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ANCA: Memphis Newspaper Reports Rep. Steve Cohen Shoving Journalist

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  • ANCA: Memphis Newspaper Reports Rep. Steve Cohen Shoving Journalist

    ARMENIAN NATIONAL COMMITTEE OF AMERICA
    1711 N Street NW
    Washington, DC 20036
    Tel: (202) 775-1918
    Fax: (202) 775-5648
    Email: [email protected]
    Website: www.anca.org

    PRESS RELEASE
    August 6, 2008
    Contact: Elizabeth S. Chouldjian
    Tel: (202) 775-1918
    Email: [email protected]

    MEMPHIS NEWSPAPER DESCRIBES STEVEN COHEN SHOVING
    ARMENIAN AMERICAN JOURNALIST OUT OF PRESS CONFERENCE

    WASHINGTON, DC - The Memphis Commercial Appeal today reported that
    Congressman Steve Cohen (D-TN) - who has been a leading opponent of
    U.S. recognition of the Armenian Genocide - forcibly shoved Peter
    Musurlian, an Armenian American video journalist, from a press
    conference in his Memphis home, reported the Armenian National
    Committee of America (ANCA). The full story is provided below.

    Cohen faces challenger Nikki Tinker in tomorrow's Democratic Primary.

    #####


    Cohen asks photographer to leave his home, then pushes him out

    By Zack McMillin (Contact), Memphis Commercial Appeal
    Originally published 01:25 p.m., August 6, 2008
    Updated 02:14 p.m., August 6, 2008

    Memphis Police were called to the home of Congressman Steve Cohen
    today after an an argument between Cohen and a Armenian-American
    cameraman in town from California ended with Cohen physically
    pushing him out the side door.

    Peter Musurlian of Globalist Films in Glendale, Calif., followed a
    reporter from The Commercial Appeal into Cohen's Overton Park home,
    where the Congressman had invited local media to respond to a
    commercial from Nikki Tinker, his 9th Congressional District
    opponent in Thursday's Democratic Primary, that Cohen called "more
    mudslinging."

    When members of Cohen's staff realized who the cameraman was - he
    had followed Cohen around on Tuesday night at National Night Out
    neighborhood events - they told him he was not invited and asked
    him to leave.

    Musurlian refused, saying he deserved a place in the open press
    conference, and continued arguing before Cohen got off his couch
    and angrily told Musurlian to leave, accusing him of trespassing.

    Then Cohen said, "You come outside, I'm going to talk to you. I'll
    give you an interview." When Musurlian retreated to the threshold,
    Cohen put both hands on his arms, forced him from the house and
    shut the door.

    Cohen's staff retrieved a tripod and a bag containing audio
    equipment and returned it to Musurlian, who later said an expensive
    part had been broken. Musurlian stood across the street from the
    house and eventually gave statements to the media and to police.

    Cohen also talked to police and said he had no intention of
    pressing charges. Musurlian said he intended to press charges
    because of the damage to his equipment.

    Armenian-Americans from around the country have been enraged at
    Cohen for his part in stopping Congress from passing a resolution
    last year that would have condemned Turkey for committing genocide
    against Armenians when the Ottoman Empire was disintegrating during
    and after World War I.

    Armenian-Americans have donated between $25,000 and $30,000 to
    Tinker's campaign and are actively working to defeat Cohen.

    Cohen has often spoken of his pride in stopping the resolution,
    saying that during his Congressional trip to the Middle East that
    he specifically asked Gen. David Petraeus, commander of U.S. forces
    in Iraq, about the ramifications of passing a resolution that
    Turkey vowed would cause it to cut off all aid to the U.S. effort
    in Iraq.

    "I'm proud of what I did," Cohen said. "Gen. Petraeus, when I went
    to Baghdad, I asked him what his position was on the Armenian
    resolution and he said, 'I am glad you brought that up. That would
    be very devastating to our troops.' The Turks are our friends in
    NATO, they allow 8,000 trucks a day through Turkey into Iraq to
    serve our troops with supplies and needs. Those trucks could be
    stopped and the Turks are very serious about that. They allow us to
    use our airbase.

    "'He said, 'That would be really devastating to our mission.' While
    I am against the mission of the Iraq war, I am for protecting our
    troops. And to pass that resolution would have been irresponsible
    and the Congress saw that. President Carter and President Clinton
    both opposed it because they said we shouldn't be doing that to
    upset the Turks.

    "Determining what happened in history when it is a foreign nation
    and something we had nothing to do with is not the job of the
    United States Congress. It's a job for historians. The bottom line
    is at this time in 2007 and 2008 and possibly in 2009 it is the
    last thing to throw in the face of one of our few allies in the
    Middle East."

    Musurlian attempted to give Memphis media a history lesson about
    what many historians have declared a genocide but which Turkey
    maintains was a much more complicated set of events unleashed by
    the world war and dissolution of the Ottoman Empire.

    "This is a particular issue that I know maybe 50 people in Memphis
    are interested in but they should be interested in it," Musurlian
    said. "It may sound ancient, but it's not as ancient as slavery."

    That seemed to be an allusion to the resolution Cohen did usher
    through Congress last week, with the U.S. House of Representatives
    for the first time apologizing to African-Americans for slavery and
    Jim Crow oppression and degradation.

    Cohen had called the press conference to explain his vote in 1997,
    while in the State Senate, against a bill called the "Tennessee
    Student Religious Liberty Act" that a Tinker ad said shows that
    Cohen "is the only Congressman that doesn't think our kids should
    be allowed to pray in schools."

    Cohen said today he unequivocally does not oppose prayer in
    schools, but that he opposed that bill because it was meaningless
    pandering.

    "They gave that bill a nice title to make it sound good, but I am
    just repulsed by people who will use religion to foster their
    political reputations and careers," Cohen said. "I voted it because
    it was a) unnecessary, b) trying to use religion on a false manner
    deluding the people to make them think they were doing something
    when they were not doing anything."

    And Cohen sounded a theme heard often over the years in Memphis,
    accusing "outsiders" of meddling

    "He needs to go back to California, EMILY's List needs to go back
    to Washington and New York, and the people who are doing these ads
    from Washington, they need to go home too," Cohen said. "Memphians
    will determine this election. And all these outsiders who don't
    know Steve Cohen, they need to get out of here."

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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