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AAA: Assembly Rallies Congr., Community Support for Amb. Evans

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  • AAA: Assembly Rallies Congr., Community Support for Amb. Evans

    Armenian Assembly of America
    122 C Street, NW, Suite 350
    Washington, DC 20001
    Phone: 202-393-3434
    Fax: 202-638-4904
    Email: [email protected]
    Web: www.armenianassembly.org

    PRESS RELEASE
    March 2, 2005
    CONTACT: Christine Kojoian
    Email: [email protected]


    ARMENIAN ASSEMBLY RALLIES CONGRESSIONAL, COMMUNITY SUPPORT FOR
    "ARMENIAN GENOCIDE" DECLARATION BY AMB. EVANS
    Rep. Pallone Tells Congress Remarks Are In Keeping With Previous
    Statements by U.S. Officials

    Washington, DC - The Assembly acted today to galvanize congressional
    and Armenian-American support for U.S. Ambassador to Armenia John
    Evans' self-evident declaration that "the Armenian Genocide was the
    first genocide of the twentieth century." The Ambassador made the
    statement repeatedly during public forums with Armenian-American
    community groups throughout the U.S. last week.

    Assembly leaders launched a comprehensive campaign that hinges on the
    support of the community and others of goodwill to join Ambassador
    Evans in properly characterizing the attempted annihilation of the
    Armenian people under cover of WW I as genocide. In its ongoing
    effort to bury the facts of history, Turkey will rely on its friends
    in the Bush Administration, Congress, the media and think tanks to
    disrupt ongoing and growing U.S. reaffirmation of the truth.

    As part of that campaign, the Assembly sent an urgent memorandum to
    Senate foreign affairs staff for their members to support the Evans'
    declaration and to all Armenia Caucus members in the House to
    encourage their members to follow the lead of Congressional Caucus on
    Armenian Issues Co-Chairs Joe Knollenberg (R-MI) and Frank Pallone,
    Jr. (D-NJ).

    Pallone is the first U.S. official to publicly address Evans' comments
    and add his name to all those who have accurately described the facts.
    In a speech on the floor of the House of Representatives last night,
    he said: "Ambassador Evans' statements did not contradict U.S. policy,
    but rather articulated the same message that the Bush Administration
    has sent to the public, the only difference in this case is that
    Ambassador Evans simply assigned the word to the definition that was
    already provided by President Bush as well as members of his
    administration." [The full text of Pallone's comments are attached
    below.]

    Additionally, the Assembly this week began mobilizing its nationwide
    network of grassroots activists, asking them to promptly contact
    President Bush and Members of Congress to support the historical
    truth.

    "The Assembly commends Ambassador Evans for accurately labeling the
    attempted annihilation of the Armenians as Genocide and urges the
    President to follow his example and properly characterize the
    atrocities in his remembrance statement next month," said Assembly
    Board of Trustees Chairman Hirair Hovnanian. "In fact, the Ambassador
    has provided everyone in our community who has worked long and hard on
    this matter a remarkable opportunity to see that the truth is told
    during the community's yearlong commemorative activities of the 90th
    anniversary of the Genocide."

    Hovnanian also said that by employing the term Armenian Genocide, the
    Ambassador is building on previously made statements by Presidents
    Reagan and Bush, as well as the repeated declarations of numerous
    world-renowned scholars. In effect, Evans has done nothing more than
    succinctly name the conclusions enunciated by those before him.

    In 1981, for example, Ronald Reagan issued a presidential proclamation
    that said in part: "like the genocide of the Armenians before it, and
    the genocide of the Cambodians which followed it - and like too many
    other persecutions of too many other people - the lessons of the
    Holocaust must never be forgotten..." President Bush himself has also
    carefully set forth the textbook definition of the crime of genocide
    as it applies to Armenians in his successive April 24th statements of
    remembrance.

    Furthermore, Evans' characterization conforms to the publicly stated
    declarations of over 120 renowned Holocaust and Genocide scholars who
    signed a statement in 2000 affirming that the Armenian Genocide is an
    incontestable historical fact and so urge the governments of Western
    democracies to likewise recognize it as such. The petitioners, among
    whom is Nobel Laureate for Peace Elie Wiesel, also asked the Western
    democracies to urge the Government and Parliament of Turkey to finally
    come to terms with a dark chapter of Ottoman-Turkish history and to
    recognize the Armenian Genocide.

    Evans' characterization also conforms to the summary conclusions of
    the International Center for Transitional Justice on the use of the
    term Armenian Genocide, which states that: "The Events, viewed
    collectively, can thus be said to include all of the elements of the
    crime of genocide as defined in the Convention, and legal scholars as
    well as historians, politicians, journalists and other people would be
    justified in continuing to so describe them."

    "Clearly there is sufficient context and validation for Evans' use of
    the term, which in our opinion is part of a natural progression
    building on the U.S. record towards an inevitable, full and
    irrevocable U.S. reaffirmation of the Armenian Genocide," continued
    Hovnanian. "That said, it is now up to us to come together as a
    community and reach out to Armenia's friends on the Hill, as well as
    those in the public policy sector, to encourage further affirmations
    of the historical truth."

    The Armenian Assembly of America is the largest Washington-based
    nationwide organization promoting public understanding and awareness
    of Armenian issues. It is a 501 (c) (3) tax-exempt membership
    organization.


    ### NR#2005-018





    Editor's Note: Below is the full text of the comments delivered by
    Congressman Frank Pallone, Jr. (D-NJ) on the floor of the House of
    Representatives on March 1, 2005.

    STOP DENIAL OF ARMENIAN GENOCIDE BY TURKEY
    (House of Representatives - March 01, 2005)

    The SPEAKER pro tempore. Under a previous order of the House, the
    gentleman from New Jersey (Mr. Pallone) is recognized for 5 minutes.

    Mr. PALLONE: Mr. Speaker, Ambassador Evans, the U.S. Ambassador to
    Armenia, recently when meeting with Armenian Americans during visits
    in several U.S. cities referenced the Armenian genocide. In a series
    of public statements, Ambassador Evans who has studied Russian history
    at Yale and Columbia and Ottoman history at the Kennan Institute
    stated, "I will today call it the Armenian Genocide.''

    Mr. Speaker, Ambassador Evans' statements did not contradict
    U.S. policy, but rather articulated the same message that the Bush
    administration has sent to the public, the only difference in this
    case is that Ambassador Evans simply assigned the word to the
    definition that was already provided by President Bush as well as
    members of his administration.

    Breaking with a pattern on the part of the State Department of using
    alternative and evasive terminology for the Armenian genocide,
    Ambassador Evans pointed out that "no American official has ever
    denied it.''

    Now, Ambassador Evans was merely recounting the historical record
    which has been attested to by over 120 Holocaust and genocide scholars
    from around the world. In so doing, he was merely giving a name, the
    accurate description of genocide, to this very administration's
    statements on the issue.

    President Bush on April 24 of each of the last four years when
    commemorating the Armenian genocide used the textbook definition of
    genocide with words and phrases such as "annihilation'' and "forced
    exile and murder.'' Before him, President Reagan used the word
    "genocide'' in 1981 when describing the annihilation of over 1.5
    million Armenians.

    In the day of the genocide, our U.S. ambassador, then Henry
    Morgenthau, had the courage to speak out against the atrocities which
    he stated were a planned and systematic effort to annihilate an entire
    race.

    In conclusion, Mr. Speaker, I just want to add my name and my voice to
    all those who, like Ambassador Evans, know the truth and speak it
    plainly when discussing the Armenian genocide.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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