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ANCA: New York Times Reverses Policy on Armenian Genocide

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  • ANCA: New York Times Reverses Policy on Armenian Genocide

    Armenian National Committee of New York
    PO Box 693
    Woodside, NY 11377
    [email protected]
    www.anca.org

    PRESS RELEASE
    April 17, 2004

    Contact: Tony Vartanian
    [email protected]

    NEW YORK TIMES REVERSES POLICY ON ARMENIAN GENOCIDE

    -- ANCA Welcomes Historic Move by Newspaper to Properly
    Characterize Armenian Genocide

    WOODSIDE, NY - In a move aimed at reaffirming its past record on
    the first genocide of the 20th Century, the New York Times has
    lifted its long-standing policy against the use of the term
    "Armenian Genocide," reported the Armenian National Committee (ANC)
    of New York.

    According to a news release by the International Association of
    Genocide Scholars, The New York Times revised guideline for
    journalists states that "after careful study of scholarly
    definitions of 'genocide,' we have decided to accept the term in
    references to the Turks' mass destruction of Armenians in and
    around 1915." The policy goes on to note that "the expression
    'Armenian genocide' may be used freely and should not be qualified
    with phrasing like 'what Armenians call,' etc."

    The New York Times guidelines continue, noting that, "by most
    historical accounts, the Ottoman empire killed more than one
    million Armenians in a campaign of death and mass deportation aimed
    at eliminating the Armenian population throughout what is now
    Turkey." Finally it advises journalists that "while we may of
    course report Turkish denials on those occasions when they are
    relevant, we should not couple them with the historians' findings,
    as if they had equal weight."

    "We welcome this decision taken by the New York Times as a
    meaningful step toward ending official U.S. complicity in the
    Turkish government's campaign to deny the Armenian Genocide," said
    ANC of New York Chairperson Tony Vartanian. "We appreciate the
    tremendous contribution of all organizations, historians and
    activists who, over the years, worked to provide the necessary
    information to the New York Times so that they can make this
    informed, but long overdue decision. Armenian Americans feel a
    tremendous sense of pride that the Times - the paper of record - no
    longer actively participates in the denial of this great crime
    against humanity."

    The New York Times recently released guidelines returns the
    newspaper to its policy of accurate reporting established during
    the years of the Armenian Genocide. According to Peter Balakian's
    New York Times best-seller "The Burning Tigris," the Times
    "published 145 articles on the Armenian massacres in 1915 alone (an
    article about every two and a half days)." The term "genocide"
    would not be coined for similar crimes against humanity until the
    1940's.

    For more than two decades, the ANC, working with its network of
    grassroots activists around the country, initiated several
    nationwide campaigns to press The New York Times to end its
    practice of dismissing the Armenian Genocide as simply an Armenian
    historical claim. During an ANCA campaign in 2002, activists
    specifically asked the Times:

    ** What standard does the New York Times use in the
    application of the word genocide in its news stories?

    ** What is the New York Times specific policy on the use of
    the term genocide in its coverage of the Armenian Genocide?

    Armenian Weekly editor Jason Sohigian has written extensively to
    the New York Times, working to provide timely information and input
    to the editorial staff.

    Last year, the ANC of Eastern Massachusetts spearheaded the
    successful effort to urge the Boston Globe to suspend its policy
    against the use of the term "genocide" when referring to the
    Armenian Genocide. The decision was made in July 2003, setting a
    precedent for its parent company - The New York Times - to
    reexamine its policy.

    The Armenian National Committee is the largest Armenian American
    grassroots political organization in New York and nationwide. The
    ANC actively advances a broad range of issues of concern to the
    Armenian American community.

    #####
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