Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Bush Says World Must Not Forget,Avoids Using Proper Term Of Genocide

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Bush Says World Must Not Forget,Avoids Using Proper Term Of Genocide

    BUSH SAYS WORLD MUST NOT FORGET, AVOIDS USING PROPER TERM OF GENOCIDE IN ANNUAL APRIL 24 STATEMENT

    Noyan Tapan
    Armenians Today
    Apr 25 2006

    WASHINGTON, APRIL 25, NOYAN TAPAN - ARMENIANS TODAY. In his annual
    April 24th commemoration statement, President Bush described the
    "mass killings" and "exile" of 1.5 million Armenians noting that
    this was a "tragedy for all humanity and one that we and the world
    must never forget." The statement was delivered following strongly
    worded letters from more than 200 House and Senate leaders last week,
    asking the President to properly acknowledge the genocide in his annual
    statement. "While the President once again employed the dictionary
    definition of Genocide, we are deeply disappointed that he did not
    properly characterize the attempted annihilation of our people as
    genocide," said the Armenian Assembly of America Board of Trustees
    Chairman Hirair Hovnanian. "The President had an opportunity to build
    on his 2000 campaign statement as well as the words of President Ronald
    Reagan who properly acknowledged the Armenian Genocide," Hovnanian
    continued. "Today, as we mark the 91st anniversary of these crimes,
    genocide deniers continue their morally bankrupt campaign against
    the truth as evidenced by the recent federal lawsuit initiated in the
    state of Massachusetts," said AAA Executive Director Bryan Ardouny. "In
    the face of this ongoing denial, the United States must make a firm
    stand for the truth," Ardouny continued. Bush's statement, as in years
    past, encourages dialogue between Turks and Armenians and states that
    "The analysis by the International Center for Transitional Justice
    (ICTJ), while not the final word, has made a significant contribution
    toward deepening our understanding of these Events." The ICTJ report,
    issued in 2003, reached the conclusion 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." The President's
    reference to ICTJ serves as an implicit acknowledgment of the Armenian
    Genocide. The Administration has clarified its policy on the crime
    of genocide and recently stated its views on the need to prevent
    its repetition. The President's National Security Strategy (NSS),
    which was released last month, notes that "the world needs to start
    honoring a principle that many believe has lost its force in parts
    of the international community in recent years: genocide must not be
    tolerated. It is a moral imperative that states take action to prevent
    and punish genocide. History teaches that sometimes other states will
    not act unless America does it part." "America did act in response to
    the first genocide of the twentieth century and Armenian-Americans
    are forever grateful for the leading role of the United States in
    attempting to stop the Armenian Genocide and for aiding those who
    survived," Hovnanian added. "It is now time for the U.S. to continue
    this proud chapter of American history and formally and irrevocably
    reaffirm the Armenian Genocide," he continued. "By so doing, the
    U.S. will articulate the same message it has already sent to the
    public - that genocide must not be tolerated."
Working...
X