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Rep. Schiff Urges President Obama To Properly Acknowledge The Armeni

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  • Rep. Schiff Urges President Obama To Properly Acknowledge The Armeni

    REP. SCHIFF URGES PRESIDENT OBAMA TO PROPERLY ACKNOWLEDGE THE ARMENIAN GENOCIDE

    armradio.am
    23.04.2010 11:44

    In a forcefully worded letter, Armenian Genocide Resolution lead
    sponsor, Congressman Adam Schiff (D-CA), urged President Barack
    Obama to stand by his record as a U.S. Senator and his pledges as a
    Presidential candidate to properly recognize the Armenian Genocide,
    reported the Armenian National Committee of America (ANCA).

    "We join with Armenian Americans from across the country in thanking
    Congressman Schiff for his leadership in calling upon President Obama
    to keep his pledge to recognize the Armenian Genocide," said ANCA
    Executive Director Aram Hamparian.

    "As we approach April 24th, in the wake of the collapse of the
    Protocols process, it's clear that President Obama faces a stark
    choice: He can honor his commitments and his conscience by properly
    recognizing the Armenian Genocide, or he can remain an accomplice to
    the Turkish government's campaign to deny this crime against humanity,"
    added Hamparian.

    Noting that President Obama did not properly recognize the Armenian
    Genocide in his 2009 April 24th statement because of "possible
    reconciliation between Armenia and Turkey," Rep. Schiff pointed out
    that "this misapprehended the nature of reconciliation, which can
    never find a sound basis in the denial of genocide, or silence when
    confronted by denial." He went on to argue that "Linking the process of
    the protocols to the Armenian Genocide resolution actually encourages
    Turkey to not ratify them, since the Turks know that prolonging the
    process serves to provide opponents of the resolution with a continuing
    excuse to delay recognition of the Armenian Genocide."

    Earlier this week, 14 Senators issued a similar call, spearheaded
    by Sen. Barbara Boxer (D-CA), urging President Obama to properly
    characterize the Armenian Genocide in his annual statement. At the
    Capitol Hill Armenian Genocide Observance on April 21st, over 20
    Members of the U.S. House discussed the importance of full and formal
    U.S. affirmation of this crime.

    The full text of Rep. Schiff's letter is provided below.

    "Dear Mr. President:

    As the primary sponsor of H.Res.252, the Armenian Genocide resolution,
    I urge you to properly characterize the murder of 1.5 million men,
    women and children as "genocide" in your statement marking the April
    24 anniversary of the start of the genocide.

    Ninety-five years ago this month, in the spring of 1915, the government
    of the Ottoman Empire launched a campaign against its Armenian
    population. Wholesale massacres, forced marches through blistering
    deserts, rapes, and looting were visited upon the Armenians of Eastern
    Anatolia. By the time that the killings ended in 1923, one and a half
    millions Armenians were dead and the world's oldest Christian nation
    had been shattered - with its survivors scattered around the world.

    As a Senator, and during the 2009 presidential campaign, you
    repeatedly spoke of the massacres of Armenians at the hands of the
    Ottoman Government as genocide. This was in line with the overwhelming
    majority of historians, including some notable Turkish historians,
    and the genocide has also been recognized by many local and state
    governments here in the United States and by many governments around
    the world.

    Last April you did not use the term "genocide" to describe the
    events of 1915 to 1923. At the time, some argued that the possible
    reconciliation between Armenia and Turkey was a reason to hold off on
    recognition. This misapprehended the nature of reconciliation, which
    can never find a sound basis in the denial of genocide, or silence
    when confronted by denial. Now, despite the signing of the Protocols,
    the Turkish government has given every indication that it will not
    ratify or implement the agreement and has sought to make resolution
    of the Nagorno Karabakh issue a precondition for any action by the
    Turkish parliament.

    I have repeatedly warned that Turkey would attempt to use the
    protocols process as a means to prevent the Administration from
    using the word "genocide" and to try to forestall consideration of a
    genocide resolution in Congress. That must not be allowed to come to
    pass. Linking the process of the protocols to the Armenian Genocide
    resolution actually encourages Turkey to not ratify them, since the
    Turks know that prolonging the process serves to provide opponents
    of the resolution with a continuing excuse to delay recognition of
    the Armenian Genocide.

    Mr. President, you have always been a leader on the important issue
    of human rights. I urge you to stand with the ever-dwindling number
    of survivors, as well as the descendants of others, who survived
    the Armenian Genocide and continue to suffer the "double killing"
    of denial, by referring to it as genocide."
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