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AAA: Assembly Expresses Concern over Exhibition 'Lessons from Rwanda

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  • AAA: Assembly Expresses Concern over Exhibition 'Lessons from Rwanda

    Armenian Assembly of America
    1140 19th Street, NW, Suite 600
    Washington, DC 20036
    Phone: 202-393-3434
    Fax: 202-638-4904
    Email: [email protected]
    Web: www.armenianassembly.org


    MEDIA ALERT
    April 13, 2007
    CONTACT: Karoon Panosyan
    E-mail: [email protected]



    Re: Assembly Expresses Concern over Exhibition 'Lessons from Rwanda' Due
    to Turkish Interference


    Washington, DC - The Armenian Assembly this week sent a letter of
    concern regarding the postponement of a UN exhibit on the Rwanda
    Genocide, 'Lessons from Rwanda,' due to an unwarranted interference by
    the mission of Turkey to the United Nations over a reference to the
    Armenian Genocide. The letter was sent to UN Secretary General Ban
    Ki-moon and Under-Secretary-General for Communications and Public
    Information Kiyotaka Akasaka.

    In the letter, Assembly Executive Director Bryan Ardouny expressed
    disappointment with the suspension of the exhibit, which included a
    description of the Armenian Genocide as a prototype of the international
    crimes requiring concerted response and prevention attributed to Raphael
    Lemkin, who authored the UN Convention on the Prevention and Punishment
    of the Crime of Genocide.

    The Assembly also applauded the decision of the exhibit's organizers to
    continue to resist the removal of the reference to the Armenian Genocide
    as a matter of principal and urged the UN support of the initial exhibit
    without qualifications.

    Attached is the full text of the Assembly's letter to the UN Secretary
    General which was also sent to the Under-Secretary-General for
    Communications and Public Information:


    April 11, 2007

    The Hon. Ban Ki-moon
    Secretary General
    United Nations
    First Avenue at 46th Street
    New York, NY 10017
    Phone: (212) 963-1234
    Fax: (212) 963-4879

    Ref: Postponement of the exhibition 'Lessons from Rwanda'

    Excellency,

    On behalf of the Armenian Assembly of America, an NGO with Special
    Consultative Status at the United Nations since 1999, I am writing to
    express my deepest concern over the postponement of a UN exhibit on the
    Rwanda Genocide due to unwarranted interference by the mission of Turkey
    to the United Nations.

    Aegis Trust, the organizer of the exhibit, is to be commended for taking
    the initiative to share the lessons of Rwanda, and of genocide in
    general, as the recurrence of this crime against humanity remains a
    global issue.

    I am, therefore, particularly dismayed to learn the exhibit was
    suspended over a reference to the Armenian Genocide attributed to
    Raphael Lemkin, the very author of the UN Convention on the Prevention
    and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide, who described the Armenian
    Genocide as a prototype of the international crimes requiring concerted
    response and prevention. This act of censorship undermines the very
    credibility of the UN commitment to responding to and preventing
    genocide.

    Genocide prevention is contingent on the ability of the international
    community to properly acknowledge and draw lessons from past genocides,
    to ensure that future situations with the potential of leading to such
    new crimes are identified early and prevented.

    Amnesia, selectivity and denial corrupt that effort, and disregard the
    standards of morality and political wisdom guiding this search for
    improved mechanisms and capabilities for collective action to prevent,
    and prosecute genocide.

    In recent years, interventions in Kosovo and Bosnia helped arrest ethnic
    cleansing in the Balkans, bringing stability and rehabilitation to the
    peoples in that region. The international response to Kosovo and Bosnia,
    however, came largely as a result of the bitter lesson learned in
    Rwanda, where the tragic inaction of the world community resulted in
    some of the most heinous crimes committed against innocent populations.

    The failure to stop the Armenian Genocide in the early part of the 20th
    century emboldened the Nazis two decades later to proceed with their
    plans for the 'Final Solution', leading to the Holocaust.

    The Armenian Genocide is a tragedy of seminal importance to the modern
    knowledge on, and understanding of, the phenomenon of genocide. The
    Armenian Assembly, therefore, applauds the decision of the organizers of
    the exhibit to continue to resist, as a matter of principle, removing
    the reference to the Armenian Genocide.

    We similarly urge you to support the exhibit as initially approved,
    without qualifications.

    Sincerely,

    Bryan Ardouny
    Executive Director

    The Armenian Assembly 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#2007-049
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