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ANCC Condemns UN Censorship

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  • ANCC Condemns UN Censorship

    Armenian National Committee of Canada
    130 Albert St., Suite 1007
    Ottawa, ON
    KIP 5G4
    Tel. (613) 235-2622 Fax (613) 238-2622
    E-mail:[email protected]
    www .anccanada.org

    PRESS RELEASE
    April 16, 2007
    Contact: Kevork Manguelian


    Tel. (613) 235-2622


    ANCC Condemns UN Censorship Ottawa-The Armenian National Committee of Canada
    (ANCC) sent a letter to the United Nations Secretary-General Ban Ki-Moon
    condemning his Undersecretary-general for Communications and Public
    Information Kiyotaka Akasaka's decision to delay the opening of Aegis Trust'
    s "Lessons from Rwanda" exhibition at the organization's headquarters in New
    York City. The exhibition, to commemorate the 13th anniversary of the Tutsi
    Genocide in Rwanda, would have been inaugurated by Mr. Ban Ki-Moon on Monday
    9th April. To recall the historical continuity of the genocide processes,
    one of the exhibition display panels said: "After the First World War,
    during which one million Armenians were killed in Turkey, the Polish lawyer
    Raphaël Lemkin urged the Society of Nations to recognize barbarian crimes as
    international crimes." ANCC president Jean Meguerditchian said in his letter
    that he considered the UN under-secretary decision's to cancel the
    exhibition "giving in to the Turkish Government's revisionist point of view
    and to blatant political blackmail. a fatal mistake for the UN as the moral
    compass of the world." "The UN is sending a twisted message to all those
    who in the future would contemplate the elimination of a nation or a race,"
    ANCC president's letter pointed out.

    Meguerditchian called on the secretary-general and the UN not to "be
    selective in their condemnation or the punishment of the guilty. Otherwise,
    your organization would become an accomplice to genocide denial, the last
    act of all genocides. Your misconceived action would set a precedent for the
    future denial of the Holocaust and other genocides," he said. The ANCC calls
    on the UN to reverse its decision and relaunch the exhibition without any
    change from its original content. "The ANCC would like to take this
    opportunity to commend the Aegis Trust for its principled, moral and ethical
    stand to uphold their initial decision and not cave in to Turkey's
    representatives and to UN officials by deleting the Armenian Genocide
    reference from the exhibit," said Aris Babikian, the executive director of
    the ANCC. -30-

    ANCC LETTER TEXT



    April 10, 2007

    Your Excellency Ban Ki-moon Secretary-General United NationsOne United
    Nations PlazaNew York, NY 10017 Dear Secretary General,
    Canadians at large and Canadian-Armenians in particular are dismayed with
    Undersecretary-general for communications and public information Kiyotaka
    Akasaka's decision to delay the opening of Aegis Trust's "Lessons from
    Rwanda" exhibition at the United Nations in New York City.

    At a time when the UN and the international community is pledging to take
    effective and resolute measures to eradicate the scourge of genocide, Mr.
    Akasaka is shutting down an important communication medium that would help
    prevent genocides and ethnic cleansing by educating viewers about learning
    from the mistakes of the past.

    Your action to obscure any mention of the Armenian Genocide is particularly
    ironic since it was your organization that requested Raphael Lemkin to draft
    your Charter on Genocide prevention. We are confident that had Mr. Lemkin
    were alive today he would have been outraged by your decision. What you have
    conspired to do is an insult to Mr. Lemkin and to all who have worked and
    have devoted their lives to prevent such heinous crimes as genocide from
    reoccurring.

    By giving in to the Turkish Government's revisionist point of view and to
    blatant political blackmail, the UN has undermined its own credibility. Such
    a decision is a fatal mistake for the UN as the moral compass of the world.

    The words of James Smith, chief executive of the Aegis Trust were true and
    eloquent: "If we can't get this right, it undermines all the values of the
    U.N. It undermines everything the U.N. is meant to stand for in terms of
    preventing (genocide) . . . You can't learn the lessons from history if
    you're going to sweep all of that history under the carpet. And what about
    accountability? What about ending impunity if you're going to hide part of
    the truth? It makes a mockery of all of this." Mr. Smith's words summed up
    the moral and ethical justification to reopen the exhibit as it was
    originally planned.

    By canceling the exhibit or by deleting any reference to the Armenian
    Genocide, the UN is sending a twisted message to all those who in the future
    would contemplate the elimination of a nation or a race.

    In contrast, by upholding its initial decision, the UN and the international
    community can send a clear and unequivocal message to the despots of the
    world that the international community will not tolerate such vile treatment
    of our fellow human beings and will not allow the denial machine to operate
    with impunity.

    Genocide prevention is the most important issue facing mankind. The UN can
    not be selective in its condemnation or punishment of the guilty. Otherwise,
    your organization would become an accomplice to genocide denial, the last
    act of all genocides. Your misconceived action would set a precedent for the
    future denial of the Holocaust and other genocides.

    We have already seen that a number of countries are learning from the
    Turkish Government's denial policy. Encouraged by the impunity granted to
    Turkey, they have launched genocides in Rwanda and in Darfur.

    The UN cannot allow Hitler's contemptuous remark: "Who remembers nowadays
    the Armenians?" to haunt humanity forever. Respectfully, Jean
    MeguerditchianPresident



    The ANCC is the largest and the most influential Canadian-Armenian
    grassroots political organization. Working in coordination with a network of
    offices, chapters, and supporters throughout Canada and affiliated
    organizations around the world, the ANCC actively advances the concerns of
    the Canadian-Armenian community on a broad range of issues.

    Regional Chapters

    Montréal - Laval - Ottawa - Toronto - Hamilton - Cambridge - St.
    Catharines - Windsor - Vancouver
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