Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

CR: Maloney - 92nd Commemoration of Genocide

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

  • CR: Maloney - 92nd Commemoration of Genocide

    Congressional Record: April 24, 2007 (Extensions)]
    [Page E840]
    >From the Congressional Record Online via GPO Access [wais.access.gpo.gov]
    [DOCID:cr24ap07-13]




    NINETY-SECOND COMMEMORATION OF THE ARMENIAN GENOCIDE

    ______


    speech of

    HON. CAROLYN B. MALONEY

    of new york

    in the house of representatives

    Monday, April 23, 2007

    Mrs. MALONEY of New York. Mr. Speaker, as a proud member of the
    Congressional Caucus on Armenian Issues, and the representative of a
    large and vibrant community of Armenian Americans, I rise to join my
    colleagues in the sad commemoration of the Armenian Genocide.
    Today we declare to people living in every corner of our globe that
    the Turkish and American governments must finally acknowledge what we
    have long understood: that the unimaginable horror committed on Turkish
    soil in the aftermath of World War I was, and is, an act of genocide.
    The tragic events that began on April 24, 1915, which are well known to
    all of us, should be part of the history curriculum in every Turkish
    and American school. On that dark April day, more than 200 of Armenia's
    religious, political and intellectual leaders were arrested in
    Constantinople and killed. Ultimately, more than 1.5 million Armenians
    were systematically murdered at the hands of the Young Turks, and more
    than 500,000 more were exiled from their native land.
    On this 92nd anniversary of the beginning of the genocide, I join
    with the chorus of voices that grows louder with each passing year. We
    simply will not allow ice planned elimination of an entire people to
    remain in the shadows of history. The Armenian Genocide must be
    acknowledged, studied, and never, ever allowed to happen again.
    Last year I joined with my colleagues in the Caucus in urging PBS not
    to give a platform to the deniers of the genocide by canceling a
    planned broadcast of a panel which included two scholars who deny the
    Armenian Genocide. This panel was to follow the airing of a documentary
    about the Armenian Genocide. Representative Anthony Weiner and I led a
    successful effort to convince Channel Thirteen in New York City to pull
    the plug on these genocide deniers. The parliaments of Canada, France,
    and Switzerland have all passed resolutions affirming that the Armenian
    people were indeed subjected to genocide. The United States must do the
    same. I will not stop fighting until long overdue legislation
    acknowledging the Armenian Genocide finally passes. I am hopeful that
    this resolution will make it to the Floor for a vote before the full
    House of Representatives this Congress.
    An acknowledgment of the genocide is not our only objective. I remain
    committed to ensuring that the U.S. government continues to provide
    direct financial assistance to Armenia. Over the years, this aid has
    played a critical role in the economic and political advancement of the
    Armenian people. I have joined with my colleagues in requesting
    military parity between Armenia and Azerbaijan in the FY08 Foreign
    Operations Appropriations bill.
    We also have requested an adequate level of economic assistance for
    Armenia and assistance to Nagorno-Karabakh. Legislation passed in the
    109th Congress and signed into law to reauthorize the Export-Import
    Bank included important language prohibiting the Bank from funding
    railroad projects in the South Caucasus region that deliberately
    exclude Armenia. American tax dollars should not be used to support
    efforts to isolate Armenia, and these provisions would prevent that by
    ensuring that U.S. funds are not used to support the construction of a
    new railway that bypasses Armenia. A railway already exists that
    connects the nations of Turkey, Georgia, and Azerbaijan, but because it
    crosses Armenia, an expensive and unnecessary new railway had been
    proposed. Allowing the exclusion of Armenia from important
    transportation routes would stymie the emergence of this region as an
    important East-West trade corridor. It is in our economic and security
    interests to ensure that the aggression against Armenia comes to an
    end.
    On this solemn day, our message is clear: the world remembers the
    Armenian genocide, and the governments of Turkey and the United States
    must declare--once and for all--that they do, too.

    ____________________
Working...
X