Biden administration to ‘recognize’ Armenian genocide: sources

During his presidential campaign, Biden commemorated Armenian Genocide Remembrance Day last year. (File/AFP)
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Updated 23 March 2021
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Biden administration to ‘recognize’ Armenian genocide: sources

The United States President Joe Biden will “recognize” the Armenian genocide caused by the Ottoman government during World War I, US media reported Tuesday.

“As I’ve heard from the White House, that President Biden is going to recognize the 1915 killing of Armenians under the Ottomans’ rule as a genocide,” American political scientist Ian Bremer said on GZERO Media.

This step would make Biden the first US president to recognize the genocide of Armenians under Ottoman rule.

Bremer said that “Biden promised during his campaign that he would make the move if elected,” pointing out that Vice President Kamala Harris was co-sponsor of the Senate decision to recognize the genocide of Armenians in 2019.

The genocide has been recorded by historians as the systematic killing and deportation of Armenians by the Turks of the Ottoman Empire during World War I. By the early 1920s, when the massacres and deportations finally ended, between 600,000 and 1.5 million Armenians were reportedly dead.

Earlier this week a bipartisan coalition of nearly 40 lawmakers led by Senate Foreign Relations Committee Chairman Bob Menendez urged Biden to officially recognize the genocide.

In their letter they said: “the administration is committed to promoting respect for human rights and ensuring such atrocities are not repeated… A critical part of that is acknowledging history.”

During his presidential campaign, Biden commemorated Armenian Genocide Remembrance Day last year.

“It is particularly important to speak these words and commemorate this history at a moment when we are reminded daily of the power of truth, and of our shared responsibility to stand against hate — because silence is complicity,” he said.  

“If we do not fully acknowledge, commemorate, and teach our children about genocide, the words ‘never again’ lose their meaning,” he said.


Australia police detain 7 men suspected to have ideological links to Bondi Beach gunmen

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Australia police detain 7 men suspected to have ideological links to Bondi Beach gunmen

  • Government to launch gun buyback scheme in bid to prevent further violence
  • Prime minister announces ‘day of reflection’ one week after attack

SYDNEY: Australian police said that seven men detained ​in Sydney’s southwest on Thursday had ideological connections to the two gunmen who allegedly fired at hundreds ‌celebrating Hanukkah ‌in ‌Bondi ⁠Beach, ​killing ‌15 people.
“We don’t have definitive links between the individuals who committed these atrocities on Sunday ⁠and this yesterday ‌apart from potential commonality ‍in ‍some thinking, but ‍no associations at this stage,” New South Wales state Police ​Deputy Commissioner Dave Hudson told ABC Radio on ⁠Friday.
Investigations were at an initial stage, Hudson said, adding one of the locations the group was planning to visit was Bondi.

Amid an outcry over the latest gun violence, Prime ‌Minister Anthony Albanese ‍said ‍on Friday that the government will ​launch a national gun buyback scheme to encourage civilians to get rid of their guns.

“We ‍expect hundreds of thousands of ​firearms will be collected and ⁠destroyed through this scheme,” Albanese told a news conference. 

Albanese also said Australia will hold a national “day of reflection” one week after the mass shooting.

“This day is about standing with the Jewish community, wrapping our arms around them, and all Australians sharing their grief,” Albanese said as he declared Australia would honor the attack’s 15 victims on Sunday, December 21.