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AAA: Key Subcommittee Holds Hearing on The Darfur Accountability Act

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  • AAA: Key Subcommittee Holds Hearing on The Darfur Accountability Act

    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
    March 15, 2007
    CONTACT: Karoon Panosyan
    E-mail: [email protected]


    KEY SUBCOMMITTEE HOLDS HEARING ON THE DARFUR ACCOUNTABILITY ACT
    Armenian Assembly Submits Testimony



    Washington, DC - Today on Capitol Hill, a key House Subcommittee held
    a hearing on the Darfur Accountability and Divestment Act
    (H. R. 180). The bill, spearheaded by Representative Barbara Lee
    (D-CA), prohibits U.S. government contracts with companies that
    conduct business operations in Sudan, with the purpose of exerting
    economic pressure against the government of the Republic of Sudan for
    its human rights abuses and participation in the crime of genocide.

    The Armenian Assembly submitted testimony for the record in support of
    current efforts to bring legitimate pressure on the government, to
    affect change in its domestic and international conduct, toward
    addressing the dire humanitarian situation in Darfur, and preventing
    future violence in that region.

    The Assembly's testimony said in part, "Armenian-Americans, as
    descendants of the survivors of the Armenian Genocide, cannot remain
    indifferent to the suffering of the people of Darfur. Inaction is not
    an acceptable course of action." 

    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#2007-038





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

    Testimony of Bryan Ardouny
    Executive Director of the Armenian Assembly of America
    Before the
    House Financial Services Committee
    Subcommittee on Domestic and International Monetary Policy, Trade, and
    Technology

    March 20, 2007

    The Darfur Accountability and Divestment Act

    Chairman Guiterrez, Ranking Member Paul and Members of the
    Subcommittee, thank you for holding this important hearing on this
    compelling human rights issue. The Armenian Assembly of America is
    pleased to offer testimony in support of H.R. 180, the Darfur
    Accountability and Divestment Act of 2007.  We would also like to take
    this opportunity to commend the sponsor of the legislation,
    Congresswoman Barbara Lee.  H.R. 180 prohibits U.S. government
    contracts with companies that conduct business operations in Sudan,
    with the purpose of exerting economic pressure against the government
    of the Republic of Sudan for its role in, and responsibility for, the
    continuing grave abuses of human rights on the territory of its Darfur
    province, including the crime of genocide, and with a goal to stop the
    atrocities.

    This legislation sets forth a laudable precedent of taking practical
    action against the financial and economic interests of a regime
    engaged in the systematic killing of an entire people. The
    implementation of this measure will provide for important further
    steps toward identifying and undermining the financial nexus of the
    genocidal war in Darfur, and toward bringing long-sought stability,
    relief and rehabilitation to its people.

    The United States has a proud record of humanitarian intervention in
    various parts of the world, to save lives and bring relief to millions
    of people - victims of crimes against humanity.  In the early 20th
    century, the U.S. led the humanitarian effort to save the survivors of
    the Armenian Genocide.  In fact, the Honorable Henry Morgenthau,
    U.S. Ambassador to the Ottoman Empire from 1913 to 1916, organized and
    led protests by officials of many countries, among them the allies of
    the Ottoman Empire, against the Armenian Genocide. Ambassador
    Morgenthau explicitly described to the Department of State the policy
    of the Government of the Ottoman Empire as "a campaign of race
    extermination," and was instructed on July 16, 1915, by Secretary of
    State Robert Lansing that the "Department approves your procedure
    ... to stop Armenian persecution."

    Our interventions in Kosovo and Bosnia helped arrest the ethnic
    cleansing associated with these wars and helped bring stability and
    rehabilitation to the Balkans. International action in Kosovo and
    Bosnia, however, came largely as a result of the bitter lesson learned
    in an earlier crisis in Rwanda, where the tragic inaction of the world
    community led to the commission of some of the most heinous crimes
    against innocent populations.

    H.R. 180 answers in part the questions raised about Darfur by actor
    and activist Don Cheadle in his testimony in February of this year
    before the Senate Judiciary Subcommittee on Human Rights and the Law: 
    "I ask you what will be done - not what can be done, for that question
    has been asked ad nauseam and contains within it connotations of
    powerlessness and surrender.  What will be done is a very different
    query."

    The U.S. can and should do everything it can to stem the loss of life
    and end the cycle of genocidal violence. Nicholas Kristof, of The New
    York Times, who has written extensively, passionately and with
    clear-sighted pragmatism on this matter enumerated in his November 29,
    2005 editorial, "What's To Be Done About Darfur?" six policy
    recommendations (a copy of this article is attached) and concluded
    that "Finding the right policy tools to confront genocide is an
    excruciating challenge, but it's not the biggest problem.  The hardest
    thing to find is the political will."

