Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

ANKARA: US Armenians Seek To Stop Award For Davutoglu

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

  • ANKARA: US Armenians Seek To Stop Award For Davutoglu

    US ARMENIANS SEEK TO STOP AWARD FOR DAVUTOGLU

    Hurriyet
    http://www.hurriyetdailynews.c om/n.php?n=us-armenians-seek-to-stop-award-for-dav utoglu-2010-05-20
    May 20 2010
    Turkey

    The largest U.S. Armenian group is trying to keep a leading Washington,
    D.C., think tank from honoring the Turkish foreign minister with
    an award due to what they call Turkey's "aggressive denial of the
    Armenian genocide."

    In a statement Wednesday, the Armenian National Committee of America
    expressed its displeasure with the Woodrow Wilson International Center
    for Scholars' plans to give Turkish Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu
    its Woodrow Wilson Award for Public Service.

    Davutoglu is scheduled to receive the award, named after the 28th U.S.

    president, in Turkey on June 17, the Anatolia news agency reported
    when the center announced its decision in March, saying that he "had
    catalyzed the development of Turkey's foreign relations, elevating
    its position in international discussions" since becoming foreign
    minister in May 2009.

    "Through an ANCA action alert, Armenian-American and other
    anti-genocide activists are expressing profound anger and
    disappointment over the Woodrow Wilson Center's plans to travel to
    Turkey to bestow the award on Davutoglu," ANCA said in its statement.

    The organization said the activists had sent letters to members of
    the U.S. Senate and House of Representatives, urging them to look
    into the center's "controversial" decision.

    The Woodrow Wilson Center receives one-third of its annual funding
    from Congress, according to ANCA. "Senators and representatives are
    being encouraged to formally investigate this matter and to share
    their concerns on this deeply troubling development directly with
    the leadership of the Woodrow Wilson Center," its statement said.

    The letter being sent to members of the U.S. Congress reads, in part:
    "This award dishonors President Wilson's vision of justice for the
    Armenian nation. Mr. Davutoglu represents a government that, in its
    aggressive denial of the Armenian genocide and ongoing obstruction of
    justice for the Armenian nation, makes a mockery of the Wilson Center
    and its founding commitment to fostering scholarship 'commemorating
    the ideals and concerns of Woodrow Wilson.'"

    ANCA has spearheaded U.S. Armenian efforts urging President Barack
    Obama and the U.S. Congress to recognize World War I-era Armenian
    deaths in the Ottoman Empire as "genocide," a term Obama has declined
    to use since taking office in January 2009. Two resolutions calling
    for such recognition are currently pending in Congress.
Working...
X