WASHINGTON—The Armenian National Committee of America (ANCA) welcomed
the European Parliament’s adoption of an Armenian Genocide Centennial
Resolution, emphasizing how this official action shines a bright
spotlight on President Barack Obama’s much-anticipated April 24
statement regarding this crime.
“The European Parliament’s strong stand for a truthful and just
resolution of the Armenian Genocide underscores the stark nature of the
choice before President Obama,” stated ANCA Executive Director Aram
Hamparian. “This April 24, President Obama can take his moral cues from
Pope Francis or Recep Erdogan. He can stand up for truth, along with the
European Parliament, our top NATO allies, 43 U.S. states, a growing
pro-justice Turkish civil society movement, and the moral conscience of
the world community. Or he can opt—on the solemn Centennial of this
crime—to continue enforcing a foreign government’s gag-rule on honest
American discourse on the Armenian Genocide.”
“As Americans, we should never outsource our nation’s human rights
policy or allow any foreign country—friend or foe—to compromise our
nation’s stand against genocide,” added Hamparian.
Prior to his election to the oval office, Obama was clear and
unequivocal in promising to properly characterize Ottoman Turkey’s
murder of over 1.5 million Armenian men, women, and children between
1915 and 1923 as genocide. In a Jan. 19, 2008 statement he wrote: “The
facts are undeniable. An official policy that calls on diplomats to
distort the historical facts is an untenable policy. As a senator, I
strongly support passage of the Armenian Genocide Resolution (H.Res.106
and S.Res.106), and as president I will recognize the Armenian
Genocide.”
Click here for the full text of that statement.
http://anca.org/change/docs/obama_pledge_011908.pdf
President Obama has yet to honor his pledge. He is expected to make a
statement on the topic on April 24, the international day of
commemoration of the Centennial of the Armenian Genocide.
Click here for a complete record of Senator Obama’s statements on the
Armenian Genocide prior to his election to the White House.
http://anca.org/change/docs/Obama_Armenian_Genocide.pdf
Thousands across the U.S. have taken action through the ANCA’s #MarchtoJustice advocacy tool—http://www.marchtojustice.org/take-action—to call on Obama to properly characterize the Armenian Genocide in his annual April 24 address.
The U.S. first recognized the Armenian Genocide in 1951 through a
filing that was included in the International Court of Justice (ICJ)
Report titled, “Reservations to the Convention on the Prevention and
Punishment of the Crime of Genocide.” The specific reference to the
Armenian Genocide appears on page 25 of the ICJ Report: “The Genocide
Convention resulted from the inhuman and barbarous practices which
prevailed in certain countries prior to and during World War II, when
entire religious, racial, and national minority groups were threatened
with and subjected to deliberate extermination. The practice of genocide
has occurred throughout human history. The Roman persecution of the
Christians, the Turkish massacres of Armenians, the extermination of
millions of Jews and Poles by the Nazis are outstanding examples of the
crime of genocide.”
President Ronald Reagan reaffirmed the Armenian Genocide in 1981. The
U.S. House of Representatives adopted legislation on the Armenian
Genocide in 1975, 1984, and 1996.
The European Parliament first recognized the Armenian Genocide in
1987 and has subsequently reaffirmed its pledge in 2000, 2002, and 2005.
Today’s resolution on the Armenian Genocide Centennial was supported
by all political groups in the European Parliament. It stated, in part,
“whereas an increasing number of Member States and national parliaments
recognize the Armenian Genocide perpetrated in the Ottoman Empire;
whereas one of the main motivations of the European unification movement
is the will to prevent the recurrence of wars and crimes against
humanity in Europe…whereas the importance of keeping the memories of the
past is paramount, since there can be no reconciliation without the
truth and remembrance; Pays tribute, on the eve of the Centenary, to the
memory of the one-and-a-half million innocent Armenian victims who
perished in the Ottoman Empire; joins the commemoration of the centenary
of the Armenian Genocide in a spirit of European solidarity and
justice; calls on the Commission and Council to join the commemoration.”
The resolution goes on to note that “the European Parliament calls on
Turkey to come to terms with its past by recognizing the Armenian
genocide and thus pave way for a genuine reconciliation.”
This latest European Parliament action comes just days after Pope
Francis clearly and unequivocally reaffirmed the Armenian Genocide,
stating, “In the past century our human family has lived through three
massive and unprecedented tragedies. The first, which is widely
considered ‘the first genocide of the 20th century,’ struck your own
Armenian people, the first Christian nation, as well as Catholic and
Orthodox Syrians, Assyrians, Chaldeans, and Greeks. Bishops and priests,
religious, women and men, the elderly, and even defenseless children
and the infirm were murdered.”
Friday, April 17, 2015
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