Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Tom Lantos, Key Congress Voice On US Foreign Affairs Dies

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

  • Tom Lantos, Key Congress Voice On US Foreign Affairs Dies

    TOM LANTOS, KEY CONGRESS VOICE ON US FOREIGN AFFAIRS DIES

    Agence France Presse
    Feb 11 2008

    WASHINGTON (AFP) - Tom Lantos, a Hungarian born-Holocaust survivor,
    outspoken global human rights advocate and veteran Democratic foreign
    affairs expert, died Monday, a month after announcing he had cancer.

    California representative Lantos, who had just turned 80, was
    surrounded by his family when he died Monday morning in Bethesda
    naval hospital north of Washington, his spokeswoman Lynne Weil said.

    He died from complications of cancer of the esophagus, which
    he said last month would force his retirement from the House of
    Representatives, where he had served since being elected in 1980 and
    latterly chaired the chamber's Foreign Affairs committee.

    When he announced his diagnosis, Lantos, expressed his "profoundly
    felt gratitude to this great country."

    "It is only in the United States that a penniless survivor of the
    Holocaust and a fighter in the anti-Nazi underground could have
    received an education, raised a family, and had the privilege of
    serving the last three decades of his life as a member of Congress,"
    he said.

    Tributes quickly poured in for Lantos, from across the political aisle.

    President George W. Bush hailed him as a "champion" of human rights.

    "As the only Holocaust survivor to serve in Congress, Tom was a living
    reminder that we must never turn a blind eye to the suffering of the
    innocent at the hands of evil men," Bush said in a statement issued
    from the White House, where flags were lowered to half-staff.

    Hillary and Bill Clinton remembered the "courageous and improbable
    journey" of Lantos's life.

    "Tom bore witness to the worst of human cruelty and devoted his life
    to stopping it," the Clintons said in a statement.

    Clinton's Democratic White House rival Barack Obama honored Lantos's
    "truly extraordinary life" in which he "never wavered in his defense
    of freedom and opposition to tyranny."

    House speaker Nancy Pelosi said the veteran congressman's passing was
    a "terrible loss" while the top Republican on the Foreign Affairs
    committee Ileana Ros-Lehtinen described Lantos as an "unfailingly
    gracious and courageous man."

    Born in Budapest to a Jewish family in February 1928, Lantos was 16
    when Nazi Germany occupied Hungary. As a teenager, he was a member
    of the anti-Nazi resistance, and later of the anti-Communist student
    movement.

    After the Soviets invaded Hungary, he discovered that most of his
    family had died in the Holocaust. By 1947, he was in the United
    States on an academic scholarship and became an economics professor
    in San Francisco.

    Since the Democrats regained control of Congress in 2006 elections,
    Lantos has used his committee to launch strident appeals for greater
    US action on human rights in China, Darfur, Myanmar and Russia.

    Under his stewardship, the committee voted in October to describe the
    mass slaughter of Armenians under the Ottoman Empire as "genocide"
    -- plunging US relations with Turkey into crisis.

    Lantos had also emerged as a fierce critic of Russian President
    Vladimir Putin, and warned last June "Russia's tactics under the KGB
    colonel now in charge of the Kremlin threaten to send the country
    back to its authoritarian past."
Working...
X