Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

AAA: Senator Durbin Holds Hearing On "Genocide and The Rule Of Law"

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

  • AAA: Senator Durbin Holds Hearing On "Genocide and The Rule Of Law"

    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

    PRESS RELEASE
    FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
    February 7, 2007
    CONTACT: Karoon Panosyan
    E-mail: [email protected]


    SENATOR DURBIN HOLDS HEARING ON "GENOCIDE AND THE RULE OF LAW"
    Armenian Assembly Calls for Strengthening International Safeguards
    and for Educational Reforms in Turkey

    Washington, DC - The Armenian Assembly on Monday called on Congress to
    strengthen international legal protections against genocide and its
    denial in testimony submitted for a Senate hearing on "Genocide and the
    Rule of Law."

    "We commend Chairman Durbin and his colleagues for establishing this
    historic subcommittee, and echo Chairman Durbin's praise for full
    Committee Chairman Patrick Leahy's vision in creating this
    Subcommittee," said Executive Director Bryan Ardouny.
    "Assistant Democratic Leader Durbin has a long-standing record in
    support of human rights issues, including affirmation of the Armenian
    Genocide," continued Ardouny.

    The Assembly's testimony, submitted to the first-ever Senate Committee
    on the Judiciary Subcommittee on Human Rights and the Law, noted that
    the law was silent in 1915 when hundreds of thousands of Armenians were
    sent on death marches, subjected to massacres and starved to death in
    the parched desert.

    The testimony said in part: "from the time of its founding in 1972, the
    Armenian Assembly supported Senator William Proxmire's unremitting
    campaign to persuade the Senate to approve implementing legislation
    enabling the U.S. adoption of the U.N. Genocide Convention."

    The Assembly encouraged the Subcommittee to actively generate and
    introduce new mechanisms to better protect potential victims from future
    genocides and to improve the U.S. record on genocide prevention.

    "[A]ffirmation of history by our lawmaking institutions is the best hope
    available to respond to the power of denial with the decency of the law
    and the principles that protect and defend basic human rights," stated
    Assembly Executive Director Bryan Ardouny.

    The Assembly's testimony also noted that "Turkey is the only country in
    the world where speaking the truth about the Armenian Genocide is
    regarded as a prosecutable offense," and pointed out that Hrant Dink,
    the Armenian journalist and citizen of Turkey who was assassinated, had
    been prosecuted under Article 301 of the Turkish penal code, which
    restricts citizens of Turkey from challenging their government's
    distortions and denials of historical facts.

    The Assembly also called upon Turkey to pay serious attention to the
    plea of the Armenian patriarch of Istanbul, His Beatitude Mesrop II
    Mutafyan, who called for an end of the stigmatization of Armenians by
    the Turkish educational system and for the reform of school curricula.
    Ardouny stated that, "The application of law should not be limited to
    prosecution after the crime has been committed. The laws on public
    education are where prejudice is averted and the environment of
    tolerance first is instilled."

    The hearing, which was presided over by Chairman Richard Durbin (D-IL),
    also included remarks by Department of Justice Deputy Assistant Attorney
    General Sigal Mandelker, Canadian Senator Lieutenant General Romeo A.
    Dallaire, actor and activist Don Cheadle and American University
    Professor Diane F. Orentlicher. Some 14 organizations also submitted
    testimony, including the Armenian National Committee of America, Amnesty
    International and Save Darfur, among others.

    The Armenian Assembly of America 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#2007-028


    Attached is the full text of the Armenian Assembly's Testimony:

    The Armenian Assembly of America
    Testimony Regarding
    Genocide and the Rule of Law
    Submitted by Bryan Ardouny, Executive Director
    Human Rights and the Law Subcommittee of the
    Senate Judiciary Committee
    February 5, 2007

    Mr. Chairman, Ranking Member Coburn and members of the Subcommittee, the
    Armenian Assembly of America is pleased to offer testimony at today's
    hearing on "Genocide and the Rule of Law."

    The Armenian Assembly of America applauds the creation of the first-ever
    Subcommittee on Human Rights and the Law and commends Chairman Durbin
    for making this hearing on "Genocide and the Rule of Law" a priority. It
    is a testament to the importance that the United States places on the
    respect for fundamental human rights. The work of the Subcommittee in
    examining past crimes against humanity to draw lessons learned to
    prevent future atrocities is further testament to this principle. It is
    clear that the existing international legal framework as well as the
    U.S. record on genocide prevention is insufficient. We hope this
    Subcommittee actively generates and introduces new mechanisms to better
    protect potential victims from future genocides and to improve the U.S.
    record on genocide prevention. The Armenian Assembly and the entire
    Armenian-American community stand ready to help in these efforts.

