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  • Local officials express happiness with resolution observing Armenian

    Glendale News Press, CA
    April 11 2014


    Local officials express happiness with resolution observing Armenian Genocide

    The vote was passed by the U.S. Senate Foreign Relations Committee

    April 11, 2014|By Arin Mikailian, [email protected]

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    Public officials in Glendale are praising a vote by the U.S. Senate
    Foreign Relations Committee on Thursday that passed a resolution to
    observe and commemorate the Armenian Genocide.

    Authored by committee chair Sen. Robert Menendez (D-NJ) and Sen. Mark
    Kirk (R-IL), Resolution 410 was approved by a 12-5 vote and will now
    head to the full Senate.

    "This resolution reaffirms in the strongest terms that we will always
    remember this tragedy and honor the memory of innocent Armenian men,
    women and children who were killed and expelled from their homeland,"
    Menendez said in a statement. "The Armenian Genocide must be taught,
    recognized and commemorated to prevent the reoccurrence of similar
    atrocities from ever happening again."

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    April 24 will mark the 99th anniversary of the genocide under the
    Ottoman Empire, now modern-day Turkey, that claimed the lives of 1.5
    million Armenians from 1915 to 1918.

    Turkey has since denied that a genocide occurred and that those people
    were all casualties of World War I and its aftermath.

    The resolution also states the president should work on developing an
    equitable and stable relationship with Turkey, but recognition of the
    genocide by the Turkish government would have to be a prerequisite.

    A previous genocide-recognition effort in the U.S. House of
    Representatives came up last year when Rep. Adam Schiff (D-Burbank)
    introduced Resolution 227, which awaits approval by the House Foreign
    Relations Committee.

    Schiff said he hopes the senate committee's vote will help jump-start
    his legislation.

    "It does put pressure on the House when the Senate acts ... only time
    will tell," he said. "We've gotten more traction in the House, so it's
    wonderful that the Senate is taking the initiative to move their own
    resolution."

    Newly sworn-in Glendale Mayor Zareh Sinanyan said he viewed Thursday's
    vote as the prevailing of justice, even if it's only within the Senate
    Foreign Relations Committee.

    "I'm far from having the illusion that this solution will be resolved
    overnight, in terms of our country to be able to tell what has been
    perceived as a U.S. ally, Turkey, to do the right thing," he said.

    Berdj Karapetian, chairman of the Glendale chapter of the Armenian
    National Committee of America, said while it is important to
    eventually to have a U.S. president sign off on a genocide resolution,
    it's important to acknowledge the significance of Thursday's vote and
    more politicians coming forward in support.

    "It's a significant vote, 12-5," he said, adding that it says to the
    Turkish government that it should take responsibility for the
    genocide.

    "That is already an important message," Karapetian said.

    http://articles.glendalenewspress.com/2014-04-11/news/tn-gnp-local-officials-express-happiness-with-resolution-observing-armenian-genocide-20140411_1_genocide-resolution-armenian-genocide-house-foreign-relations-committee

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