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  • Rock band leads rally at Hastert's office

    Kane County Chronicle
    September 28, 2005

    Rock band leads rally at Hastert's office
    By ERIC SCHELKOPF

    [email protected]

    BATAVIA - Batavia High School senior Julie Allen is
    not a big fan of the rock band System of a Down.
    But Allen said she appreciates that the band takes a
    stand on social issues. That is why she attended a
    rally Tuesday in front of U.S. House Speaker Dennis
    Hastert's district office.
    System of a Down lead singer Serj Tankian and drummer
    John Dolmayan urged Hastert to call for a vote on the
    pending Armenian genocide legislation, which would
    recognize that Turkey murdered 1.5 million Armenians
    between 1915 and 1923.
    "I think it is awesome what they are doing," Allen
    said.
    Allen said she is concerned about the 1994 genocide in
    Rwanda and recent genocide in Darfur, Sudan.
    "I am concerned that genocide keeps reoccurring,"
    Allen said.
    The Armenian National Committee of America, Axis of
    Justice and the Armenian Youth Federation also
    sponsored the rally.
    System of a Down's four band members are of Armenian
    descent. Tankian's 97-year-old grandfather survived
    the Armenian genocide.
    "This is not just political, it is personal. If my
    grandfather hadn't survived, I wouldn't be here,"
    Takian said to crowd of about 125 people. "I really
    believe there are a lot of good people in Congress who
    are going to do the right thing."
    The rally was peaceful and no one was arrested.
    "Everything has gone great," Batavia Police Cmdr. Greg
    Thrun said.
    Tankian and Dolmayan gave Batavia police a letter
    addressed to Hastert, who in turn gave the letter to
    Hastert's staff. The speaker was in Washington, D.C.,
    on Tuesday presiding over Congress.
    Hastert in October 2000 withdrew the Armenian Genocide
    resolution from consideration shortly before it was to
    reach the House floor.
    "President Clinton asked the speaker not to bring the
    resolution to the floor," Hastert spokesman Brad Hahn
    said. "He was concerned about how it would affect the
    situation in the Middle East and how it would affect
    diplomatic relations."
    The House's International Relations Committee on Sept.
    15 approved two resolutions that denounced the deaths
    of Armenians early last century as genocide.
    However, the State Department said in a letter to
    committee members that the "resolutions could
    undermine efforts to rebuild a partnership between the
    United States and Turkey in pursuit of America's broad
    national security interests in the eastern
    Mediterranean, Caucasus, Central Asia and the Middle
    East."
    "Discussion is going on. No vote is scheduled.
    (Hastert) is taking a step back and letting the will
    of the House work its way through the process," Hahn
    said.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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