Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

ANCA Alerts Congress to Growing Anti-Armenian Sentiment in Turkey

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

  • ANCA Alerts Congress to Growing Anti-Armenian Sentiment in Turkey

    Armenian National Committee of America
    1711 N Street NW
    Washington, DC 20036
    Tel. (202) 775-1918
    Fax. (202) 775-5648
    Email [email protected]
    Internet www.anca.org

    PRESS RELEASE
    September 18, 2007
    Contact: Elizabeth S. Chouldjian
    Tel: (202) 775-1918

    ANCA ALERTS CONGRESS TO GROWING ANTI-ARMENIAN SENTIMENT IN TURKEY

    -- Armenian Genocide Resolution Author, Rep. Adam Schiff Decries
    Mounting Turkish Repression of Armenian Minority

    WASHINGTON, DC - The Armenian National Committee of America (ANCA),
    this week, alerted Members of Congress to the growing wave of anti-
    Armenian sentiment orchestrated by the Turkish government as part
    of its drive to block legislation before the U.S. House and Senate
    recognizing the Armenian Genocide.

    The dramatic increase in pressure against the Armenian community
    coincides with Turkey's growing frustration over its inability -
    either directly or through its highly paid lobbyists - to arrest
    the growing bipartisan momentum toward the adoption of the Armenian
    Genocide Resolution (H.Res.106 / S.Res.106).

    Patriarch of Constantinople to Visit Washington, DC:

    With the number of House cosponsors clearing the 50% mark and the
    recent reversal of the Anti-Defamation Leagues longstanding refusal
    to recognize the Armenian Genocide, the Turkish government has
    resorted to a series of increasingly strident - even desperate -
    measures. Amid these efforts by Ankara comes a visit to
    Washington, DC, this week, by His Beatitude Patriarch Mesrob II,
    Patriarch of the Armenian Patriarchate of Constantinople, who - as
    a matter of Turkish law and under the intense pressure applied
    against Turkey's remaining Armenian Christians - has been
    constrained from speaking openly about the Armenian Genocide. The
    Patriarch has recently been subjected to a number of high profile
    death threats, including, this July, a plot to assassinate both him
    and Greek Orthodox Patriarch Bartholomew I by a criminal
    organization of retired officers, known as the Union of National
    Forces.

    The Patriarch, who - in a sharp departure from traditional Armenian
    religious practice - will apparently not be visiting with local
    Armenian Churches or the city's faithful, is scheduled to speak at
    a series of public policy engagements on Capitol Hill, Georgetown
    University, and elsewhere in the nation's capital. Among these are
    an Iftar dinner on Capitol Hill hosted by the Rumi Forum, a Turkish
    American organization with a stated mission to "foster interfaith
    and intercultural dialogue." A second, titled, "The Impasse
    Between Armenians and Turks Must Be Broken," will be at Georgetown
    University, again sponsored by the Rumi Forum, along with
    Georgetown's Woodstock Theological Center.

    Rep. Adam Schiff, the lead author of the Armenian Genocide
    Resolution, commented on the growing pressure on Turkey's remaining
    Armenians, noting that, "In order to perpetuate its campaign of
    denial, Turkey seeks to intimidate all Armenians worldwide, but
    especially the Armenians in Turkey who must live with daily
    threats. It is a criminal offense to merely speak about the
    Armenian Genocide, let alone advocate for the passage of the
    Armenian Genocide Resolution before the Congress. The editor of
    the last Armenian-language newspaper in Turkey, Hrant Dink, was
    assassinated for writing about the genocide this year, and a
    popular video now being circulated in Turkey celebrates his killers
    and threatens Armenians."

    "It should come as no surprise then that the Bishop of the Armenian
    community in Turkey, who states that he is under daily threat,
    cannot speak about the genocide or support any efforts to recognize
    the genocide including those efforts in our country. To do so would
    be to place a target on his head and threaten his community even
    further. What is a disturbing surprise, however, is the
    exploitation of the vulnerable Armenian community in Turkey by
    opponents of the resolution."

    The ANCA, in a letter circulated yesterday to Congressional
    offices, explained that, "Patriarch Mutafyan - like the leaders of
    all religious minorities in Turkey - lives in constant fear of acts
    of discrimination and retribution by a Turkish government that
    actively persecutes those who speak freely on human rights and
    other 'sensitive' issues. As a virtual hostage, the Patriarch -
    whose life has been threatened on many occasions - will, as has in
    the past, be forced to follow the Turkish government's line. It is
    truly shameful that Turkey has resorted to using naked coercion -
    cynically taking advantage of the concern of Patriarch Mesrob for
    the safety of his flock - in a last ditch bid to block the adoption
    of the Armenian Genocide Resolution."

    YouTube Video Glorifying Dink Assassination:

    A highly popular online Turkish video, posted on the video sharing
    service YouTube last week, praising the assassination of Turkish
    Armenian journalist Hrant Dink, illustrates the type of dangerous
    and hate-filled environment that Patriarch Mutafyan will return to
    after his orchestrated visit to the United States.

    The video, which was originally taken down from YouTube but which
    has resurfaced in a number of different forms and has been viewed
    by hundreds of thousands in Turkey, depicts images of the Dink's
    killing with a lyric refrain, "If a person betrays the country, he
    is finished off." It goes on to show "patriotic" photos of
    confessed assassin Ogan Samast glorified in front of the Turkish
    flag. Video lyrics also include the chilling warning: "The only
    good Armenian or Kurd is a dead Armenian or Kurd." Similar video
    of Turkish police proudly posing with Samast shortly following his
    January incarceration for the murder was leaked to Turkish press
    and made headlines worldwide.

    Turkish Armenian newspaper editor Hrant Dink was gunned down in
    broad daylight on January 19th in front of his Istanbul "Agos"
    newspaper office. Dink had been prosecuted multiple times under
    Turkey's repressive "Article 301" laws, which criminalize reference
    to the Armenian Genocide for "insulting Turkishness." Since his
    murder, Turkey's writers and historians, including Nobel Laureate
    Orhan Pamuk, Taner Akcam and Elif Shafak who have spoken honestly
    about this crime against humanity, have been the target of death
    threats.
Working...
X