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Rep. Pallone will hold observance ceremony - continue to advocate

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  • Rep. Pallone will hold observance ceremony - continue to advocate

    US Fed News
    April 29, 2009 Wednesday 3:14 PM EST



    REP. ARMENIAN CAUCUS WILL HOLD OBSERVANCE CEREMONY - CONTINUE TO
    ADVOCATE FOR OFFICIAL RECOGNITION



    WASHINGTON, April 21 -- Rep. Frank G. Pallone, D-N.J. (6th CD), issued
    the following news release:

    The long-sought effort to gain official recognition of the Armenian
    Genocide will continue this week when the Congressional Caucus on
    Armenian Issues holds a memorial observance on Wednesday, in advance
    of the April 24 anniversary of the mass killing that took the lives of
    an estimated 1.5 million Armenians, U.S. Rep. Frank Pallone, Jr. and
    U.S. Rep. Mark Steven Kirk announced on Tuesday. Pallone and Kirk, who
    serve as co-chairmen of the caucus, said the Armenian Genocide
    Observance, marking the 94th anniversary of the attempted annihilation
    of an entire people, is not just about history, it is another
    opportunity to press the United States government to officially accept
    the fact that the genocide occurred.

    The observance ceremony will include congressional and community
    speakers paying tribute to the 1.5 million Armenian men, women, and
    children who were systematically annihilated by the Ottoman Empire in
    1915. Genocide scholar Henry Theriault will be among the speakers
    addressing the history of the Armenian Genocide, the threat of
    genocide denial, and the future of genocide prevention and
    intervention.

    The Armenian Genocide Observance will be held from 6:00 p.m. to 8:00
    p.m., Wednesday, April 22, 2009, in The Cannon House Caucus Room in
    Washington, D.C. April 24, 2009 is the 94th Anniversary of the start
    of the Armenian Genocide. Pallone, along with former Congressman John
    Porter, founded the Armenian caucus in 1995 to address Armenia's
    economic isolation and to commemorate the 80th anniversary of the
    genocide.

    The caucus has also been advocating for recognition of the genocide as
    a means of honoring its victims, a way to require Turkey to come to
    terms with its own history and to prevent a shroud of denial from
    covering up one of the most horrific tragedies in world history.

    President Barack Obama has expressed optimism that the two countries
    will normalize relations, which would include lifting the blockade
    against travel and trade imposed in 1993 by Turkey along the border
    with Armenia. By coming to terms with the past and reconciling any
    current conflicts, Turkey and Armenia will help bring more stability
    to a volatile and strategic region of the world, Pallone and Kirk
    said.

    For more information please contact: Sarabjit Jagirdar, Email:-
    [email protected]
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