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Students Engage Ambassador Yovanovitch on America's Foreign Policy

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  • Students Engage Ambassador Yovanovitch on America's Foreign Policy

    Armenian National Committee - Western Region
    104 North Belmont, Suite 200
    Glendale, California 91206
    Telephone: (818) 500-1918
    Facsimile: (818) 246-7353

    PRESS RELEASE

    July 2, 2009
    Contact: Haig Hovsepian
    Tel: (818) 500-1918

    Students Engage Ambassador Yovanovitch on America's Foreign Policy

    ENCINO, CA --- On Friday, June 26th, the United States Ambassador to
    Armenia, Marie Yovanovitch participated in a town hall meeting hosted by the
    Western Prelacy of the Armenian Church at Ferrahian High School's Avedissian
    Hall in Encino, California. Designed to educate and inform Ambassador
    Yovanovitch about the Armenian-Americans concerns in connection with US
    foreign policy, the event was one of several community engagements that
    included public forums with Armenian-Americans in New York and Boston. A
    broad cross-section of the community attended the event on Friday to express
    their opinions and concerns regarding US-Armenia relations to the newly
    appointed Ambassador. Present and participating in the public forum were
    several current and former Armenian National Committee interns and
    volunteers.

    "This meeting provided a valuable opportunity to actively engage in the
    US-Armenia dialogue," said Hovsep Hajibekyan, a University of California,
    Berkeley senior currently interning with the Armenian National
    Committee-Western Region (ANC-WR), who attended the town-hall meeting. "It
    was a rare chance to meet our Ambassador to Armenia and address our
    thoughts, concerns and frustrations directly to her. There was clearly high
    interest in today's event, judging from the packed hall, and that is very
    encouraging."

    After her opening remarks, Yovanovitch responded to many pointed questions
    from the audience, many of which were critical of the US position on
    recognition of the Armenian Genocide and the Obama Administration's proposed
    reduction of aid to Armenia for 2010.

    "I think there are many disappointments and lingering doubts in the
    Armenian-American community regarding the new Administration and its
    policies in the Caucuses region," commented Christina Toroyan, a volunteer
    with the ANC-WR and a student at California State University, Northridge.

    "Today's tough questions and the audience's uneasy mood reflected those
    doubts," she said, recalling an audience member who asked the Ambassador to
    identify a single moral or political advantage that resulted from America's
    continued refusal to acknowledge the Armenian Genocide. During the town hall
    event, Yovanovitch responded by insisting that President Obama has gone
    further than his predecessor with his April 24, 2009 statement.

    The Ambassador often prefaced her responses with apologies and
    acknowledgments that the responses she would give would most likely be
    unsatisfactory to the public before which she stood. During her remarks,
    Ambassador Yovanovitch never utilized the word "genocide" and struggled to
    explain how the US Administration favored increasing direct aid to
    Azerbaijan and Georgia, in spite of both countries' flawed democratic
    credentials and their expressed belligerence against their own ethnic
    Armenian communities.

    Shant Taslakian, a former ANCA Leo Sarkisian Intern and law student at the
    University of California, Hastings was not surprised by the Ambassador's
    equivocal answers. "I wish she was a little more candid and clear in her
    answers, especially regarding the decrease of aid to Armenia, but as a
    diplomat who simply represents US views her style was expected."

    Hajibekyan agreed, "Yovanovitch only articulated the ambiguities that exist
    in US policy on such questions as aid to Armenia and the genocide issue. Our
    hope is that by engaging the Ambassador, we can make our voices heard and
    affect change on higher levels of the government."

    Community members also expressed their frustration with President Obama?s
    failure to properly acknowledge the Armenian Genocide. During his
    presidential campaign, then-candidate Obama had won overwhelming support
    from the Armenian-American community with a strongly worded promise to
    unequivocally refer to the Armenian Genocide as such. Since taking office in
    2009, President Obama has yet to fulfill that campaign promise.

    "Genocide is a powerful legal term that properly characterizes the events of
    1915," said Shant Taslakian who voted for Obama in 2008. "The president had
    a great opportunity to clearly state his position and follow his election
    pledge. Instead, he prevaricated. Yovanoitch's poor answers today reflected
    the Administration's policies."

    Hrag Melkonian, a student at the College of the Canyons and an activist with
    the Armenian Youth Federation, had even stronger words for the President.
    "The fact that our President has constantly used words such as 'justice',
    'equality', and 'truth' in his speeches, but refused to properly
    characterize the Armenian Genocide is unacceptable and shames me as an
    American," Melkonian explained.

    "This amounts to defying everything that he and this country have said and
    is meant to stand for," adding that he hopes the Ambassador will convey the
    community's disappointment with the Administration when she holds meetings
    in Washington, DC.

    The town-hall meeting on Friday was the first time Yovanovitch met with the
    Armenian-American community of the greater Los Angeles area in her official
    capacity as Ambassador. Yovanovitch's nomination was confirmed in August
    2008 by the U.S. Senate. The previous nominee, Richard Hoagland, was
    withdrawn following his controversial statements denying the Armenian
    Genocide during Senate Foreign Relations Committee hearings. Yovanovitch is
    scheduled conclude her visit to the United Sates with high-level meetings
    with officials from the State Department and the White House.

    "It is our right and obligation as concerned Americans to have a dialogue
    with our government regarding issues of concern to our community," noted
    Hrag Melkonian following the meeting with the Ambassador. "I am pleased the
    community, specifically young Armenian-Americans, took advantage of this
    opportunity and asked our nation's ranking diplomat in Armenia direct and
    important questions regarding America's foreign policy."
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