Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Armenian Americans Urge Deutsche Bank to Return Genocide-Era Assets

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Armenian Americans Urge Deutsche Bank to Return Genocide-Era Assets

    Armenian National Committee of America
    1711 N Street NW
    Washington, DC 20036
    Tel. (202) 775-1918
    Fax. (202) 775-5648
    Email [email protected]
    Internet www.anca.org

    PRESS RELEASE

    FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
    December 6, 2006
    Contact: Elizabeth S. Chouldjian
    Tel: (202) 775-1918

    ARMENIAN AMERICANS CALL ON DEUTSCHE BANK
    TO RETURN STOLEN ARMENIAN GENOCIDE-ERA ASSETS

    -- ANCA Launches WebFax Letter-writing Campaign
    to the Firm's Chairman, Dr. Josef Ackermann

    WASHINGTON, DC - Armenian Americans from all fifty states are calling on
    Deutsche Bank, the Germany-based financial giant, to stop obstructing the
    return
    of stolen Armenian Genocide-era assets, reported the Armenian National
    Committee
    of America (ANCA).

    The grassroots campaign is fueled by citizens throughout the country
    troubled
    that Deutsche Bank continues to block the rightful return of assets
    belonging to
    heirs of Armenians killed in the Armenian Genocide, despite the good faith
    efforts toward a settlement by lawyers for a group of Armenian Americans who
    have filed a class action lawsuit against the firm.

    Taking advantage of the free ANCA WebFax feature on the ANCA website -
    www.anca.org - community activists are sending letters directly to Dr. Josef
    Ackermann, the Chairman of Deutsche Bank. The WebFax letter allows
    concerned
    individuals to call on Dr. Ackermann to "personally ensure that Deutsche
    Bank
    fully lives up to its legal, financial, and moral obligations by returning
    all
    assets your firm unlawfully holds from the victims and survivors of the
    Armenian
    Genocide of 1915 to 1923." The letter goes on to criticize the firm's
    current
    conduct, noting that, "compounding your firm's guilt in this matter has been
    its
    illegal and immoral conduct in the years following the Armenian Genocide.
    Rather than taking steps to return stolen property, Deutsche Bank actively
    avoided meeting its responsibilities through acts of evasion and
    concealment, as
    well as other measures intended to prevent these funds from being recovered
    by
    survivors and the heirs of victims. Now, having profited from the use of
    these
    funds over the course of the last nine decades, your firm is today actively
    obstructing efforts to secure their rightful return."

    Individuals can send a free ANCA WebFax to Deutsche Bank by visiting:
    http://capwiz.com/anca/issues/alert/?ale rtid=9194726&type=CU

    Deutsche Bank has more than $1.32 trillion in assets and over 67,000
    employees
    operating in nearly 1,600 branches across 73 countries. Experts estimate
    that
    Deutsche Bank illegally withheld more than $20,000,000, in World War I-era
    dollars, from Armenian victims and survivors of the Armenian Genocide. A
    class
    action lawsuit against the firm to secure the return of these assets has
    been
    filed by attorneys Mark Geragos, Brian Kabatack, and Vartkes Yeghiayan. The
    lawsuit states that the Deutsche Bank systematically thwarted the recovery
    of
    millions of dollars in assets deposited by Armenians prior to and during the
    Armenian Genocide. In addition, the lawsuit seeks damages for Armenian
    assets
    forcibly taken by the Ottoman Turkish government during the Armenian
    Genocide.
    The same three lawyers recently settled similar lawsuits against New York
    Life
    and AXA for a total of $37.5 million for the wrongful withholding of
    insurance
    policy proceeds held from the Armenian Genocide era.

    Earlier this month the ANCA's European affiliate, the European Armenian
    Federation for Justice and Democracy, launched a continent-wide campaign to
    urge
    Deutsche Bank to honor its commitments. In January of 2006, the
    ANCA-Western
    Region helped organize a rally in support of a press conference outside the
    Los
    Angeles offices of Deutsche Bank announcing the filing of the class action
    lawsuit against both bank. Speaking at the rally, ANCA Board member Raffi
    Hamparian called on Deutsche Bank "to return the money it eagerly accepted
    but
    then so heartlessly withheld from the victims and survivors of the Armenian
    Genocide. Withheld - from the wounded, the destitute and desperate -
    exactly
    when they needed access to these funds the most. Today, we ask simply for
    what
    is owed, what has been owed for nearly a century. We know that the time has
    long-since passed when Deutsche Bank can make its depositors whole. That
    time
    has passed. No one today can wipe away the blood, the tears, the sweat of
    endless desert marches, mass executions, and starvations. But we can,
    today,
    secure a measure of justice, and that is why we are here. Justice: A small
    measure today - from a bank. A greater measure tomorrow - from the Turkish
    government. The full measure - soon - of the justice owed the Armenian
    nation."

    #####
Working...
X