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Pallone, Knollenberg And Crowley Urge State Department To Clarify Mi

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  • Pallone, Knollenberg And Crowley Urge State Department To Clarify Mi

    PALLONE, KNOLLENBERG AND CROWLEY URGE STATE DEPARTMENT TO CLARIFY MISREPRESENTATION OF NAGORNO KARABAKH

    ArmRadio.am
    04.05.2007 10:41

    Congressional Armenian Caucus Co-Chairs Frank Pallone (D-NJ) and Joe
    Knollenberg (R-MI) were joined by House Foreign Affairs Committee
    Member Joe Crowley (D-NY) this week in urging the State Department
    to clarify inaccurate language in its 2006 human rights report that
    dramatically mischaracterizes the fundamental realities of the Nagorno
    Karabakh conflict, reported the Armenian National Committee of America
    (ANCA).

    "Armenian Americans appreciate the leadership of Armenian Caucus
    Co-Chairmen Joe Knollenberg and Frank Pallone and Congressman Joe
    Crowley in seeking clarification from the Department of State
    concerning its patently inaccurate and entirely unprecedented
    misrepresentation of Armenia as an occupier of Nagorno Karabagh
    and Azerbaijani territory," said ANCA Executive Director Aram
    Hamparian. "We look forward to the State Department's timely response
    to their questions and to learning of the steps that the Secretary
    intends to take to rectify the damage that this ill- advised and
    destructive misrepresentation has already caused to the peace process."

    The controversy began earlier this year with the inclusion, for the
    first time, of language in the Armenia and Azerbaijan sections of the
    State Department's 2006 Country Reports on Human Rights Practices,
    which asserted that Armenia is occupying Nagorno Karabakh and
    Azerbaijani territory. While the State Department initially made a
    correction to this text, albeit not a fully accurate one, it later
    reverted to its original wording following public threats by Azerbaijan
    to cancel bilateral security talks in Washington, DC.

    During a May 2nd House Foreign Affairs Subcommittee hearing on
    the human rights report, Congressman Crowley, a senior and well-
    respected member of the panel, submitted the following question to
    the State Department's witness, Assistant Secretary for Human Rights
    Barry Lowenkron: "The statement that 'Armenia continues to occupy
    the Azerbaijani territory of Nagorno-Karabakh and seven surrounding
    Azerbaijani territories' in the 2006 State Department Human Rights
    report on Armenia has created significant controversy among the US,
    Azerbaijan, Armenia and NK. Can you confirm that the references to
    Armenia's forces and NK's status do not reflect the facts on the
    ground and are contrary to current U.S. policy?"

    Rep. Crowley went on to "urge that this factually incorrect statement
    be removed forthwith" from the report in an effort to preserve its
    integrity.

    In a separate letter to Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice, issued on
    Thursday, May 3rd, Reps. Pallone and Knollenberg expressed "strong
    concerns regarding inaccuracies in the recent series of changes
    to the Armenia section of the 2006 Country Reports on Human Rights
    Practices." They argued that, "in addition to the troubling precedent
    set by allowing a foreign state to shape the assessments of our human
    rights report, we are deeply disturbed that the State Department's
    mischaracterization of the Nagorno Karabakh conflict is inaccurate,
    unprecedented, and counter-productive to our government's goal of
    actively promoting constructive engagement in the peace negotiations
    in the region."

    The Armenian Caucus Co-Chairs specifically called on Secretary Rice to
    publicly clarify that the report's language describing Armenia as an
    occupier of Azerbaijani territory and Nagorno Karabakh is inaccurate
    and does not reflect US foreign policy; the United States views the
    Nagorno Karabakh conflict as fundamentally about the self-determination
    of the people of Nagorno Karabakh; and this misrepresentation would
    not appear in future reports or other official documents.
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