    As we reflect on the continuing problem of genocide, certainly the 20th
    century stands out as one marred by mass killings on a scale never
    before seen in history. From the Armenian Genocide at the turn of the
    century, which the world easily forgot but for Adolf Hitler, who
    infamously invoked it by saying: "Who, after all, speaks today of the
    annihilation of the Armenians?" as he unleashed the horrors of World War
    II and the Holocaust - to the crimes of the Khmer Rouge in Cambodia, the
    atrocities in Rwanda, and now in the 21st century, the decimation of the
    population of Darfur, the trail of crimes against humanity painfully
    continues.

    The absence of international law to hold the perpetrators of the
    Armenian Genocide accountable was dishearteningly evident at the end of
    World War I. But for a brief series of domestic trials in Turkey, which
    were too soon discontinued, the organizers of the Armenian atrocities
    avoided responsibility and escaped judgment. This very lack of
    accountability to one's own nation and to the international community
    for having committed mass atrocities propelled a true giant in the
    defense of human rights, Raphael Lemkin, to ask why a murderer may be
    charged for a single crime, while a mass murderer is excused. It would
    take one more genocide for mankind to find the sense of outrage that is
    now embodied in the U.N. Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of
    the Crime of Genocide, of which the United States is a signatory.

    In fact, the Armenian Assembly of America was part of the coalition of
    organizations headed by the American Bar Association advocating for the
    U.S. adoption of the U.N. Genocide Convention. From the time of its
    founding in 1972, the Armenian Assembly supported Senator William
    Proxmire's unremitting campaign to persuade the Senate to approve
    implementing legislation enabling the U.S. adoption of the Convention.
    The Armenian Assembly had the honor then of giving testimony in
    committee and in writing, as part of the commitment of the
    Armenian-American community to doing its share in creating greater
    awareness of the danger of genocide.

    The law was silent in 1915 when Armenians by the hundreds of thousands
    were sent on death marches, subjected to massacres, and starved to death
    in the parched desert. While the law was silent, leading voices of
    conscience in the United States and elsewhere around the world were far
    more vocal. Newspapers across America carried chilling accounts under
    headlines such as "Armenians Are Sent to Perish in the Desert" and
    "1,500,000 Armenians Starve" (New York Times, August 18, and Sept. 5,
    1915, respectively). In turn, America's diplomatic representatives in
    the Ottoman Empire performed an extraordinary service by recording their
    eyewitness accounts and sending them to the Department of State and the
    President. Their horror and indignation prompted U.S. Ambassador Henry
    Morgenthau, with the approval of the State Department, to appeal to
    American humanitarians to respond to the crisis in the Middle East. At a
    time when relief agencies were non-existent, the U.S. Senate called upon
    the American people to rescue the survivors of the Armenian Genocide. A
    resolution adopted by the Senate on February 9, 1916, reads in part:

    Whereas the people of the United States of America have learned with
    sorrow of this terrible plight of great numbers of human beings [several
    hundreds of thousands of Armenians in need of food, clothing, and
    shelter] and have most generously responded to the cry for help whenever
    such an appeal has reached them: Therefore be it

    Resolved by the Senate (the House of Representatives concurring), That,
    in view of the misery, wretchedness, and hardships which these people
    are suffering, the President of the United States be respectfully asked
    to designate a day on which the citizens of this country may give
    expression to their sympathy by contributing to the funds now being
    raised for the relief of the Armenians in the belligerent countries.

    Further, in 1919 the Senate incorporated the agency called Near East
    Relief for the express purpose of providing for the care of orphans and
    widows and to promote the welfare of those rendered destitute by "the
    cruelties of men."

    Against the background of overwhelming evidence that would have been
    sufficient to prosecute any number of the criminals involved in the
    Armenian Genocide, today the Armenian-American community instead
    struggles against the unremitting forces of denial that want to bury the
    past, distort history, and erase the memory of this crime against
    humanity. To quote Professor Deborah Lipstadt of Emory University, who
    personally confronted the problem in court, "Denial of genocide is the
    final stage of genocide; it is what Elie Wiesel has called 'a double
    killing.' " It seeks to demonize the victims and rehabilitate the
    perpetrators.

    Descendents of the survivors of the Armenian Genocide in their
    respective countries of residence have appealed to their governments to
    stop this denial and to re-affirm the historic record on its occurrence.
    For them, as for us in the Armenian Assembly of America, the affirmation
    of history by our lawmaking institutions is the best hope available to
    respond to the power of denial with the decency of the law and the
    principles that protect and defend basic human rights.

    Denial also subverts the essence of the rule of law. It is a form of
    violation, a violation of the right to honor the memory of the victims
    of genocide without facing the abuses and indignity of denial. For this
    very reason the Armenian-American community with every Congress has
    urged legislators to re-affirm this history, and most especially the
    very honorable American record of humanitarian response to the Armenian
    Genocide. Therefore, we remain deeply concerned that the Department of
    State, despite the very evidence in its own archives, has consistently
    opposed Congressional resolutions that properly identify the mass
    killing of the Armenians as genocide. This policy is not consistent with
    the American record on human rights and flies in the face of past and
    current policy to expose those who commit atrocities and to bring them
    to justice.

