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ANKARA: Possible US Envoy To Yerevan Refrains From 'Genocide' Word

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  • ANKARA: Possible US Envoy To Yerevan Refrains From 'Genocide' Word

    POSSIBLE US ENVOY TO YEREVAN REFRAINS FROM 'GENOCIDE' WORD

    Hurriyet Daily News
    July 14 2011
    Turkey

    A U.S. diplomat who has been tipped as a possible ambassador to Yerevan
    acknowledged the 1915 deaths of over 1.5 million Armenians during a
    Senate confirmation hearing Wednesday yet he did not term the events
    "genocide."

    "The characterization of those events is a policy decision that is made
    by the president of the United States and that policy is enunciated
    in his April 24 Remembrance Day statement," John Heffern said in the
    hearing, Asbarez Armenian News reported.

    President Barack Obama issued a statement on April 24 about the
    events in Armenia in which he called the 1915 events "one of the worst
    atrocities of the 20th century", but did not use the word "genocide."

    In the statement, Obama said that "a full, frank, and just
    acknowledgement of the facts is in all of our interests."

    The president's statement was met with concern by both Turkish and
    Armenian officials. One Turkish official told USA Today that Obama's
    statement was "one-sided" and "distorts the historical facts" while
    the chairman of the Armenian National Committee of America criticized
    Obama for failing to call the events "genocide."

    New Jersey Democratic Senator Robert Menendez led Heffern's
    interrogation and said the Obama administration's failure to label
    the events as "genocide" subverts American moral standing with regard
    to genocide prevention.

    "We have a historical knowledge of the facts that we accept would
    amount to genocide," Menendez said at the hearing. "But we are
    unwilling to reference it as genocide. And if we cannot accept the
    past, we cannot move forward."

    Argentina, Belgium, Canada, France, Italy, Russia, and Uruguay are
    among the nations that use the word "genocide" to describe these
    events. Britain, Israeli and the U.S. use different terminology.



    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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