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ANKARA: Incoming US ambassador to Yerevan doesn't use 'genocide'

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  • ANKARA: Incoming US ambassador to Yerevan doesn't use 'genocide'

    The New Anatolian, Turkey
    June 30 2006

    Incoming US ambassador to Yerevan doesn't use word 'genocide'

    TNA with AP / Washington

    U.S. senators failed to persuade the nominee for U.S. ambassador to
    Yerevan to use word 'genocide' while describing events of 1915 at his
    confirmation hearings Wednesday in the Senate.

    "I have not received any kind of written instruction about this,"
    Ambassador-designate Richard E. Hoagland said. "I simply have studied
    the president's policy. I've studied the background papers on the
    policy. And my responsibility is to support the president."

    While declining to say the word "genocide," Hoagland, who is
    currently the ambassador to Tajikistan, said, "I fully agree that the
    events that occurred in 1915 and following were of historic
    proportions, as I said, well-documented, horrific, horrifying."

    He quoted Maryland democrat Senator Paul Sarbanes, who read a
    statement about the situation, that "hundreds of valleys (were)
    devastated, no family untouched. It was historic. It was a tragedy
    and everyone fully agrees with that, sir."

    U.S. President George W. Bush, in a presidential message on the 91st
    anniversary of April 24, called the events "a terrible chapter of
    history" that "remains a source of pain for people in Armenia and for
    all those who believe in freedom, tolerance and the dignity and value
    of every human life."

    Bush is ordering home their current ambassador in Yerevan, John
    Evans, two years into the normally three-year diplomatic term. In
    announcing his recall last month, the White House gave no reason and
    praised Evans for his service. Last Sunday was his second anniversary
    in the Armenian capital. In February 2005 Evans told
    Armenian-Americans, "The Armenian genocide was the first genocide of
    the 20th century."

    Sixty members of the House of Representatives sent a letter to
    Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice protesting that Evans was being
    punished for his reference to "genocide." In a separate letter,
    Democratic Senators Edward Kennedy and John Kerry of Massachusetts
    demanded an explanation from Rice for Evans' recall.

    The events occurred during the expulsion of ethnic Armenians from
    eastern Turkey into Syria in 1915 and 1916. Turkish officials have
    traditionally maintained that 300,000 people died. Armenian
    terrorists, mainly members of the Armenian Secret Army for the
    Liberation of Armenia (ASALA), roamed through Europe and the U.S. in
    the 1970s and 1980s and claimed more than 60 attacks against Turkish
    targets. The army claimed the campaign killed 30 Turkish diplomats
    and dependents.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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