    Most regrettably, Congress and the Department of State need to be
    reminded that denial is not a problem of semantics alone. A mere two
    weeks ago a terrible crime was committed in Turkey that reminded the
    world how high can be the price of fighting denial.

    Turkey is the only country in the world where speaking the truth about
    the Armenian Genocide is regarded as a prosecutable offense. The
    infamous Article 301 of the Turkish penal code coercively restricts the
    freedom of expression and has been invoked in dozens of cases against
    peaceful law-abiding citizens of Turkey who have taken a public position
    challenging their government's distortions and denials of historical
    facts.

    The new Turkish penal code, adopted by the Turkish legislature, as part
    of its accession process to the European Union, and intended to
    introduce reforms in Turkey, has clearly been shown to be a step
    backward instead of progress forward.

    It is extremely unfortunate that one of the most prominent figures of
    the Armenian community in Turkey was prosecuted under Article 301. The
    Turkish courts dismissed all other cases filed under Article 301 with
    the exception of Hrant Dink, one of the most vocal advocates of human
    rights and tolerance in Turkey.

    For mere mention of the Armenian Genocide he was hauled to court and
    found guilty in 2005. His very public prosecution in the courts and in
    the Turkish media made him a target of extremists. Now he is dead,
    assassinated in front of the office of the newspaper he founded, a
    newspaper he published in Armenian and Turkish to foster understanding
    and dialogue among those two communities.

    In a country of 71 million people, the representative of the Armenian
    minority (approximately 60,000) in Turkey, which numbers less that a
    tenth of one percent of the population, the remnant of a people once
    counted at over 2 million, happens to be the individual meted punishment
    and public condemnation for speaking about events in history that
    occurred more than 90 years ago.

    Clearly, the law in Turkey violates the very spirit of what the law is
    supposed to be, the instrument by which society protects its citizens,
    the guarantee by which fundamental freedoms are protected, the
    institution that looks after the safety and security of everyone of its
    constituents.

    Here the rule of law has been turned upside down by Article 301, abused
    by prosecutors and judges to impose an authoritarian conformity adhering
    to extreme and intolerant forms of nationalism, and applied in a manner
    that targeted the bravest champion of democratic freedoms to the point
    of exposing him and delivering him as the victim of a ruthless assassin.


    Article 301 of the Turkish penal code has become a painful reminder of
    the abuses of the law that allowed genocide to be committed in 1915,
    much as it became the propellant that added the name of so distinguished
    a journalist, a figure honored everywhere for his courage and decency,
    to the list of victims of hate, racism, chauvinism, and extremism.

    Many in Turkey condemned the murder of Hrant Dink. A reported 100,000
    marched at his funeral, an outpouring of grief over the demise of one
    man and a statement of public concern for the ominous dangers
    threatening democracy and free speech in Turkey. Yet just weeks after
    this act of solidarity, a different set of pictures has emerged from
    Turkey, of police officers lining up to be photographed with the
    assailant (a Turkish flag held between his hands), of crowds in stadiums
    holding banners and chanting slogans with messages opposed to the
    peaceful rally that carried Hrant Dink to his gravesite.

    Hrant Dink did not break the law, as we understand the law. He believed
    in the freedom of speech, and he wanted to speak freely. He believed in
    the freedom of the press, and he wanted to publish freely. He believed
    in the freedom of expression, and he wanted Turks and Armenians to
    communicate without rancor. He needed the protection of the law, but did
    not receive it. Hrant Dink did not violate the law. Rather, the law
    failed Hrant Dink.

    The rule of law means more than enforcement. It means respecting the
    spirit of the law as the law was meant to be. By the murder of a single
    person, or the slaughter of one and a half million, genocide and the
    denial of genocide offends the spirit of the law and calls for justice,
    whether from two weeks ago, two years ago, or 92 years ago.

    The Armenian Assembly of America calls upon Congress to consider and
    introduce measures that strengthen international legal protections
    against genocide and to do the same regarding the denial of genocide.

    The Armenian Assembly of America also calls upon Turkey to pay serious
    attention to the plea of the Armenian patriarch of Istanbul, His
    Beatitude Mesrop II Mutafyan, who called for an end of the
    stigmatization of Armenians by the Turkish educational system and the
    reform of school curricula.

    The application of the law should not be limited to prosecution after
    the crime has been committed. The laws on public education are where
    prejudice is averted and the environment of tolerance first is
    instilled. The U.N. Genocide Convention did not call for punishment
    alone. It aspired for the prevention of genocide. Prevention, whether of
    a single crime, or atrocities on the scale of genocide, starts with
    education. So does the rule of law.


    ###

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
Working...
X