Executive Of Nevada State, USA, Recognizes Armenian Genocide

EXECUTIVE OF NEVADA STATE, USA, RECOGNIZES ARMENIAN GENOCIDE

14:20, 16 April, 2015

YEREVAN, APRIL 16, ARMENPRESS: The executive of the 46th state of
the USA recognized and condemned the Armenian Genocide on April 14,
Armenpress reports, citing the 1st Public TV Company of Armenia. The
resolution considers the first genocide of the 20th century to be a
historic fact and highlights the necessity to condemn it.

Before the step of recognition and condemnation of the Armenian
Genocide by Nevada’s two chambers of parliament was the declaration
of the governor and state Senate President. In it the politicians not
only call the President of the USA and the Congress to follow their
example but also urge Turkey to accept their own past.

“Today we touch upon the events, which took place hundred years ago,
on these days, in another part of the world. In several days the
100th anniversary of the Armenian Genocide will be marked. In 1915 the
Turkish government, using force and violence, seized the properties
of the Armenians, arrested a part of them and sent the other part to
deserts, condemning them to inevitable death. Due to it, 1,5 million
Armenians fell martyrs”, – told the member of the State’s Parliament
James Oscarson. The Congressman stated that the Armenian Genocide is
a part of the US history as well, presenting the story of activities
of the Near East Relief Fund, established by the instruction of the
former US President Woodrow Wilson.

Legal Cases Related To Armenian Genocide Could Be ‘Heavy Blow’ – Har

LEGAL CASES RELATED TO ARMENIAN GENOCIDE COULD BE ‘HEAVY BLOW’ – HARUTYUN MESROBYAN

15:13 * 16.04.15

Management expert Harutyun Mesrobyan told reporters on Thursday that
April 24 will inaugurate an entirely new situation involving the
Armenian Genocide.

According to him, the events marking the Armenian Genocide centenary
should have been commenced much earlier.

“They should have been started in 2010, progressing toward April 24
this year, which would be followed by a new quality, challenges and
aims,” he said.

Mr Mesrobyan pointed out that the campaign for recognition of the
Armenian Genocide hardly mentions the fact that over 50 legal cases
involving the Armenian Genocide were filed in Turkey in 1919-1921.

“To be precise, 63 legal cases, and we have rulings by Turkish courts.

But why do not we employ them? It would be quite a heavy blow,”
he said.

The Armenian Genocide is one of the key problems of the Armenian Cause.

“We should realize that that April 24 will be followed by a different
situation. We should have a program of action after all,” Mr Mesrobyan
said.

http://www.tert.am/en/news/2015/04/16/mesrobian/1648055

Turkey Summons Vatican Envoy After Pope Describes Armenian "Genocide

TURKEY SUMMONS VATICAN ENVOY AFTER POPE DESCRIBES ARMENIAN “GENOCIDE”

Deutsche Presse-Agentur, Germany
April 12, 2015 Sunday 2:00 PM EST

By Alvise Armellini and Shabtai Gold, dpa

Vatican City (dpa) – Armenians were the victims of “the first genocide
of the 20th century,” Pope Francis said Sunday, prompting Turkey’s
Foreign Ministry to summon the Vatican envoy to Ankara.

Similar remarks from the Catholic leadership in the past have
triggered protests from Turkey, which denies that the mass
deportation of Armenians in the Ottoman Empire during World War I
was genocide. Armenians say up to 1.5 million people were killed.

“In the past century, our human family has lived through three massive
and unprecedented tragedies,” Francis said at the start of a special
remembrance mass in St Peter’s Basilica for the 1915-16 mass slaughter
of the Armenians.

“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,” the pontiff said.

Francis said the other two genocides of the last century “were
perpetrated by Nazism and Stalinism” and went on to say the world
was in the midst of another genocide, the persecution of Christians
in the Middle East.

The leader of the Armenian Apostolic Church, Supreme Patriarch Karekin
II, thanked the pope at the end an elaborate service that lasted two
and a half hours.

“The Armenian genocide is an unforgettable and undeniable fact of
history, deeply rooted in the annals of modern history and in the
common consciousness of the Armenian people. Therefore, any attempt to
erase it from history and from our common memory is doomed to fail,”
Karekin said.

Armenian President Serzh Sargsyan also attended the mass at the
Vatican.

