Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

ANC-SF: SF Elected Officials, HR Community Condemn Dink Assassinatio

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

  • ANC-SF: SF Elected Officials, HR Community Condemn Dink Assassinatio

    PRESS RELEASE

    Armenian National Committee - San Francisco Bay Area
    51 Commonwealth Avenue
    San Francisco, California 94118
    Phone: (415)387-3433
    Fax: (415)751-0617
    [email protected]
    www.ancsf.org

    Februa ry 12, 2007

    Contact: Matyous Senekerimian
    Telephone: (650)504-1111

    SAN FRANCISCO ELECTED OFFICIALS, HUMAN RIGHTS COMMUNITY CONDEMN DINK
    ASSASSINATION

    SAN FRANCISCO, CA - In response to the assassination of Armenian
    newspaper editor Hrant Dink, San Francisco city officials and Bay Area
    human rights organizations joined the Armenian Bay Area ANC in
    condemning the murder and calling on the United States government to
    reaffirm the Armenian Genocide.

    "Sadly, Hrant Dink's murder does not come as a surprise to us," said
    Roxanne Makasdjian, chairwoman of the Bay Area ANC, at the press
    conference on January 25th on the steps of San Francisco City Hall. "The
    ultra-nationalist and authoritarian forces which have created this
    atmosphere of fear, intolerance and hatred in Turkey, paved the way for
    Dink's assassination. These are the same forces which led to the
    Armenian Genocide, and that currently fuel the government's vast
    campaign of denial of the Armenian Genocide."

    Participating in the press conference were representatives from the
    offices of California State Senator Carol Migden and San Francisco Mayor
    Gavin Newsom, San Francisco City and County Board of Supervisors
    President Aaron Peskin and Supervisor Ross Mirkarimi, San Francisco City
    Attorney Dennis Herrera, representatives from the city's Human Rights
    Commission, Amnesty International, The Genocide Education Project, the
    Holocaust Center of Northern California, and the San Francisco Bay Area
    Darfur Coalition, and San Francisco Poet Laureate Jack Hirschman.

    "The United States State Department is speaking ironically with two
    heads," said Board of Supervisors President Aaron Peskin. "On the one
    hand, they are once again working to prevent the United States Congress
    from acknowledging the genocide of over a million and a half people...and
    at the same time...they're making these calls to virtually every
    municipality in the United States of America to pass a local resolution
    condemning holocaust denial in other countries."

    Dink was shot dead in front of his "Agos" newspaper office on January
    19. Thousands of people demonstrated in Istanbul for days following the
    tragedy chanting "we are all Hrant Dink we are all Armenians," and over
    100,000 mourners marched in Dink's funeral procession. However, reports
    of the police officers who arrested the youth alleged to have murdered
    Dink posing for photographs and a national trend to purchase white caps
    like the one the youth was wearing at the time of the murder also
    emerged, pointing to the deep-seeded anti-Armenian ultra-nationalist
    sentiment that pervades much of Turkish society to this day.

    "It's a tragedy that as a result of his death we've seen a voice
    silenced that was trying to bring truth to those that want to ignore
    history and deny what we all know occurred 90 years ago where 1.5
    million Armenians were exterminated [in] a senseless and brutal series
    of acts," noted San Francisco City Attorney Dennis Herrera. On behalf of
    the City of San Francisco, Herrera pledged to those attending the press
    conference: "We won't stand idly by and ignore history and promote
    intolerance and that we'll stand by you to ensure that the truth is
    told, that the work that Hrant Dink did is not in vein and we'll
    continue to spread that message to ensure that history and civility and
    tolerance is something that is promoted."

    Dink had faced multiple prosecutions under a Turkish law prohibiting
    "insulting Turkishness" for statements he made affirming the Armenian
    Genocide. His murder came amid a growing tide of official Turkish
    government pressure to silence him and on the eve of a renewed drive by
    the US State Department to block Congress from commemorating this crime
    against humanity.

    "Turkey should be held to answer," said Supervisor Ross Mirkarimi.
    "Their application to any kind of contemporary, to any kind of modern
    relationship economically, environmentally, and socially, should also be
    predicated in the fact that they recognize what occurred in 1915."

    The executive director of the Holocaust Center of Northern California,
    Leslie Kane remarked, "Hatred and intolerance are unacceptable. The
    denial of the Armenian genocide is unacceptable. Indifference is
    unacceptable. It is our duty to learn about the Armenian genocide and to
    confront denial wherever it exists. And it is our duty to educate our
    youth so that the Armenian genocide is never forgotten, and that
    genocides the world over are permanently halted."
Working...
X