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MP Accused Of Betraying Assyrian Community

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  • MP Accused Of Betraying Assyrian Community

    MP ACCUSED OF BETRAYING ASSYRIAN COMMUNITY
    by Lauren McMah

    Cumberland Courier Newspapers
    http://fairfield-advance.whereilive.com.au/news/s tory/mp-accused-of-betraying-assyrian-community/
    F eb 24 2010
    Australia

    AUSTRALIAN Business Party president Joseph Adams has slammed a motion
    for the NSW Government to formally recognise the Assyrian genocide,
    because it failed to mention the group responsible for the slaughter.

    Mr Adams said the motion, expected to be put to parliament by
    Smithfield State Labor MP Ninos Khoshaba yesterday, made no mention
    of the Ottoman Government, who has been accused of the genocide.

    Mr Adams, of Canley Heights, said Mr Khoshaba had betrayed the
    Assyrian community.

    "Ninos Khoshaba should be ashamed of himself for hiding the truth,"
    he said.

    "He may be more concerned for the safety of his own state seat of
    Smithfield, but I can assure him that he has lost the vote of many
    Assyrians."

    The plaque on an Assyrian genocide monument at Bonnyrigg will also
    exclude any reference to the Ottoman Empire.

    Mr Adams said true recognition of the Assyrian genocide would not be
    possible unless the Ottoman Government was held responsible.

    "The Assyrian community of NSW is appalled at the lack of sensitivity
    displayed by one of its own on an issue so sacred to the heart of
    every member of the Assyrian community," he said.

    When the State Government recognised the Armenian genocide in 1997, the
    State Government listed the Ottoman Government as being responsible.

    Mr Khoshaba said he welcomed debate on the motion.

    "The motion recognises all acts of genocide against the Assyrian
    people," he said.

    "If this motion comes up for debate, then all acts of genocide
    against the Assyrian people from the early 1900s will be discussed
    and debated."

    Adem Cetinay, part of the Turkish community's opposition to Mr
    Khoshaba's motion, said that such recognition would "divide the
    community along ethnic fault lines".

    "The allegation of an Assyrian genocide is both hotly debated and
    deeply offensive to Australians of Turkish background," he said.

    "Surely NSW Parliament has more pressing matters to debate."
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