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ANC: Denial stands in the way of the truth

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  • ANC: Denial stands in the way of the truth

    Armenian National Committee of Canada
    Comité National Arménien du Canada
    130 Albert St., Suite/Bureau 1007
    Ottawa, ON
    KIP 5G4
    Tel./Tél. (613) 235-2622 Fax/Téléc. (613) 238-2622
    E-mail/courriel:national.office@anc-canad a.com
    www.anccanada.org

    April 24, 2008

    Contact Roupen Kouyoumjian

    Ken Hachikian is the chairman of Armenian National Committee of America.

    ********

    Denial stands in the way of the truth And without the truth, we can
    never have justice

    Sudan is today using Turkish arms to kill the people of Darfur.


    I am truly honored to join with you today in offering our respect, our
    thanks, and our admiration to the people and government of Canada.

    As we are all aware, Canada's recognition of the Armenian Genocide
    both holds profound meaning for the Armenian nation and has sent a
    powerful message to the government of Turkey as well as to those who
    condone Turkey's campaign of denial by looking the other way.


    We also know that, in an important way, this principled stand says at
    least as much about the people of this great nation than it does about
    either the Turks or the Armenians.

    The acknowledgement of this crime by your Parliament and Prime
    Minister Stephen Harper - in the face of fierce foreign threats and
    intimidation and no end of political pressure - speaks to Canada's
    courage in matching her actions with her ideals.

    It also speaks to her special role as a worldwide leader in advancing
    human rights.

    And it speaks to her commitment to the heavy lifting of building the
    international consensus behind the moral imperative that genocide must
    be opposed unconditionally - whenever and wherever it is perpetrated.

    What is at stake here goes beyond the recognition of a Turkish crime
    and the justice long denied the Armenian nation.

    Canada's leadership, in speaking truthfully about the Armenian
    Genocide, defines the type of nation her citizens deserve and the kind
    of world we all seek.


    Common humanity

    In taking this step toward justice for the Armenian Genocide, Canada
    served many noble aims, first and foremost among them the cause of our
    collective conscience, our shared morality, and our common humanity as
    citizens of the international community.


    Just as the spirit of the Genocide Convention is diminished every time
    a government compromises its opposition to genocide for reasons of
    political expediency, so too, in equal measure, is the vitality of
    this landmark treaty strengthened every time a country, such as
    Canada, takes a principled stand in its defense. All the more so when
    doing the right thing comes at a cost, as sadly we all know, in the
    form of threats from the Turkish government.

    Prevention of future genocides

    In recognizing the Armenian Genocide, Canada helps prevent future
    genocides, because the denial of such horrific crimes - left
    unchallenged - only fosters an environment in which similar atrocities
    will be committed again and again. It only emboldens future tyrants
    to consider the wholesale slaughter of innocents as a tool of power,
    secure in the knowledge that political leverage will shield them from
    responsibility for their sins.

    As Armenians, victims of genocide, we are owed a profound debt, but
    also carry a special burden - much like the Jews, Pontians, Assyrians,
    Cambodians, Rwandans, and, unfortunately, too many others - to bear
    witness to the suffering visited upon our people. To make sure that
    the horrors of our past are not repeated against any other people,
    anywhere in the world.

    As we watch the suffering in Darfur, and the lies being told by
    Sudan's brutal regime to hide their crimes, it is increasingly clear
    that a vital part of ending the cycle of genocide is rejecting the
    denial of past genocides.

    The proof is there for all too see. Consider the very recent chilling
    news of the growing military partnership between Sudan and Turkey.
    The recent red-carpet, three day visit to Turkey by Sudan's president.

    Sudan is today using Turkish arms to kill the people of Darfur.

    Sudan is today using the same tactics - including starvations and
    deportations - used by the Ottoman Empire against Armenians in 1915.

    And Sudan is today already employing the same hateful methods used by
    Turkey to deny the Armenian Genocide.

    Promotion of Armenia's security

    In recognizing the Armenian Genocide, Canada added a measure to
    Armenia's security, by signaling to the world that the Republic of
    Armenia cannot be safe and will never be fully secure as long as she
    is bordered by an unrepentant and over-armed perpetrator of genocide
    against the Armenian people.

    Denial, at its heart, does far more than threaten our past. It truly
    threatens our future.


    Support for Turkey's reform and rehabilitation

    And finally, in recognizing the Armenian Genocide, Canada performed a
    true service to the Turkish people, a people who deserve better than
    to be represented by a government that settles differences through
    violence. A country that destroyed its Armenian population. Invaded
    and still occupies Cyprus. Wiped out over 3,000 Kurdish villages over
    the past generation. And, just in the last few months, twice invaded
    northern Iraq.

