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Armenian Assembly Mourns Loss Of Illinois Congressman Henry Hyde

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  • Armenian Assembly Mourns Loss Of Illinois Congressman Henry Hyde

    ARMENIAN ASSEMBLY MOURNS LOSS OF ILLINOIS CONGRESSMAN HENRY HYDE

    armradio.am
    30.11.2007 10:43

    The Armenian Assembly of America mourns the loss of former Congressman
    Henry J. Hyde (R-IL), an advocate for U.S. reaffirmation of the
    Armenian Genocide, who believed that recognition of the truth was in
    the best interest of the United States, Turkey and Armenia.

    In September 2005, the Armenian Genocide resolution (H. Res. 316)
    was overwhelmingly approved by the influential House International
    Relations Committee thanks in part to strong support from Committee
    Chairman Hyde. The resolution called upon the President "to accurately
    characterize the systematic and deliberate annihilation of 1,500,000
    Armenians as genocide."

    "The argument has been made that these resolutions, if adopted, will
    be harmful to [the] interests [of the United States] by undermining
    our relationship with Turkey, which all acknowledge to be one of
    our allies....But I do not believe that these resolutions will harm
    that relationship," Hyde said. "They merely recognize the fact that
    the authorities of the Ottoman Empire deliberately slaughtered the
    majority of the Armenian community in that empire. Denial of that fact
    cannot be justified on the basis of expediency or fear that speaking
    the truth will do us harm."

    "I believe it is in the interest of the United States and of Turkey
    and Armenia both that we take the lead in dealing with this paralyzing
    legacy.

    And we must start with the truth," he added. "For there is no
    possibility that this problem can ever be overcome if we seek to
    ground any solution on silence and forgetting."

    "Congressman Hyde clearly recognized that Turkey's ongoing denial
    campaign in this day and age is both inexplicable and unacceptable,"
    said Bryan Ardouny, executive director of the Armenian Assembly. "He
    understood that remembrance and recognition of this fact of
    world history would go a long way in preventing the recurrence of
    genocide. Congressman Hyde's passing is a great loss. We extend our
    sympathies to his family and friends."

    In 2003, when the International Relations Committee considered
    President Bush's Millennium Challenge Account, Chairman Hyde championed
    the new foreign assistance program saying, "we should embrace the idea
    of increasing U.S. economic assistance but only to those countries
    that demonstrate a commitment to human rights, democratic ideals and
    practices, and investment in people." That same year, he spearheaded
    legislation establishing the government-to-government assistance
    program. Armenia became one of the first of 16 countries to qualify
    and later receive a five-year, $235 million grant from the Millennium
    Challenge Corporation.

    In response to the acute shortage of food, medical supplies and fuel in
    Armenia in the early 1990s, Congressman Hyde joined his congressional
    colleagues in urging Secretary of State Warren Christopher to take
    the necessary steps to address the grave situation. The congressional
    appeal urged the Administration to increase U.S. assistance, press
    the government of Turkey to provide reliable transit route for
    humanitarian supplies to Armenia and increase U.S. efforts to end
    the Azeri blockade so that vital humanitarian assistance and energy
    can flow unimpeded to the Armenian people.
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