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Frank Pallone Castigated The United Nation For Postponing A Rwandan

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  • Frank Pallone Castigated The United Nation For Postponing A Rwandan

    FRANK PALLONE CASTIGATED THE UNITED NATIONS FOR POSTPONING A RWANDAN GENOCIDE EXHIBIT

    DeFacto Agency, Armenia
    May 4 2007

    In a powerful speech on the House floor, Congressional Armenian Caucus
    Co-Chair Frank Pallone (D-NJ) castigated the United Nations for first
    postponing and then rewording a Rwandan genocide exhibit in response
    to protests from the Turkish Government about its inclusion of a
    display citing the Armenian Genocide, reported the Armenian National
    Committee of America (ANCA).

    ANCA Executive Director Aram Hamparian expressed his gratitude to Frank
    Pallone. "We value Frank Pallone's leadership and share his principled
    view that the international community's efforts to prevent and punish
    genocide should be not reduced to the level acceptable to a Turkish
    government that is actively pursuing a campaign of genocide denial -
    both here in the United States and around the world."

    To remind, the controversy arose three weeks ago, when the United
    Nations first postponed the opening of an exhibit on the Rwandan
    Genocide, organized by the Aegis Trust, which made reference to
    the Armenian Genocide. Over the past several weeks, as the result
    of intense pressure from the Turkish government, the United Nations
    reworded the exhibit prior to its opening this week. The postponement
    was covered widely in the U.S. press, including articles by the
    New York Times and Associated Press. A New York Times editorial
    regarding the issue stated, "It's odd that Turkey's leaders have not
    figured out by now that every time they try to censor discussion of
    the Armenian genocide, they only bring wider attention to the subject
    and link today's democratic Turkey with the now distant crime. As for
    Secretary General Ban Ki-moon and his inexperienced new leadership
    team, they have once again shown how much they have to learn if they
    are to honorably and effectively serve the United Nations, which is
    supposed to be the embodiment of international law and a leading
    voice against genocide." The ANCA, Genocide Intervention Network,
    and Armenian Assembly called on the U.N. to reject Turkey's objections
    to the exhibit.

    Rep. Pallone, clearly incensed by the U.N. decision to reword the
    exhibit prior to its opening, remarked, in part, "How, exactly,
    are you educating the public about genocide, when you refuse to
    call the first genocide of the 20th century by its name? The word
    '~Rgenocide'~R was actually created as a way to describe the barbaric
    crimes inflicted against the Armenians between 1915 and 1923, but
    now the word cannot be used in an exhibit at the U.N. This is utterly
    ridiculous. . . Would you ever have an exhibit on Christianity without
    mentioning the birth of Christ?"
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