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AAA Submits Testimony In Support Of Genocide Affirmation And Prevent

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  • AAA Submits Testimony In Support Of Genocide Affirmation And Prevent

    AAA SUBMITS TESTIMONY IN SUPPORT OF GENOCIDE AFFIRMATION AND PREVENTION

    /PanARMENIAN.Net/
    17.12.2009 10:59 GMT+04:00

    /PanARMENIAN.Net/ The Senate Judiciary Subcommittee on Human Rights
    and the Law chaired by Senator Richard Durbin and ranking Member
    Senator Tom Coburn held a first-ever Congressional hearing on U.S.

    implementation of its human rights treaty obligations reported the
    Armenian Assembly of America (Assembly).

    "We commend Chairman Durbin's commitment to human rights and the
    Subcommittee's continued efforts to bring these issues to the
    forefront, stated Executive Director Bryan Ardouny.

    "The Assembly looks forward to working together with Congress and the
    Members of the Judiciary Subcommittee to bring about an end to the
    vicious cycle of genocide and give true meaning to the words never
    again," added Ardouny.

    In the Assembly's testimony before the distinguished Subcommittee on
    Human Rights and the Law, Executive Director Bryan Ardouny applauded
    the Committee's "pioneering work" and noted that the "treaties under
    review embody the spirit of America's values and our ongoing commitment
    to human rights."

    Highlighting the "groundbreaking [U.S.] humanitarian intervention
    during the first genocide of the twentieth century against the Armenian
    people, which U.S. Ambassador Henry Morgenthau to the Ottoman Empire
    described as a 'campaign of race extermination,'" the Assembly focused
    in particular on the United Nations Convention for the Prevention
    and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide (Genocide Convention).

    The Assembly recalled the 1951 U.S. filing before the International
    Court of Justice (ICJ), pertaining to the Genocide Convention, which
    stated that the "Roman persecution of the Christians, the Turkish
    massacres of Armenians, the extermination of millions of Jews and Poles
    by the Nazis are all outstanding examples of the crime of genocide."

    Despite the incontrovertible facts, the Assembly's testimony indicated
    that "Time and time again, and especially in the case of U.S.

    reaffirmation of the Armenian Genocide, we have seen the effects of
    entrenched interests that thwart genocide affirmation and prevention
    efforts. In fact, millions upon millions of dollars by foreign entities
    have been spent to deny the Armenian Genocide, and in turn the proud
    chapter in American history in alerting the world to man's inhumanity
    to man and marshalling resources to help save the survivors."

    Given the corrosive nature of genocide denial, the Assembly
    highlighted the importance of education and affirmation as an
    effective counterweight, and urged Members of the Subcommittee
    to cosponsor legislation (S.Res. 316) introduced by Senator Robert
    Menendez along with Senator John Ensign, which reaffirms the Armenian
    Genocide. Ardouny also invoked Nobel Laureate Elie Wiesel poignant
    words, "Remember: silence helps the killer, never his victims."

    The Assembly also called for the enactment of "a strong education
    component...to address the ongoing consequences of genocide denial,
    the case of the Armenian Genocide being a prime example. The testimony
    concluded with President Barack Obama's 2008 statement that "America
    deserves a leader who speaks truthfully about the Armenian Genocide
    and responds forcefully to all genocides."
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