International Response to Armenian Genocide
Argentine Senate Adopts Genocide Resolution
In commemoration of the 83rd anniversary
of the Armenian Genocide, on April 23, the Argentinean Senate adopted a
resolution condemning all forms of genocide and mass extermination, and
expressing concern over the lack of condemnation of such criminal injustice.
In its introduction, the resolution cited
the Armenian Genocide, beginning on April 24, 1915, as the "first
genocide of the 20th century, which was perpetrated by the Turks."
40 Members of Congress Commemorate Armenian Genocide on House and
Senate Floors
Washington , DC - A bipartisan group
of forty Senators and Representatives, in speeches this week on the floors
of their respective chambers, spoke out against Turkey's denial of the
Armenian Genocide, called for passage of the Armenian Genocide resolution,
and urged President Clinton to break with his policy of supporting Turkey's
campaign to deny the first genocide of this century, reported the Armenian
National Committee of America (ANCA).
The Special Order speeches on the House
floor were organized by Congressional Armenian Caucus Co-chairmen Frank
Pallone (D-NJ) and John Edward Porter (R-IL). In total, thirty-eight Representatives
and two Senators marked the 83rd anniversary of the Genocide in floor speeches.
They joined with the more than forty members of Congress, including Democratic
Leader Richard Gephardt (D-MO), Sen. Spencer Abraham (R-MI), and Sen. Daniel
Patrick Moynihan (D-NY), who participated in the ANCA's April 22nd Armenian
Genocide Observance program in the U.S. Capitol.
Chris Hekimian with ANCAGovernmental
Affairs said, "This unprecedented participation by members of Congress,
both here in Washington and at observances across the country, reflects
a growing awareness that the time has come for the Administration to end
its participation in Turkey's campaign of denials. The Administration,
by encouraging Turkey to openly acknowledge this tragic chapter in its
history, can help to reduce tensions in a region of great strategic significance."
Rep. John Edward Porter (R-IL): Armenia
and the Armenians will remain vigilant to assure that this tragic history
is not repeated. The United States should do all it can in this regard
as well, including a clear message about the historical fact of the Armenian
genocide. I call on President Clinton to have the courage to speak plainly
about what happened 83 years ago. We do Turkey no favors by facilitating
her self-delusion, and we make ourselves hypocrites when we fail to sound
the alarm on the human rights abuses occurring in Turkey, a close American
ally today.
Rep. Esteban Torres (D-CA): Some would
claim that our remembrance today fans the flames of atavistic hatred and
that this issue of the Ottoman government's efforts to destroy the Armenian
people is a matter best left to scholars and historians. I do not agree.
One fact remains undeniable: the death and suffering of Armenians on a
massive scale happened, and is deserving of recognition and remembrance.
Rep. Joe Knollenberg (R-MI): At the end
of World War I, those responsible for ordering and implementing the Armenian
Genocide were never brought to justice, and the world casually forgot about
the pain and suffering inflicted upon the Armenian people. This proved
to be a grave mistake.
French Prime Minister on Armenian Genocide
Paris (April 22) XINHUA - French Foreign
Minister Hubert Vedrine Wednesday called on Turkey to "go much further"
in facing the historical facts of massacres of Armenians committed by Ottoman
Turkish army from 1915 to 1917.
"We have never ceased to tell the
leaders of Turkey that they should go much further...in authorizing historians
to make objective and true researches on these events," Vedrine told
the National Assembly. Unlike the parliaments in Russia, Greece, Lebanon,
the United States (House of Representatives) and Canada, the French National
Assembly has not adopted any resolution recognizing the massacres of Armenians
as "genocide". But former President Francois Mitterand once used
the word "Genocide" to describe the massacres of Armenians.