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ANCA: Rep. Pallone Urges UN to Stand Up to Turkey's Genocide Denial

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  • ANCA: Rep. Pallone Urges UN to Stand Up to Turkey's Genocide Denial

    Armenian National Committee of America
    1711 N Street NW
    Washington, DC 20036
    Tel. (202) 775-1918
    Fax. (202) 775-5648
    Email [email protected]
    Internet www.anca.org

    PRESS RELEASE

    FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
    April 20, 2007
    Contact: Elizabeth S. Chouldjian
    Tel: (202) 775-1918

    PALLONE URGES U.N. TO STAND UP AGAINST TURKEY'S DENIALS

    Unless the United Nations takes a stand against
    Turkey's denial, its value to the international
    community is greatly undermined.
    -- Rep. Frank Pallone (D-NJ)

    WASHINGTON, DC - In remarks delivered yesterday on the floor of the
    U.S. House of Representatives, Congressional Armenian Caucus Co-
    Chairman Frank Pallone (R-MI) sharply criticized the United Nations
    for caving in to Turkey's pressure to block a long-awaited exhibit
    on the Rwanda Genocide because one of its display panels included a
    reference to the Armenian Genocide, reported the Armenian National
    Committee of America (ANCA).

    The New Jersey legislator stressed, in his remarks to his House
    colleagues, that, "As a representative of the international
    community, the United Nations must be the leading voice against
    genocide. That includes all genocides, including the Armenian
    Genocide. Unless the United Nations takes a stand against Turkey's
    denial, its value to the international community is greatly
    undermined." Speaking to the dangerous precedent set by genocide
    denial, he noted that, "Turkey's policy of denying the Armenian
    genocide gives cover to those who perpetrate genocide everywhere.
    If the cycle is to end, there must be accountability for genocide."

    The controversy surrounding Turkey's objections to the Rwanda
    exhibit, which had been organized by the Aegis Trust, has been
    covered extensively in the international media, and was the subject
    of a powerful New York Times editorial criticizing the United
    Nations for caving in to Turkey's objections.

    The ANCA, on April 11th, called upon the United Nations to reject
    Turkey's historically unfounded and patently immoral objections,
    and to reverse its recent decision to close the Rwanda Genocide
    exhibit. In a letter addressed to Kiyotaka Akasaka, Under-
    Secretary-General for Communications and Public Information, ANCA
    Chairman Ken Hachkian expressed the "Armenian American community's
    profound disappointment over [the] decision to allow the Turkish
    government to delay - and quite possibly cancel - a United Nations
    exhibit intended to help ensure that the lessons of the Rwanda
    Genocide are used to help prevent future genocides."

    The full text of Congressman Pallone's remarks is provided below.

    #####

    Remarks by Congressman Frank Pallone (D-NJ)
    April 19, 2007

    UNITED NATIONS MUST BE LEADING VOICE AGAINST GENOCIDE

    Mr. PALLONE. Mr. Speaker, I am strongly disappointed that United
    Nations Secretary General Ban Ki-moon has given in to Turkey's
    demands and cancelled an exhibit commemorating the 13th anniversary
    of the Rwanda genocide.

    Turkey, as usual, was offended by references in the exhibit to the
    Armenian genocide in Turkey during World War I.

    As a representative of the international community, the United
    Nations must be the leading voice against genocide. That includes
    all genocides, including the Armenian genocide. Unless the United
    Nations takes a stand against Turkey's denial, its value to the
    international community is greatly undermined.

    As the 92nd anniversary of the Armenian genocide approaches,
    Turkey's recent behavior is yet another example of why it is so
    important for Congress to reaffirm the Armenian genocide by passing
    H. Res. 106. Over the past year, Turkey has pulled out of NATO
    exercises after France affirmed the Armenian genocide. They have
    threatened U.S. troops in Iraq if the U.S. reaffirms the Armenian
    genocide. And now they are preventing the U.N. from honoring the
    victims of the Rwandan genocide. Their denial has no limits.

    The United States must never allow crimes against humanity to pass
    without remembrance and condemnation. As a society, we cannot
    effectively work to end crimes against humanity without recognizing
    those that have previously occurred.

    Far too many times we have seen the horrible consequences of
    ignoring genocide. Even after unprecedented humanitarian efforts by
    Americans, the Armenian genocide had become the "forgotten
    genocide," and in 1939 Adolf Hitler exclaimed to his generals to
    have no mercy by stating, and I quote, "who, after all, speaks
    today of the annihilation of the Armenians?

    In 1994 world leaders witnessed the Hutu leaders of Rwanda kill
    800,000 Rwandans, and did nothing. Today we sit idly by as militias
    massacre innocent citizens in Darfur; and, again, world leaders do
    virtually nothing. There are lessons to be learned by history.
    Unfortunately, Turkey has undermined the intent of the U.N. exhibit
    to help teach the lessons of genocide inaction.

    Turkey's policy of denying the Armenian genocide gives cover to
    those who perpetrate genocide everywhere. If the cycle is to end,
    there must be accountability for genocide. Genocide denial is the
    last stage of genocide.

    Mr. Speaker, when will today's world leaders stop letting Turkey
    deny its past? It is bad enough for Turkey to threaten and
    prosecute its own citizens for discussing these crimes, but to
    threaten to retaliate against countries that acknowledge the
    Armenian genocide is appalling and unacceptable. As a global
    community we must collectively stand for historical truth and
    recognize the worst humanitarian crimes that we have seen.

    #####
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