    The people of Turkey deserve better than a government that pursues
    aggression, at home and abroad, promotes intolerance as state policy,
    and then buries the inevitable problems that result under a growing
    mountain of lies.

    If reformers in Turkey are to realize their nation's democratic
    aspirations, their hopes for European integration, a vital and
    necessary step in this process will be recognizing the Armenian
    Genocide and, in dialogue with the key stakeholders of the Armenian
    nation, reaching a just and appropriate resolution of this crime.

    Sadly, we are today, far from this reality. Denial stands in the way
    of the truth. And without the truth, we can never have justice.

    Far from repentant, Turkey is escalating its campaign of denial.

    Turkey continues to crack down on even the mere discussion of the
    Armenian Genocide. Look at the events of the recent past:

    Article 301 and other provisions of the newly adopted Turkish criminal
    code establish prison terms of up to 3 years for even the mere mention
    of the Armenian Genocide.

    The prosecution, official intimidation, and subsequent brutal
    assassination in January 2007 of journalist Hrant Dink stand as
    evidence of Turkey's escalating attacks on those who speak honestly
    about the Armenian Genocide.

    The prosecution of Orhan Pamuk - a Nobel Prize-winning author -
    demonstrates Turkey's efforts to silence even its most prominent
    citizens who speak about the Armenian Genocide.

    Turkey's Minister of Education, as a formal state policy, requires
    that schoolchildren be taught to deny the Armenian Genocide.

    In all of these areas, and more, Turkey persists in its denials.

    But not as before.

    In years past, Turkey outright lied about the facts of the Genocide,
    but, today, we see that it has failed to convince anyone beyond its
    borders or outside its payroll of its false version of history.

    More recently, Turkey sought to make the moral case AGAINST condemning
    genocide, a flawed argument from the start, and one that was doomed to
    fail.

    Today, stripped of any academic trappings or moral cover, Turkey has
    been reduced to making threats, outright warnings, and unvarnished
    attempts at interference in and intimidation towards the democracies
    of the West.

    Behind every attack, every criticism, every attempt to delay, derail,
    or defeat recognition, lies a Turkish threat.

    To close a base.

    To cut off a supply line.

    To restrict air-space.

    To recall an Ambassador.

    To leave NATO or cancel arms contracts.

    The list goes on. Turkey today, like the South Africa of the 1980s,
    finds itself defending a morally bankrupt policy, unable to convince
    anyone on the merits of their case, but trying desperately to use the
    last of its political capital to force the world to look the other
    way. This policy failed in South Africa - and Apartheid fell. It
    will fail too in Turkey, and the walls of denial will come crumbling
    down.

    In Washington, Turkey's high-priced lobbyists serve as little more
    than messenger-boys, shuttling Ankara's latest threats to
    decision-makers in the White House, State Department, and Pentagon.


    These attempts to intimidate are the same as the ones being made in
    Brussels and around the world. They were the same as the ones made
    right here in Ottawa, until the people and government of this proud
    land stood tall, and rejected these threats as a matter of principle.

    To your credit, you told Turkey and the world that other countries -
    even allies - will never be allowed to compromise Canada's
    unconditional stand against all instances of genocide.

    In the United States, we are not there yet.

    Turkey's threats - its overstated warnings of the direst consequences
    - continue to impose a `gag-rule' on the United States.

    Turkey has exported its Article 301, which bans discussion of the
    Armenian Genocide, to the United States, exercising a veto over what
    the world's most powerful nation can and cannot say about human
    rights.

    This veto and gag rule should not and will not stand.

    My visit here reminds me of the words of the Reverend Martin Luther
    King, Jr. who said that, `the arc of the moral universe is long but it
    bends toward justice.'

    I come here with a profound respect for the Canadian Armenian
    community, a great admiration for the Canadian people and government,
    and a renewed devotion to the hard work of justice.


    We very much appreciate your support. In return, I personally commit
    to you, in the memory of our sacred ancestors, that we will persevere
    in our efforts to realize justice and never give up our struggle.

    Thank you.

    *****

    The ANCC is the largest and the most influential Canadian-Armenian
    grassroots political organization. Working in coordination with a
    network of offices, chapters, and supporters throughout Canada and
    affiliated organizations around the world, the ANCC actively advances
    the concerns of the Canadian-Armenian community on a broad range of
    issues.

    ------

    Le CNAC est l'organisation politique canadienne-arménienne la plus
    large et influentielle. Collaborant avec une série de bureaux,
    chapitres et souteneurs à travers le Canada et des organisations
    affiliées à travers le monde, le CNAC s'occupe activement des
    inquiétudes de la communauté canadienne-arménienne.

    Regional Chapters/Sections régionales
    Montréal - Laval - Ottawa - Toronto - Hamilton - Cambridge - St. Catharines - Windsor - Vancouver
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