“With these celebrations in St Peter’s, the Holy Father has sent
a vigorous signal to the international community,” namely “that
uncondemned genocides represent a danger for all of humanity,” he
told Italian news agency ANSA.

Official commemorations of the massacres are to take place on April
24 in Armenia. Memorial events are also scheduled in Istanbul, where
on that day in 1915 more than 200 Armenian community leaders were
rounded up by police to be deported.

“It is the responsibility not only of the Armenian people and the
universal Church to recall all that has taken place, but of the
entire human family,” the pope said in a written message delivered
to Armenian religious and political leaders after mass.

He also prayed for Armenia and Turkey to make amends.

“May God grant that the people of Armenia and Turkey take up again
the path of reconciliation, and may peace also spring forth in
Nagorno-Karabakh,” said Francis, a reference to a contested Armenian
enclave in Azerbaijan.

Turkey, the successor state to the Ottoman Empire, says both Turks and
Armenians were killed in unrest during the war and accuses Armenia
of inflating the number of people who died. The deportations were
said to be for security reasons.

It is not the first time that the Vatican has used the word “genocide”
to describe the events of 100 years ago.

On Sunday, the pope quoted a joint 2000 declaration from his
predecessor, Saint John Paul II, and Karekin II. Francis used the same
formulation in a June 2013 meeting with Armenian representatives at
the Vatican.

At the time, the Turkish Foreign Ministry criticized the papal remarks
as “unacceptable” and warned the Vatican against “making steps that
could have irreparable consequences on our ties.”

“What is expected from the papacy, under the responsibility of its
spiritual office, is to contribute to world peace instead of raising
animosity over historical events,” the ministry added.

In Sunday’s mass, which was attended by Armenian President Serzh
Sargsyan, Francis also gave a special title to Saint Gregory of Narek,
a medieval monk seen as the greatest poet and mystic of the Armenian
nation.

He was elevated to the position of a doctor of the Church, making
him one of only 36 saintly masters of Catholic teaching, along with
other well-known religious figures such as Saint Thomas Aquinas and
Saint Augustine.

Gregory was born from a family of writers in around 950 and died about
55 years later. He is chiefly remembered for the Book of Lamentations,
a compendium of 95 prayers considered a gem of Christian literature.

The monastery where he lived, as well as his grave, were destroyed
during the Armenian genocide.

Congressman Smith Joins Commemoration Of 100th Anniversary Of The Ar

CONGRESSMAN SMITH JOINS COMMEMORATION OF 100TH ANNIVERSARY OF THE ARMENIAN GENOCIDE

Congressional Documents and Publications
April 12, 2015

Event Held at Center for Holocaust, Human Rights and Genocide Education
at Brookdale Community College in Monmouth Co.; Rep. Chris Smith
(R-NJ) News Release

U.S. Rep. Chris Smith (NJ-04) was a guest at an event today
commemorating the 100th anniversary of the Armenian genocide. The
event included the opening of two exhibits and a book release, and
was sponsored by the Center for Holocaust, Human Rights, and Genocide
Education (Chhange) at Brookdale Community College in the Lincroft
section of Middletown, N.J.

“Genocide is the most terrible crime a people can undergo, or another
people can commit. It must never be forgotten-to forget it would be to
dull our consciences and diminish our own humanity. It must never be
denied, but fully acknowledged – otherwise any meaningful attempt at
reconciliation will be thwarted,” said Smith, a longtime human rights
advocate in Congress, senior member of the House Foreign Affairs
Committee and chairman of the House global human rights subcommittee.

“For my part, I am preparing to chair a congressional hearing
on April 23–the day before Armenian Remembrance Day (April
24)–which this year marks the 100th anniversary of the genocide,”
he said. “When political leaders fail to lead or denounce violence,
the void is not only demoralizing to the victims but silence
actually enables the wrongdoing. Silence by elected officials
in particular conveys approval–or at least acquiescence–and can
contribute to a climate f fear and a sense of vulnerability. History
has taught us that silence is not an option. We must do more.” Go to:

to read his statement.

Smith has long been a passionate voice in support of the moral duty of
governments, including the U.S. government, to recognize the Armenian
genocide. In 2000 he chairedCongress’s first hearing on the Armenian
genocide. He has long been one of Congress’s strongest voices in
support of passing the Armenian genocide resolution, which calls on
the President to officially recognize the genocidal nature of the
terrible crime committed against the Armenian people beginning in 1915.

