Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Arkansas step ahead of Congress on genocide recognition

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

  • Arkansas step ahead of Congress on genocide recognition

    Arkansas News, AR
    Oct 14 2007


    Political Notebook: Arkansas step ahead of Congress on genocide
    recognition
    Sunday, Oct 14, 2007

    By Rob Moritz and Aaron Sadler
    Stephens Media


    In contrast to the quickening controversy in Congress over
    legislation to condemn the killings of Armenians in the early 20th
    century, an action by Arkansas' governor denouncing the deaths drew
    little notice six years ago.

    Turkey has recalled its U.S. ambassador and vehemently objected to a
    bill approved Wednesday by a House panel to declare the Armenian
    deaths at the hands of Ottoman Turks as genocide.

    The Bush administration also opposes the bill, worried it would
    fracture a fragile relationship with Turkey, a Middle East ally.

    Then-Gov. Mike Huckabee on March 7, 2001, signed a proclamation in
    Arkansas declaring a "Day of Remembrance of the Armenian Genocide."

    The proclamation was requested by the Armenian National Committee of
    America.

    The document stated that at least 1.5 million Armenians were killed
    between 1915 and 1923, and that the Armenian people have not received
    reparations for their losses. It also said the current Turkish
    government "engages in a campaign of 'denial of the Armenian
    Genocide.'"

    Leo Stepanian of Fort Smith, the son of Armenian immigrants, said he
    requested Huckabee sign the recognition in advance of Armenian
    Martyrs Day on April 24 of that year.

    In what was perhaps an attempt to "keep the peace," as Stepanian
    said, in Arkansas, Huckabee also proclaimed April 23 as "Turkish
    Heritage and Children's Day" and April 24 as a "Day of Remembrance of
    the Turkish and Armenian Tragedy."

    Stepanian, indignant over the other proclamations even six years
    later, said: "It was not a tragedy. It was a genocide."

    Huckabee is now a Republican candidate for president.

    "The 2001 proclamations were like many proclamations requested by
    Arkansas citizens and there was no intention to make a political
    point at all," said Alice Stewart, Huckabee's press secretary, on
    Friday.

    The proclamations were also signed by then-Secretary of State Sharon
    Priest. When contacted Friday, Priest said she did not recall the
    details of the gubernatorial proclamation, one of hundreds issued by
    Huckabee during his decade in office.

    Stepanian said 39 other states had condemned the Turks' actions as
    genocide.

    "It took me about five or six months to get Gov. Huckabee to do
    this," said Stepanian, who said his mother lost four brothers and his
    father nearly his entire family in the killings.

    The Turkish government denies that Armenians were killed in an
    organized genocide, but instead said the deaths were because of
    massive problems related to the collapse of the Ottoman Empire.

    "I'm not blaming the present Turkish government, but they continually
    deny the Ottoman Turks did something like this," Stepanian said.

    The bill in Congress cleared the House Foreign Affairs Committee and
    advances to the full House.

    http://www.arkansasnews.com/archive/2007/1 0/14/WashingtonDCBureau/343639.html
Working...
X