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AAA: Pan-Armenian Genocide Resolution Passes House Int. Rel. Comte.

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  • AAA: Pan-Armenian Genocide Resolution Passes House Int. Rel. Comte.

    Armenian Assembly of America
    1140 19th Street, NW, Suite 600
    Washington, DC 20036
    Phone: 202-393-3434
    Fax: 202-638-4904
    Email: [email protected]
    Web: www.armenianassembly.org

    PRESS RELEASE
    September 15, 2005
    CONTACT: Christine Kojoian
    Email: [email protected]


    PAN-ARMENIAN GENOCIDE RESOLUTION PASSES HOUSE INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS COMMITTEE

    Lawmakers Vote 40 to 7 to Approve H. Res. 316

    Washington, DC - The pan-Armenian genocide resolution took a major
    step forward today, winning bipartisan support in the influential
    House International Relations Committee. H. Res. 316, which is
    currently backed by 140 Members, won passage thanks in part to
    Committee Chairman Rep. Henry Hyde (R-IL) and the bill's principal
    sponsors Reps. George Radanovich (R-CA), Adam Schiff (D-CA), and
    Armenian Caucus Co-Chairs Joe Knollenberg(R-MI) and Frank Pallone,
    Jr. (D-NJ).

    "The argument has been made that these resolutions, if adopted, will
    be harmful to [the] interests [of the United States] by undermining
    our relationship with Turkey, which all acknowledge to be one of our
    key allies.....Denial of that fact cannot be justified on the basis of
    expediency or fear that speaking the truth will do us harm," said
    Hyde.

    "The Assembly extends its appreciation to Chairman Hyde and members of
    the Committee for properly recognizing the first genocide of the
    twentieth century and affirming the U.S. record," Assembly Board of
    Trustees Chairman Hirair Hovnanian said following the vote. "This
    recognition, which is especially poignant during this 90th
    commemorative year, will go a long way in preventing future tragedies
    and give meaning to the phrase 'Never Again.'"

    "We also thank the original sponsors of H. Res. 316 who worked long
    and hard in helping secure today's victory," Hovnanian added.

    Committee Members also voted today to approve, H. Con. Res. 195, a
    bill that would reaffirm the Armenian Genocide. The measure, which
    passed 35 to 11, was introduced by Schiff in June.

    During the markup Schiff said that there is no discrepancy that the
    Armenian experience constituted genocide and no evidence that
    U.S.-Turkish relations would be irreparably harmed by the adoption of
    these resolutions.

    Congressman Tom Lantos (D-CA), the Committee's Ranking Member,
    expressed his strong concern over Ankara's refusal in 2003 to provide
    U.S. troops a northern front in the war against Iraq and in a
    reversal, changed his previous opposition to one of support.

    Armenian Caucus Member Rep. Christopher Smith (R-NJ) said, "Friends
    don't let friends commit human rights abuses or crimes against
    humanity."

    Rep. Betty McCollum (D-MN), also a member of the Caucus, stressed the
    importance of acknowledging history and the fact that the government
    of the Ottoman Empire attacked its own citizens.

    H. Res. 316, which was introduced on June 14, calls upon the President
    to "ensure that the foreign policy of the United States reflects
    appropriate understanding" of the "Armenian Genocide" and to
    "accurately characterize the systematic and deliberate annihilation of
    1,500,000 Armenians as genocide" in the President's annual message.

    Passage of this legislation would reaffirm the U.S. historical record
    which includes thousands of pages documenting the premeditated
    extermination of the Armenian people. American intervention prevented
    the full realization of Ottoman Turkey's genocidal plan and
    U.S. humanitarian assistance was extended to those who survived.

    Additionally, today's vote reiterates the same message put forth by
    Presidents Ronald Reagan and George W. Bush. In 1981, for example,
    Reagan issues 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 also carefully set forth the
    textbook definition of the crime of genocide as it applies to
    Armenians in his successive April 24th statements of remembrance.

    H. Res. 316 is similar to the version that nearly passed the House of
    Representatives in 2000. The previous resolution, which had the
    support of 143 cosponsors, passed the House International Relations
    Committee by a vote of 24 to 11. It was later scheduled for a vote on
    the House floor, but withdrawn at the last minute due to an
    intervention by President Clinton to Speaker Dennis Hastert (R-IL)
    which prevented the final affirmative vote.

