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
October 13, 2006
CONTACT: Christine Kojoian
E-mail: [email protected]
ARMENIAN ASSEMBLY APPLAUDS FRANCE FOR STRONGLY AFFIRMING THE ARMENIAN
GENOCIDE
Washington, DC - The Armenian Assembly welcomes the continued commitment
by the French parliament to keep the history of the Armenian Genocide
inviolable despite calls from Turkey to drop an Armenian Genocide bill
or risk damaging bilateral ties.
Yesterday, the French National Assembly voted 106 to 19 to approve
legislation that would penalize Armenian Genocide denial with fines and
a jail term. The bill must still be approved by France's upper house of
parliament and signed by President Jacques Chirac, who called on Turkey
to acknowledge the Armenian Genocide during a recent state visit to
Armenia.
According to The Associated Press, Chirac asked, "Should Turkey
recognize the genocide of Armenia to join the European Union? Honestly,
I believe so. Each country grows by acknowledging its dramas and errors
of the past."
In the week leading up to the vote, the Turkish government warned France
that bilateral relations would suffer if lawmakers approved the bill. A
statement issued by the Turkish Foreign Ministry, criticized the vote
saying, "French-Turkish relations....have been dealt a severe blow today
as a result of the irresponsible false claims of French politicians who
do not see the political consequences of their actions."
The Armenian government, for its part, called the vote a "natural
continuation of France's principled and consistent defenses of human and
historic rights and values."
The statement from Foreign Affairs Minister Vartan Oskanian also said,
"To adopt such a decision is the French Parliament's sovereign right and
is understandable. What we don't understand is the Turkish government's
instigation of extremist public relations, especially while Turkey
itself has a law that does exactly the same thing and punishes those who
even use the term genocide or venture to discuss those events."
ORHAN PAMUK AWARDED NOBEL PRIZE IN LITERATURE; ASSEMBLY INTERVIEW WITH
HRANT DINK
While the passage of the French bill was making international headlines,
news broke that Turkey's best-known writer Orhan Pamuk was awarded the
Nobel Prize for Literature. Last year, Pamuk was prosecuted under
Article 301 of the Turkish Penal Code and charged with "insulting
Turkishness" for telling a Swiss newspaper that "30,000 Kurds and one
million Armenians were killed in these lands, and nobody but me dares
talk about it." The charges have since been dropped.
The Armenian Assembly spoke with Turkish-Armenian journalist Hrant Dink,
from his home in Istanbul, on these latest developments, including new
"denigration" charges filed against him for acknowledging the Armenian
Genocide.
Reflecting on the passage of the French bill, Dink added "I do see some
positive results coming out of this....The Armenian and Turkish
governments, both states, should see there is no alternative to
dialogue. There is no alternative to good neighborliness. There is no
alternative to opening the borders and joint action."
Dink also welcomed Orhan Pamuk's award, saying "for those of us
struggling for democracy in Turkey, it is a great honor and great joy
that our beloved friend...has made so many great contributions to the
pursuit of democracy, has ascended to the world's highest pedestal of
the Nobel Prize in Literature."
"It is not just the people living in this country today that his prize
belongs to," Dink continued. "It also belongs to the people who for
centuries populated this land and created this culture. And today, the
culture that Orhan Pamuk presented to the world, in the form of
literature, is the culture of all those people who lived and created on
this land, including the Armenians."
The interview concluded with Dink's thoughts on his pending trial. "In
March 2007 I will be tried for having stated 'yes what happened was
genocide' in an interview with Reuters," he explained. "What else can
we call it if my people who lived there for 4,000 years, disappeared
without a trace, and its culture disappeared? This was my message and
this is why I'm being indicted."
Earlier this month, Dink was awarded the prestigious Bjornson Prize for
Literature for his publications on the Armenian Genocide. He will
accept the award, along with a cash prize, during a ceremony in Molde,
Norway on November 24.