    Armenian-Americans, as descendants of the survivors of the Armenian
    Genocide, cannot remain indifferent to the suffering of the people of
    Darfur. Inaction is not an acceptable course of action.  Therefore, we
    support the current effort to bring legitimate pressure on the
    government of Sudan, to affect change in its domestic and
    international conduct, toward addressing the dire humanitarian
    situation in Darfur, and preventing future violence in that region. 

    The Armenian Assembly of America strongly endorses the Darfur
    Accountability and Divestment Act, and urges all parties of good will
    to follow its recommendations in full.

    Thank you.







    What's to Be Done About Darfur? Plenty
    By NICHOLAS D. KRISTOF

    29 November 2005
    The New York Times
    Late Edition - Final

    Copyright 2005 The New York Times Company. All Rights Reserved.

    In 1915, Woodrow Wilson turned a blind eye to the Armenian
    genocide. In the 1940's, Franklin Roosevelt refused to bomb the rail
    lines leading to Auschwitz. In 1994, Bill Clinton turned away from the
    slaughter in Rwanda. And in 2005, President Bush is acquiescing in the
    first genocide of the 21st century, in Darfur.

    Mr. Bush is paralyzed for the same reasons as his predecessors. There
    is no great public outcry, there are no neat solutions, we already
    have our hands full, and it all seems rather distant and hopeless.

    But Darfur is not hopeless. Here's what we should do.

    First, we must pony up for the African Union security force. The
    single most disgraceful action the U.S. has taken was Congress's
    decision, with the complicity of the Bush administration, to cut out
    all $50 million in the current budget to help pay for the African
    peacekeepers in Darfur. Shame on Representative Jim Kolbe of Arizona
    -- and the White House -- for facilitating genocide.

    Mr. Bush needs to find $50 million fast and get it to the
    peacekeepers.

    Second, the U.S. needs to push for an expanded security force in
    Darfur. The African Union force is a good start, but it lacks
    sufficient troops and weaponry. The most practical solution is to
    ''blue hat'' the force, making it a U.N. peacekeeping force built
    around the African Union core. It needs more resources and a more
    robust mandate, plus contributions from NATO or at least from major
    countries like Canada, Germany and Japan.

    Third, we should impose a no-fly zone. The U.S. should warn Sudan that
    if it bombs civilians, then afterward we will destroy the airplanes
    involved.

    Fourth, the House should pass the Darfur Peace and Accountability
    Act. This legislation, which would apply targeted sanctions and
    pressure Sudan to stop the killing, passed the Senate unanimously but
    now faces an uphill struggle in the House.

    Fifth, Mr. Bush should use the bully pulpit. He should talk about
    Darfur in his speeches and invite survivors to the Oval Office. He
    should wear a green ''Save Darfur'' bracelet -- or how about getting a
    Darfur lawn sign for the White House? (Both are available, along with
    ideas for action, from www.savedarfur.org .) He can call Hosni Mubarak
    and other Arab and African leaders and ask them to visit Darfur. He
    can call on China to stop underwriting this genocide.

    Sixth, President Bush and Kofi Annan should jointly appoint a special
    envoy to negotiate with tribal sheiks. Colin Powell or James Baker III
    would be ideal in working with the sheiks and other parties to hammer
    out a peace deal. The envoy would choose a Sudanese chief of staff
    like Dr. Mudawi Ibrahim Adam, a leading Sudanese human rights activist
    who has been pushing just such a plan with the help of Human Rights
    First.

    So far, peace negotiations have failed because they center on two
    groups that are partly composed of recalcitrant thugs: the government
    and the increasingly splintered rebels. But Darfur has a traditional
    system of conflict resolution based on tribal sheiks, and it's crucial
    to bring those sheiks into the process.

    Ordinary readers can push for all these moves. Before he died, Senator
    Paul Simon said that if only 100 people in each Congressional district
    had demanded a stop to the Rwandan genocide, that effort would have
    generated a determination to stop it. But

    Americans didn't write such letters to their members of Congress then,
    and they're not writing them now.

    Finding the right policy tools to confront genocide is an excruciating
    challenge, but it's not the biggest problem. The hardest thing to find
    is the political will.

    For all my criticisms of Mr. Bush, he has sent tons of humanitarian
    aid, and his deputy secretary of state, Robert Zoellick, has traveled
    to Darfur four times this year. But far more needs to be done.

    As Simon Deng, a Sudanese activist living in the U.S., puts it: ''Tell
    me why we have Milosevic and Saddam Hussein on trial for their crimes,
    but we do nothing in Sudan. Why not just let all the war criminals
    go. When it comes to black people being slaughtered, do we look the
    other way?''

    Put aside for a moment the question of whether Mr. Bush misled the
    nation on W.M.D. in Iraq. It's just as important to ask whether he was
    truthful when he declared in his second inaugural address, ''All who
    live in tyranny and hopelessness can know: the United States will not
    ignore your oppression, or excuse your oppressors.''

    Mr. Bush, so far that has been a ringing falsehood -- but, please,
    make it true.
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