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ANCA: Pelosi Pledges Support for Armenian Genocide Recognition

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  • ANCA: Pelosi Pledges Support for Armenian Genocide Recognition

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

    PRESS RELEASE
    October 24, 2006
    Contact: Elizabeth S. Chouldjian
    Tel: (202) 775-1918

    NANCY PELOSI PLEDGES TO SUPPORT CONGRESSIONAL ARMENIAN GENOCIDE RECOGNITION

    WASHINGTON, DC - U.S. House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi (D-CA), a
    longtime supporter of Armenian American issues who is expected to
    become Speaker if the Democrats win a majority in the House this
    November, pledged today to support Armenian Genocide legislation
    next year during in the 110th session of Congress.

    In a statement released to Harut Sassounian, Publisher of the
    California Courier, Congresswoman Pelosi stated that:

    "I have supported legislation, including H.Res.316, that would
    properly acknowledge the Armenian Genocide. It is imperative that
    the United States recognize this atrocity and move to renew our
    commitment to eliminate genocide whenever and wherever it exists.
    This effort enjoys strong bipartisan support in the House, and I
    will continue to support these efforts in the 110th Congress."

    Sassounian's weekly column appears internationally in more than a
    dozen newspapers, as well as in the widely read Huffington Post.

    "Nancy Pelosi's powerful words and principled actions underscore
    the stark difference between her and Dennis Hastert, who, during
    his tenure as Speaker has consistently prevented a bipartisan
    majority from voting in favor of U.S. recognition of the Armenian
    Genocide," said ANCA Executive Director Aram Hamparian.

    Congresswoman Pelosi's statement is consistent with her past record
    of energetic and principled support for U.S. recognition of the
    Armenian Genocide, dating back nearly 20 years. Since her election
    to the House in 1986, she has worked closely with the Bay Area
    Armenian National Committee, enjoying warm relations with the
    Armenian American community in the greater Bay Area.

    "The principled stand of House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi comes
    as no surprise, and we're proud that she confirmed it again today,"
    said Bay Area ANC Chairwoman Roxanne Makasdjian. "The Bay Area
    Armenian community has long known and respected Congresswoman
    Pelosi's leadership on genocide prevention, from her advocacy of
    Armenian Genocide recognition, to ending the genocide taking place
    today in Darfur."

    Speaker Hastert (R-IL), despite his pledge in August of 2000 to
    schedule a vote on the Armenian Genocide Resolution, pulled the
    measure from the House floor in October of that year, only moments
    before it was set to be adopted by a broad, bipartisan majority.
    He has, in every year since, actively blocked legislation properly
    commemorating this crime against humanity.

    In July of 2004, following Congressman Adam Schiff's (D-CA)
    successful effort to secure the adoption by the U.S. House of an
    amendment recognizing the Armenian Genocide, Speaker Hastert joined
    with other members of the House leadership in vowing to block the
    final adoption of the measure. In remarks posted at the top of the
    Speaker's website on the day after the amendment's adoption, the
    Speaker stated that, "Turkey has been a reliable ally of the United
    States for decades, and the deep foundation upon which our mutual
    economic and security relationship rests should not be disrupted by
    this amendment." He and his leadership colleagues also vowed to
    block any future consideration of the Armenian Genocide Resolution
    by the full House of Representatives.

    Speaker Hastert has received an "F" rating from the ANCA, while
    Minority Leader Pelosi has consistently received "A" grades from
    the ANCA for her principled support for Armenian American issues.

    Speaking at a Capitol Hill observance in April of 2005, the
    California Congresswoman countered those who have cited Turkey's
    strategic position as reason to oppose Armenian Genocide
    legislation, stressing that:

    "First at the time of the Iron Curtain, [they cited] the strategic
    location of Turkey, after that it was the Gulf War and Turkey's
    strategic location . . . Turkey's strategic location is not a
    license to kill."

    In May of 2001, during her remarks at the ANCA's annual Capitol
    Hill Armenian Genocide observance, Congresswoman Pelosi noted that:

    "The sad thing about that tragedy is that it is a tragedy twice.
    Once in the course of the Genocide and secondly in the fact that we
    cannot get the United States to pass a resolution memorializing and
    acknowledging the terrible things that happened then . . . This
    Armenian Genocide is a challenge to the conscience of our country
    and the conscience of the world. We will not rest until we have
    recognition of it."

    Speaking on the House floor in April of 2001, she reminded her
    colleagues that:

    "Our alliance with Turkey should not deter us from learning the
    lessons of past mistakes. If we ignore the lessons of the Armenian
    Genocide, we are destined to repeat those same mistakes. The
    horrible conflicts in Sudan, Sierra Leone, and East Timor remind us
    that we must do more to prevent the systematic slaughter of
    innocent people. We must learn from the past and never forget the
    victims of the Armenian genocide."

    In April of 1999, in a statement on the House floor, the
    Congresswoman stressed:

    "As we enter the Third Millennium of the Christian Era, it behooves
    us to remember. If we ignore the lessons of the Armenian Genocide,
    then we are destined to continue our stumblings through the long,
    dark tunnel of endless ethnic-cleansings, genocides, and
    holocausts. Let us, then, remember to remember."

    In remarks marking the Armenian Genocide on the House floor in
    April of 1998, she explained that:

    "On April 24, 1915, the rulers of the Ottoman Empire set out to
    annihilate the Armenian minority. Over the course of the next eight
    years, the Turkish government systematically murdered 1.5 million
    Armenians and deported 500,000. By the end of 1923, the entire
    Armenian population of Anatolia and Western Armenia was either
    murdered or deported . . . While a growing number of Americans come
    to understand the horror of this episode in history, the
    perpetrators continue their denial."

    In her April 1997 remarks to her House colleagues, the San
    Francisco-based legislator reminded Members of Congress that:

    "In 1944, noted jurist and scholar, Raphael Lemkin looked to a
    previous generation when he coined the word `genocide' to describe
    the systematic annihilation of the Jewish people by the Nazis.
    Lemkin was thinking of the Turkish attempt in 1915 to extinguish
    from this earth the ancient community of Armenians living within
    the Ottoman Empire. Ironically, Hitler had also referred to the
    extermination of the Armenians when he spoke of his plans for the
    Jewish people in 1939: `Who, after all, speaks today of the
    Armenians,' Hitler said."

    In June of 1996, speaking in support of a Congressional measure,
    authored by Rep. George Radanovich (R-CA) to cut aid to Turkey
    until it ended its denial of the Armenian Genocide, Congresswoman
    Pelosi argued that:

    "Passage of this [Radanovich] amendment will serve to deter the
    Turkish government from pursuing their unconscionable cover-up of
    this internationally recognized crime against humanity."

    In his most recent column, Sassounian criticized the current
    Speaker as someone who "not only has broken his pledge repeatedly,
    but has actively blocked the Armenian Genocide resolution from
    being brought to a floor vote." He stressed that, "On Nov. 7,
    members of the Armenian American community should vote for all
    those [House] candidates, regardless of their party affiliation,
    who are supportive of Armenian issues. In the case of equally
    supportive candidates in a particular race, the preference should
    be given to the one who is a Democrat in order to secure a
    Democratic majority in the House, helping make Congresswoman Pelosi
    the next Speaker, which will enable her to schedule a long overdue
    vote on the Armenian Genocide resolution."
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