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  • Blue Cross resists pressure on ADL

    Boston Globe, United States

    Watertown

    Blue Cross resists pressure on ADL

    By Christina Pazzanese
    Globe Correspondent / September 28, 2008

    The state's largest health insurer is under mounting pressure to
    withdraw its support of the Anti-Defamation League's No Place for Hate
    program, but is showing no signs of backing down.

    At a meeting Tuesday night, the Watertown Town Council unanimously
    backed a resolution urging Blue Cross and Blue Shield of Massachusetts
    to stop supporting the program. It also voted to send a letter to
    Abraham Foxman, the ADL's national head, requesting he appear before
    the council to discuss whether his organization considers the deaths
    of 1.5 million Armenians at the hands of the Ottoman Turks from 1915
    to 1923 as genocide.

    Meantime, a collection of 25 Armenian groups from the area last week
    sent a letter to Blue Cross-Blue Shield CEO Cleve Killingsworth also
    urging the company to drop its support. "Blue Cross-Blue Shield should
    not be associated with genocide denial," the letter said.

    John J. Curley, a senior vice president of government affairs for Blue
    Cross-Blue Shield, told town officials and a crowd of 60 at the Town
    Council meeting that the company does not intend to end its
    relationship with the No Place for Hate program, which promotes
    antiracism and other antiviolence efforts.

    Curley said he and company executives met with leaders from the ADL's
    New England office last month seeking clarity on the issue, and now
    feel comfortable with the assurances they received over the league's
    position on the Armenian genocide.

    "Our relationship is with the local ADL, and we're very satisfied with
    the response we got," said Curley. "If it was ambiguous, we would have
    ended our partnership." Robert Crestan, civil rights counsel for the
    ADL's New England office, said in a telephone interview Thursday that
    the Watertown Town Council's resolution was "unfair."

    "I think it's disturbing that Blue Cross is being targeted since
    they've done such good work in the community," Crestan said.

    Curley said the company provided money to No Place for Hate from 2001
    through 2006, but since then has offered only space at its
    headquarters for meetings and functions. The current absence of
    financial assistance "shouldn't be a reflection" on the company's
    continuing interest in the program, said Curley, who added it "may"
    resume funding the program in the future.

    The developments are the latest chapter in a controversy that flared
    up in the summer of 2007, when Watertown, home to a large and vocal
    Armenian population, pulled out of the No Place for Hate program
    because of what critics said was the ADL's refusal to acknowledge the
    genocide. Other towns followed.

    Under pressure from local ADL leaders and the Armenian community,
    Foxman last year called the atrocities "tantamount to genocide." But
    that has not entirely quieted critics.

    The Town Council's president, Clyde L. Younger, vice president Mark
    Sideris, and Councilor Jonathan Hecht implored Blue Cross-Blue Shield
    to join the Watertown board in approaching national ADL leaders for
    clarification on the league's stance.

    "Getting involved in national and international politics is not
    something we do," said Curley.

    Curley did say the company was "not pleased with the tone and tenor"
    of an Aug. 22 statement by Foxman that was posted briefly on the New
    England chapter's website.

    "There is simply no basis for the false accusation that we engage in
    any form of genocide denial, and we believe this characterization of
    ADL crosses the boundary of acceptable criticism and falls into the
    category of demonization," Foxman's statement read.

    "It was not helpful," Curley said.

    Councilor Vincent Piccirilli said many local Armenian-Americans and
    their supporters feel there is a gap between what the local ADL
    leaders and its national leadership have said about the deaths.

    "Most of the citizens of Watertown are somewhat dismayed with the
    talking around the issue and the failure to come clean," said
    Piccirilli. "This kind of two-faced action and statement" is not
    helpful to resolving the dispute, he said.

    "I am disappointed at your lack of concern about the difference
    between the oral assurances you've received locally and the national
    ADL," Hecht told Curley.

    But the ADL's national office insisted there is no division between
    the organization's local and national entities.

    "There's only one position: there is no 'one position in Boston and
    one position in New York,' " said Crestan, civil rights counsel for
    the ADL's New England office. "We think it's a clear statement."

    David Boyajian, an activist from Newton, said he was pleased with the
    council's unrelenting posture. "I'm very happy they passed the
    resolution and I hope Blue Cross-Blue Shield will follow the
    principled actions of the 13 towns," as well as the Massachusetts
    Municipal Association, he said, "and sever ties with No Place for Hate
    and any other ADL-sponsored program."

    Councilor Stephen Corbett, who drafted the resolution, expressed
    frustration that the issue was still being debated more than a year
    after Watertown dropped its participation in the No Place for Hate
    program as a protest against the ADL's stance.

    "I see the situation as not having changed at all," said
    Corbett. "It's a fairly straightforward thing we're looking for. This
    is a matter of principle."

    © Copyright 2008 Globe Newspaper Company.
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