On display at Brookdale are the two exhibits, A Journey to Life :
Armenia, which teaches the history of the Armenian Genocide through
the lives of local Armenian Genocide Survivors who settled in Monmouth
County, and Illuminating Images: A Hundred Year Remembrance is an art
exhibit created by middle school, high school and college students
from across the county and beyond. Also released on Sunday was
Hundred-Year Commemoration of the Armenian Genocide: Celebrating the
Lives of Armenian Genocide Survivors in Our Community, which features
the personal histories of 54 Survivors who lived in Monmouth County.

Smith (NJ-04) has been a strong supporter of Chhange. In December 2014,
he hosted “100 Days of Silence,” a unique art exhibition coordinated
by Chhange to commemorate the 20th Anniversary of the 1994 Rwanda
Genocide. The collection brought together works created by over 450
New Jersey students and includes more than 60 life-size human forms
which illustrate students’ artistic responses to learning about the
genocide, the silence of the world, and the importance of becoming
involved, concerned citizens.

The 100 Days of Silence exhibit corresponded with the 100 days in
1994 when some 800,000 Rwandan men, women and children were killed
by Hutu extremists. Originally exhibited at Brookdale from April
through August 2014, Smith helped arrange an exhibition on Dec. 4 in
the Rayburn House Office Building Foyer.

Smith is Chairman of U.S. Helsinki Commission and an Executive Member
of the Tom Lantos Human Rights Commission.

Read this original document at:

http://chrissmith.house.gov/UploadedFiles/Brookdale_College_Armenian_Genocide_Information__Exhibit_April_12_2015.pdf
http://chrissmith.house.gov/news/documentsingle.aspx?DocumentID=398023

Washington Appelle A Reconnaître Le Massacre Armenien, Sans Le Mot G

WASHINGTON APPELLE A RECONNAÃŽTRE LE MASSACRE ARMENIEN, SANS LE MOT GENOCIDE

USA-Armenie-Turquie-Vatican-histoire-politique-diplomatie

Washington, 14 avr 2015 (AFP) – Les Etats-Unis ont appele mardi a une
“pleine et franche” reconnaissance des faits concernant le massacre
d’Armeniens pendant la Première guerre mondiale mais sans utiliser
le mot “genocide”, repris dimanche par le pape.

La Turquie nie categoriquement que l’Empire ottoman ait organise le
massacre systematique de sa population armenienne pendant la Première
guerre mondiale et recuse le terme de “genocide” repris par l’Armenie,
de nombreux historiens et une vingtaine de pays dont la France,
l’Italie et la Russie.

Le president islamo-conservateur turc Recep Tayyip Erdogan a fermement
denonce mardi les propos du pape Francois, evoquant des “delires”.

Ankara avait violemment reagi après les declarations du pape, rappelant
son ambassadeur au Vatican.

“Le president (americain) et d’autres hauts responsables de
l’administration ont souvent reconnu comme un fait historique, et l’ont
deplore, que 1,5 million d’Armeniens aient ete massacres ou conduits a
la mort a la fin de l’Empire ottoman”, a affirme mardi Marie Harf, une
porte-parole du departement d’Etat, lors du point de presse quotidien.

“Une pleine, franche et juste reconnaissance de ces faits est dans
notre interet, y compris celui de la Turquie, de l’Armenie, et de
l’Amerique”, a-t-elle ajoute.

“Les pays sont plus forts et progressent quand ils reconnaissent et
tiennent compte des elements douloureux de leur passe”, a estime la
representante de la diplomatie americaine.

De tels changements sont “essentiels pour construire un avenir
different, plus tolerant”, a note Mme Harf, qui a cependant refuse
d’utiliser le terme de “genocide”.

Barack Obama, alors senateur, avait pourtant utilise ce mot lors
de sa campagne presidentielle en 2008, quand il avait promis de
“reconnaître le genocide armenien”.

Mme Harf a refuse de s’exprimer sur la promesse de M. Obama en 2008
et a demande aux journalistes de s’adresser a la Maison Blanche.

Les Armeniens estiment que 1,5 million des leurs ont ete tues de
manière systematique a la fin de l’Empire ottoman par l’armee dans
le but d’eradiquer les Armeniens d’Anatolie, une region situee dans
l’est de la Turquie actuelle.

