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Armenian Ambassador To U.S. Responds To Washington Post Article

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  • Armenian Ambassador To U.S. Responds To Washington Post Article

    ARMENIAN AMBASSADOR TO U.S. RESPONDS TO WASHINGTON POST ARTICLE

    HULIQ, NC
    Oct 30 2007

    6vote The Washington Post Wednesday published a letter by the Armenian
    Ambassador to the United States, Tatoul Margarian in response to
    an article entitled "Armenians Who Need Help Today," published on
    October 15.

    The Washington Post article, written by Fred Hiatt, urged the Armenian
    Diaspora to work as hard for democracy in Armenia as for congressional
    recognition of the genocide.

    "Imagine what the Armenian Diaspora might have accomplished had it
    worked as hard for democracy in Armenia as it did for congressional
    recognition of the genocide Armenians suffered nearly a century ago,
    said Hiatt in his article. "It's even possible that modern Armenia
    would be as democratic as modern Turkey."

    The same day Armenian Ambassador to the United States, Tatoul
    Margarian, responded by sending a letter to the Washington Post. The
    letter said Fred Hiatt's "Armenians Who Need Help Today" leads
    the debate over recognition of the Armenian genocide in the wrong
    direction.

    The Ambassador mentioned that the difficulties that Armenia has
    encountered during its successful democratic and economic transition
    are not taboo subjects for genuine discussion and members of our
    Diaspora have always provided economic assistance and been actively
    involved in issues such as the environment, civil and political
    liberties, and security. This activism, he added, has not come at
    the expense of the quest for genocide recognition, a moral duty for
    all Armenians and all of humanity.

    "In addition, the Turkish state's denial of the Armenian genocide
    translates into its continuing refusal to normalize relations with
    Armenia, leading us to believe that our only choice is to pursue both
    historical and contemporary justice," Margarian said.

    "The fact that Armenia's democratic transition is not yet complete
    should not prevent Armenia from condemning crimes against humanity,
    especially a genocide that killed 1.5 million of our ancestors, took
    their historical homeland and destroyed a millenniums-old culture,
    The Ambassador's letter said. "The suggestion that Armenia's routine
    transition problems and the genocide carried out by Ottoman Turkey
    can be weighed on the same scale is ill-founded, to say the least,"
    the Ambassador wrote.
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