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New U.S. Administration Majority Stands For Armenian Genocide Recogn

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  • New U.S. Administration Majority Stands For Armenian Genocide Recogn

    NEW U.S. ADMINISTRATION MAJORITY STANDS FOR ARMENIAN GENOCIDE RECOGNITION

    PanARMENIAN.Net
    14.01.2009 17:26 GMT+04:00

    /PanARMENIAN.Net/ Majority of the U.S. 111th Congress members stand
    for recognition of the Armenian Genocide at the hands of the Ottoman
    Empire in 1915, Armenian National Committee of America Communications
    Director Elizabeth Chouljian told PanARMENIAN.Net.

    "April 24, 1915, signified the beginning of a systematic attempt
    by the Ottoman regime to deport and exterminate Armenians from the
    Anatolian Peninsula. Over the next 8 years, 1 1/2 million Armenian
    people were murdered by minions of the Ottoman Empire. Those who were
    spared were driven from their homes. It is for those victims, and it
    is for all oppressed peoples today, those who have died and those who
    survived, that we take time to reflect on the Armenian genocide and
    its implications for all of us today," said CIA Director-designate
    Leon Panetta.

    Interior Secretary-designate Ken Salazar, Labor Secretary-designate
    Hilda Solis and Transportation Secretary-designate Ray LaHood are
    among Cosponsors of Armenian Genocide Resolution H.Res.106.

    In addition to Administration officials, the U.S. Congress is today
    led by among the most energetic and vocal advocates of American
    recognition of the Armenian Genocide.

    "A grave injustice was committed and the fact that our nation is not
    officially recognizing these crimes as genocide is a disappointment,"
    said Speaker of the House of Representatives Nancy Pelosi.

    "It truly saddens me that after 93 years, the U.S. has failed to
    acknowledge the Armenian Genocide for what it was," said Senate
    Majority Leader Harry Reid.

    "Genocide is a very powerful word, and should be reserved for only the
    most horrific examples of mass killing motivated by a desire to destroy
    an entire people. Without a doubt, this term is appropriate to describe
    the unimaginable atrocities suffered by the Armenian people from 1915
    to 1918," said House Foreign Affairs Committee Chairman Howard Berman.

    "Acknowledging when genocide has occurred is not simply a theoretical
    or legal exercise. It is key to preventing genocide from happening
    again. That's why, in my view, we must change U.S. policy to reflect
    the true nature of the tragic events that were perpetrated against
    the Armenians by calling them what they were: genocide," said Senate
    Foreign Relations Committee Chairman John Kerry.
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