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  • Schiff's genocide bill heads to floor of House

    Burbank Leader
    Published September 17, 2005

    Schiff's genocide bill heads to floor of House

    The House International Relations Committee approves Adam Schiff's
    bill recognizing the Armenian Genocide with a 36 to 11 vote.

    By Darleene Barrientos, The Leader

    WASHINGTON -- Legislation introduced by Rep. Adam Schiff recognizing
    the deaths of 1.5 million Armenians from 1915 to 1923 as a genocide
    was passed by the House International Relations Committee Thursday,
    but proponents say the battle to get the bill to the floor for a vote
    has just begun.

    Thursday's bill mark-up was the Armenian Genocide Resolution's final
    hurdle before it can be voted on by the full House of Representatives.

    The committee approved the bill with a bipartisan vote of 36 to 11,
    Schiff said. "We are just thrilled," Schiff said. "It was the first
    time we had the support of the chair and a ranking member. We think
    this will give us a lot of momentum on the floor."

    But even with Thursday's victory, lawmakers pushing the resolution are
    frank about the uphill battle they face. There's been no timetable
    established for when the resolution might reach the floor for a vote
    because legislators anticipate resistance from Republicans who do not
    want to offend ally Turkey.

    "It was a hill to climb just to get it heard in the committee," Schiff
    said. "But if the committee was any indication, the votes are
    there. We just need to get the leadership to commit to the vote."

    Rep. Brad Sherman, who represents a portion of Burbank, was a member
    of the committee that passed the resolution. Proponents of the
    resolution will now focus on pushing Rep. Tom Delay (R-Texas) to allow
    the bill onto the floor for a vote, he said.

    "The rumor is that [President Bush] is going to try to say, 'hey, we
    Republicans don't want this on the floor -- let's stop it,'" Sherman
    said. "It's peculiar, because our committee is always passing
    resolutions favoring democracy. But when it comes to our resolutions
    getting fair and democratic treatment, I'm pessimistic."

    National Security Council spokesman Fred Jones could not be reached
    for comment Thursday.

    The resolution is important for the United States in quest for
    democracy throughout the world, Sherman said.

    "It's important because genocide denial sets us up for the next
    genocide," Sherman said. "It was Adolf Hitler who said, before he
    killed 6 million of my ethnic group and tens of millions of others,
    'who remembers the Armenians?' "Genocide denial is the last act of
    genocide itself. First you exterminate the people, then you
    exterminate the people's memory, then you exterminate the memory of
    the extermination."

    In spite of the uphill battle before them, local proponents of the
    bill will continue with a phone, e-mail and fax campaigns to members
    of Congress, just as they have the past few years, said Armen
    Carapetian, director of the Armenian National Committee's Western
    Region.

    "This is sort of a David and Goliath-type battle and the little guy
    won," Carapetian said. "Hopefully, that will be carried through to the
    full floor vote."

    Carapetian is optimistic that Congress will recognize that
    acknowledging the Armenian Genocide is an important issue.

    "We know that the only way to prevent genocide from continuing to
    happen around the world is to hold those who commit them responsible,"
    Carapetian said. "Turkey must be held accountable.

    This resolution serves as a first step in pursuing justice and
    pressuring Turkey to come to grips with its past."

    * DARLEENE BARRIENTOS covers business and politics. She may be reached
    at (818) 637-3215.
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