    The Turkish government has vigorously opposed the resolutions by
    calling upon its hired lobbyists, the Administration and Members of
    Congress to deny that the genocide occurred. A recent New York Times
    editorial entitled "The Turkish Identity" also highlights Turkey's
    state-sponsored denial efforts which include the recent prosecution of
    novelist Orhan Pamuk for openly discussing the Armenian
    Genocide. Pamuk has been charged with "public denigration" of the
    Turkish identity and face a possible three-year jail sentence.

    "That court action [against Pamuk] is as wrong as it is incredible,"
    said Armenian Caucus Member Rep. Ed Royce (R-CA). Congressman Dana
    Rohrabacher added, "This is not a good trend and we should never
    accept it. We should be on the side of that writer and be on the side
    of truth."

    Board of Directors Chairman Anthony Barsamian praised the Assembly's
    network of grassroots activists and the community at large for
    reaching out to lawmakers on Capitol Hill and helping secure
    bi-partisan support for H. Res. 316.

    "Armenian-Americans celebrate this victory, not only for our public
    advocacy efforts, but for those who dare to speak the truth," said
    Barsamian. "Today's success demonstrates that engaging our grassroots
    in the democratic process prevails over the millions spent by Turkey's
    hired lobbyists to influence decision makers. It is our hope that
    Speaker Hastert will now follow the example of President Reagan, and
    more recently, U.S. Ambassador to Armenia John Evans, and formally and
    irrevocably reaffirm the Armenian Genocide."

    The next step in the legislative process is to work with the sponsors
    to secure passage in the full House.

    The Armenian Assembly of America is the largest Washington-based
    nationwide organization promoting public understanding and awareness
    of Armenian issues. It is a 501(c)(3) tax-exempt membership
    organization.

    NR#2005-090

    Editor's Note: Attached is the full text of Chairman Henry Hyde's
    statement.

    I have waited to speak until the end of the members' statements
    because I wanted to listen carefully to what they had to say. I have
    thought long and hard about these resolutions and have decided to vote
    in favor. And I want to explain why.

    The overriding purpose in all of my work in Congress has been to
    promote the interests of the United States. The argument has been that
    these resolutions, if adopted, will be harmful to those interests by
    undermining our relationship with Turkey, which all acknowledge to be
    one of our key allies. That is a serious charge indeed and worthy of
    serious attention. I very much believe that the relationship is of
    great importance to U.S. and also to the possibility of peace and
    stability in the volatile regions that Turkey borders. But I do not
    believe that these resolutions will harm that relationship.

    They merely recognize the fact that the authorities of the Ottoman
    Empire deliberately slaughtered the majority of the Armenian community
    in that empire. Denial of that fact cannot be justified on the basis
    of expediency or fear that speaking the truth will do us harm.

    Having said this, I want to strongly emphasize that neither the
    Republic of Turkey nor the Turkish people bear responsibility for the
    crimes that undoubtedly took place. Too often that inaccurate and even
    slanderous association is made, either by accident or design, and we
    must be careful not to give it credence.

    I also want to note and commend the Turkish government's recent
    initiatives to address this issue more forthrightly than has been the
    practice in the past. These are encouraging signs, and I hope they are
    but the first in a series of mutual steps.

    It is commonly supposed that we must choose between recognizing the
    fact of the massacres and supporting our relationship with Turkey,
    that somehow these things are opposed to one another. I believe that
    not only is that view profoundly incorrect but is actually harmful to
    all parties.

    The deep animosity between Turkey and Armenia is destructive to the
    interests of both countries, as well as to those of the United States,
    for they make lasting peace and stability in the Caucasus virtually
    impossible.

    The many barriers between them tower so mightily that they are
    dispiriting to all but the most resolute.

    However, this particular issue is of such profound importance and
    emotional resonance to both countries that I do not believe that
    either alone can take the steps needed to overcome its impregnable
    walls. But to freeze attention on the past is to be imprisoned by it
    and at the enormous cost of sacrificing the future.

    Therefore, I believe it is in the interests of the United States and
    of Turkey and Armenia both that we take the lead in dealing with this
    paralyzing legacy. And we must start with a recognition of the
    truth. For there is no possibility that this problem can ever be
    overcome if we seek to ground any solution on silence and
    forgetting. For as our Savior is quoted in the Book of St. John: "You
    shall know the truth. And the truth shall set you free." That is why I
    will vote to support these resolutions and do so in the hope that it
    will contribute to a lasting peace among the peoples of these ancient,
    tragic, and beautiful lands.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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