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Report on House of Commons Meeting held on 22 June 2007

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  • Report on House of Commons Meeting held on 22 June 2007

    Armenia Solidarity
    British Armenian All Party Parliamentary Group
    Nor Serount Publications
    The Armenian Genocide Trust

    Report on House of Commons Meeting on
    Genocide Denial and the UK Government's "Ethical Foreign Policy"
    Held on 22 June 2007

    Tel 07876561398 or 07718982732
    e-mails : [email protected], [email protected]
    norserount@btconnec t.com [email protected]


    The meeting was convened on the day that a new Prime Minister took up
    the seals of office and in anticipation of a subsequent cabinet
    reshuffle. Its purpose was to focus on the present UK government policy
    as it affected both the Armenian Genocide recognition and the current
    genocide in Darfur in the hope that it could become more effective and
    ethical.

    The meeting was sponsored by David Drew MP and chaired by John Bercow
    MP. The chairman gave an overview of the terrible events in Darfur and
    the lack of effective international action to stop the carnage. He
    proposed that the inability to clearly condemn earlier genocides was one
    factor that allowed more than 60 repetitions of such crimes against
    humanity in the essentially genocidal 20th century.

    Ruth Barnet, a survivor of the Holocaust who works with genocide
    survivors, stated that a diaspora remains troubled by genocide until it
    is recognised by the perpetrator. Denial consists of attempts to cover
    the evidence and to argue the events never happened. This worsens the
    psychological impact as true mourning cannot commence and survivors who
    carry the burden of memory cannot live their lives to their full
    potential. These feelings spread down the generations and are carried
    until the proper acknowledgement is given. The murdered ancestors are a
    loss to the whole of humanity, not just to their own people. A 'genocide
    footprint' can measure the destruction of humanity just as a carbon
    footprint the destruction of the environment. Each time there is no
    protest at genocide, a footprint is made on the human soul for the loss
    of the living and the unborn. What is needed for sufficient people to
    protest so as to make a difference to the direction of governments and
    other state organisations.

    Dr James Smith, Chief Executive of the Aegis Trust, brought out the
    startling similarities between the Armenian Genocide and Darfur even
    though these are over 90 years apart. Both have a victimising power
    that claims to be responding to a threat from a minority in the context
    of external conflict (1st World War, fight against terrorism), the use
    of irregular forces against civilians coordinated by government forces,
    the use of privation and violence as a means of extermination, good
    communication of the unfolding events to the outside world who response
    is high on rhetoric and low on action. In both cases, the perpetrators
    have not been held effectively to account, and denial continues despite
    the wealth of information to the contrary from reliable independent
    sources. The Armenian Genocide can be seen as a good prototype for
    denialism and Darfur follows the Turkish model of obfuscation and
    dissemination of confusion. Even today, Turkish denialism is rampant
    having temporarily closed a New York exhibition on the Rwandan genocide
    (because of a single reference to the Armenian Genocide) and the
    activities of TARC (Turkish Armenian Reconciliation Committee) aimed at
    diverting attention from the real issues. Denial legitimises the
    original murders and avoids addressing prevention. It must be met
    head-on.

    Yet today there is an International Criminal Court which may have to
    wait decades before it is given the powers to prosecute the indicted of
    Darfur. Meanwhile, the Sudanese authorities still benefit from
    significant oil revenues using it to buy the hardware for repression,
    continue to control the irregular forces that brutalise civilians and
    the much talked about no fly zone has not been implemented. One wonders
    if the world had acted in concerted effort to stop the killing of
    Armenians in 1915, the 20th century may have been a different place.

    Turkish society is beginning to change with some of the new generation
    becoming more aware of the past and challenging radical
    ultra-nationalistic views. The UK government is not helping this
    process by supporting the position of the Turkish government. The Aegis
    Trust would welcome an enquiry not only into the impact of the British
    foreign policy in failing to identify and stop the killing of Armenians
    during the 1st World War but also the behaviour of the British
    government in all subsequent genocides such as Rwanda and the Bosnia.
    Until we really understand the failings and lessons of these events, and
    bring the decision makers to account for the failure that leads to
    unnecessary mass murder of innocents, we will not change the future. We
    do have to look at history and combat denial to apply these lessons.

    HE Dr Vahe Gabrielyan, Ambassador of the Republic of Armenia, applauded
    the convergence of many organisations to focus on all genocides and the
    relationship between them. The outcome of the recognition of past
    genocides should be not only be the moral and ethical tribute to the
    survivors but also lead to the prevention of potential future
    repetition. Because the Armenian Genocide has not been condemned,
    further appalling events could not be stopped. There should be a united
    front against all genocides across all nations backed by huge
    cross-border and cross-people pressure on all governments. Only then
    will governments, including the UK, act to the required measures.

    The government of Armenia with its people adds voice to the
    international community to stop the atrocities in Darfur. The lessons
    from the Armenian Genocide should be input to this initiative so as to
    achieve effective action.
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