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#2006-094
Editor's Note: Photograph available on the Assembly Web site at the
following link:
http://www.aaainc.org/images/press/2006-094 /2006-094-1.jpg
Caption: Hrant Dink
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
October 13, 2006
CONTACT: Christine Kojoian
E-mail: [email protected]
ARMENIAN ASSEMBLY APPLAUDS FRANCE FOR STRONGLY AFFIRMING THE ARMENIAN
GENOCIDE
Washington, DC - The Armenian Assembly welcomes the continued commitment
by the French parliament to keep the history of the Armenian Genocide
inviolable despite calls from Turkey to drop an Armenian Genocide bill
or risk damaging bilateral ties.
Yesterday, the French National Assembly voted 106 to 19 to approve
legislation that would penalize Armenian Genocide denial with fines and
a jail term. The bill must still be approved by France's upper house of
parliament and signed by President Jacques Chirac, who called on Turkey
to acknowledge the Armenian Genocide during a recent state visit to
Armenia.
According to The Associated Press, Chirac asked, "Should Turkey
recognize the genocide of Armenia to join the European Union? Honestly,
I believe so. Each country grows by acknowledging its dramas and errors
of the past."
In the week leading up to the vote, the Turkish government warned France
that bilateral relations would suffer if lawmakers approved the bill. A
statement issued by the Turkish Foreign Ministry, criticized the vote
saying, "French-Turkish relations....have been dealt a severe blow today
as a result of the irresponsible false claims of French politicians who
do not see the political consequences of their actions."
The Armenian government, for its part, called the vote a "natural
continuation of France's principled and consistent defenses of human and
historic rights and values."
The statement from Foreign Affairs Minister Vartan Oskanian also said,
"To adopt such a decision is the French Parliament's sovereign right and
is understandable. What we don't understand is the Turkish government's
instigation of extremist public relations, especially while Turkey
itself has a law that does exactly the same thing and punishes those who
even use the term genocide or venture to discuss those events."
ORHAN PAMUK AWARDED NOBEL PRIZE IN LITERATURE; ASSEMBLY INTERVIEW WITH
HRANT DINK
While the passage of the French bill was making international headlines,
news broke that Turkey's best-known writer Orhan Pamuk was awarded the
Nobel Prize for Literature. Last year, Pamuk was prosecuted under
Article 301 of the Turkish Penal Code and charged with "insulting
Turkishness" for telling a Swiss newspaper that "30,000 Kurds and one
million Armenians were killed in these lands, and nobody but me dares
talk about it." The charges have since been dropped.
The Armenian Assembly spoke with Turkish-Armenian journalist Hrant Dink,
from his home in Istanbul, on these latest developments, including new
"denigration" charges filed against him for acknowledging the Armenian
Genocide.
Reflecting on the passage of the French bill, Dink added "I do see some
positive results coming out of this....The Armenian and Turkish
governments, both states, should see there is no alternative to
dialogue. There is no alternative to good neighborliness. There is no
alternative to opening the borders and joint action."
Dink also welcomed Orhan Pamuk's award, saying "for those of us
struggling for democracy in Turkey, it is a great honor and great joy
that our beloved friend...has made so many great contributions to the
pursuit of democracy, has ascended to the world's highest pedestal of
the Nobel Prize in Literature."
"It is not just the people living in this country today that his prize
belongs to," Dink continued. "It also belongs to the people who for
centuries populated this land and created this culture. And today, the
culture that Orhan Pamuk presented to the world, in the form of
literature, is the culture of all those people who lived and created on
this land, including the Armenians."
The interview concluded with Dink's thoughts on his pending trial. "In
March 2007 I will be tried for having stated 'yes what happened was
genocide' in an interview with Reuters," he explained. "What else can
we call it if my people who lived there for 4,000 years, disappeared
without a trace, and its culture disappeared? This was my message and
this is why I'm being indicted."
Earlier this month, Dink was awarded the prestigious Bjornson Prize for
Literature for his publications on the Armenian Genocide. He will
accept the award, along with a cash prize, during a ceremony in Molde,
Norway on November 24.
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#2006-094
Editor's Note: Photograph available on the Assembly Web site at the
following link:
http://www.aaainc.org/images/press/2006-094 /2006-094-1.jpg
Caption: Hrant Dink