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  • ANKARA: Dink's murder a reminder of need for genocide recognition, U

    Turkish Daily News
    Jan 22 2007

    Dink's murder a reminder of need for genocide recognition, US
    Armenians say

    Monday, January 22, 2007
    UMÝT ENGÝNSOY
    WASHINGTON - Turkish Daily News


    U.S. Armenian organizations have called on President George W.

    Bush's administration to drop efforts to prevent Congress from formally
    recognizing the Armenian genocide, especially at a time when the
    assassination of prominent Turkish Armenian journalist Hrant Dink
    illustrates "Turkey's campaign of denial and intolerance."

    "In light of this terrible tragedy, it is all the more inappropriate
    for the administration to oppose congressional reaffirmation of the
    Armenian Genocide," said Hirair Hovnanian, chairman of the board of
    trustees for the Armenian Assembly of America (AAA), according to an
    AAA statement following Dink's killing. "In memory of Hrant Dink,
    we reaffirm our commitment to fight for universal reaffirmation
    of the Armenian genocide," he added. AAA Executive Director Bryan
    Ardouny also expressed his sorrow at Hrant's assassination, saying,
    "Sadly 92 years after the start of the Armenian genocide, Hrant Dink
    is now the latest victim of Turkey's outrageous campaign of denial
    and intolerance."~S[This] brutal murder serves as a wake up call to
    the United States and the entire international community to unite
    together in ending forever the Turkish government's denial of the
    Armenian genocide," said Armenian National Committee of America (ANCA)
    Executive Director Aram Hamparian. "Hrant Dink's murder is tragic proof
    that the Turkish government - through its campaign of denial, threats
    and intimidation against the recognition of the Armenian genocide -
    continues to fuel the same hatred and intolerance that initially led
    to this crime against humanity more than 90 years ago," said Hamparian
    in an ANCA statement.In a CNN-International interview, he said that
    Dink's murder was a terrible tragedy, but not entirely a surprise,
    "in light of the environment of escalating intolerance intimidation
    created by the Turkish government against those who openly acknowledge
    the Armenian genocide." The AAA and ANCA are the two largest U.S.

    Armenian organizations. Dink, 52, the editor of Turkish-Armenian
    newspaper Agos, was gunned down outside his newspaper's office in
    Istanbul on Friday, causing a huge wave of protests inside and outside
    Turkey. Police on Sunday detained a teenage suspect over the slaying.

    The journalist had stood trial several times for his public comments on
    the genocide, and was convicted last year for "insulting Turkishness"
    under a much criticized article of Turkey's penal code; he received a
    six-month suspended sentence.Pro-Armenian lawmakers in U.S. Congress
    are gearing up for the introduction of a fresh resolution in the House
    of Representatives classifying World War I-era killing of Armenians
    in the Ottoman Empire as genocide.

    Originally the resolution was expected to come last week, but its
    sponsors decided to wait for another week or so in an effort to
    maximize the number of legislators backing the measure in writing.

    The AAA said late last week that the resolution would be formally
    introduced in the House before the end of January.

    The Washington administration strongly condemned Dink's assassination,
    calling on Turkish authorities to bring those responsible to
    justice. But State Department officials said that official U.S. policy
    on the last century's Armenian killings in the last days of World
    War I was unchanged. Successive U.S. administrations have declined to
    qualify the Armenian killings as genocide so as not to alienate Turkey,
    also urging Congress to refrain from genocide recognition. However,
    the new Democratic leadership in the House of Representatives,
    including Speaker Nancy Pelosi, backs the genocide resolution's
    passage.U.S. Armenians want the resolution's approval in a full House
    floor vote before April 24, designated by U.S. presidents as the day
    of remembrance of the Armenian tragedy.

    --Boundary_(ID_okBjBDZwQFhPxPh8GoNoog)--
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