whether other international laws
    were violated, it summarily rejects the application of the
    Convention - the most comprehensive statutory expression of the
    international community's commitment to preventing and punishing
    the crime of genocide - using poor documentation and analysis,
    thereby substantially and materially prejudicing the ability of
    Armenians to seek redress. There are many distinguished scholars,
    including Dr. Alfred de Zayas, the former Secretary of the United
    Nations Human Rights Committee, who disagree with this particular
    conclusion and who argue persuasively that the Genocide Convention
    is legally applicable to the Armenian Genocide.

    The Turkish government and its surrogates are today aggressively
    using this document to seek to escape responsibility for the
    Armenian Genocide. Taking advantage of the veneer provided by the
    token Armenian participation in TARC, they are seeking to create
    the false impression that a meaningful segment of the Armenian
    American community accepts the concept that Turkey should be
    allowed to remain unaccountable for the genocide of the Armenians.
    Simply put - the sponsors of TARC seek to manipulate elements of
    the Armenian community into forfeiting all our rights and
    compromising the future of our nation based on nothing more than a
    cursory four-page analysis in a single, anonymously written,
    seventeen-page report commissioned by a discredited Turkish
    government-linked organization.

    As the collective leaders of the Armenian American community, we,
    of course, understand that the formula of "recognition without
    consequences" of the Armenian Genocide lacks any moral or legal
    basis. The present day Republic of Turkey is heir to the Ottoman
    Empire, the beneficiary of the fruits of genocide, the architect of
    an eight-decade long campaign of denial aimed at evading
    accountability, and the entity currently eradicating our remaining
    community and cultural presence in Turkey. As such, Turkey bears
    full responsibility to make reparations and restitution to the
    Armenian nation for the massacres, expropriation of property, and
    the exile - for nearly a century - of our people from our ancestral
    homeland of more than three thousand years.

    The stakes could not be higher. We must, as a community, clearly
    recognize the dangers presented by this threat, decisively reject
    efforts to deny our rights, and recommit ourselves to the necessary
    work of securing justice for our nation and people.
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