La Turquie affirme pour sa part qu’il s’agissait d’une guerre civile,
doublee d’une famine, dans laquelle 300 a 500.000 Armeniens et autant
de Turcs ont trouve la mort, au moment où les forces ottomanes et
l’empire russe se disputaient le contrôle de l’Anatolie.

mercredi 15 avril 2015, Stephane (c)armenews.com

Genocide De 1915 : Programme Des Commemorations En Turquie

GENOCIDE DE 1915 : PROGRAMME DES COMMEMORATIONS EN TURQUIE

Publie le : 14-04-2015

Info Collectif VAN – – >. Nota CVAN
: Le Collectif VAN est honore d’avoir ete sollicite pour soutenir
officiellement ses partenaires turcs et kurdes de l’IHD lors des
commemorations qui se tiendront le 24 avril 2015 a l’occasion
du Centenaire du genocide armenien a Istanbul. Notre association
soutient egalement l’EGAM, l’UGAB et DurDe qui mèneront a Istanbul,
pour la 3e annee consecutive, une delegation antiraciste europeenne
du 21 au 25 avril, et qui ont lance une petition (voir plus bas). Le
Collectif VAN vous propose la traduction d’un article en anglais de
Mehmet Boran publie sur le site d’Agos le 10 avril 2015.

Agos

Annonce du programme des commemorations d’Istanbul et Diyarbakir

Mehmet Boran 10/04/2015 17:20 NOUVELLES

L’Initiative >
a annonce son programme des commemorations du genocide, pour Istanbul
et Diyarbakýr.

L’initiative – reunissant Anadolu Kultur et Araþtýrma
Derneði/Association de la Culture et de la Recherche anatoliennes
(AKA-DER), l’Association de Defense des Droits de l’Homme et la
Commission anti-racisme et anti-discrimination, Nor Zartonk, la
Plate-forme Turabdin : la Plate-forme des Assyriens de Turquie,
Yuzleþme Platformu (la Plate-forme de confrontation au passe) et la
Fondation de la recherche politique, sociale et economique Zan, et
soutenue par l’Institut Gomidas base a Londres, l’Armenian Council
of Europe et le Collectif VAN de Paris – a tenu une conference de
presse concernant les evenements des commemorations qui auront lieu
le 24 avril.

Eren Keskin, la directrice de la branche d’Istanbul de l’Association
de Defense des Droits de l’Homme (IHD) a lu le communique de presse au
nom de l’initiative, et a declare que la lutte pour la reconnaissance
du genocide et contre le negationnisme ne finirait ni le 24 avril 2015
ni le 31 decembre 2015. Keskin a ajoute :

http://www.collectifvan.org/article.php?r=0&id=87462
www.collectifvan.org

Centenaire Du Genocide Armenien A Nancy

CENTENAIRE DU GENOCIDE ARMENIEN A NANCY

FRANCE

Pour faire memoire du massacre de leur peuple, les membres de la
communaute armenienne de Nancy, avec le concours de l’association
Armax, ont fait sculpter une croix kachkar (9e siècle), symbole
de l’Armenie.

Celle-ci sera erigee devant la basilique Notre-Dame-de-Lourdes, a
Nancy. Un beau signe pour souligner aussi les nombreux liens de la
paroisse avec des communautes chretiennes du Moyen-Orient.

Haute de 2,20 m et pesant 1 tonne, la stèle de grès rose a ete sculptee
a Erevan.

M. Vahan Harutyunian, president de l’association armenienne de Nancy
ARMAX, et l’abbe Dominique Doidy, cure de Notre-Dame-de-Lourdes,
presentent le projet et son evolution. Reportage.

lire la suite..

mercredi 15 avril 2015, Stephane (c)armenews.com

http://www.catholique-nancy.fr/agenda/une-croix-khatchkar-a-nancy
http://www.armenews.com/article.php3?id_article=110045

Activists In Gyumri To Hand Over ‘Present’ To Russian Prosecutor Gen

ACTIVISTS IN GYUMRI TO HAND OVER ‘PRESENT’ TO RUSSIAN PROSECUTOR GENERAL

12:35 | April 15,2015 | Politics

A group of citizens of Armenian’s second largest city of Gyumri are
going to stage a protest action outside the outside the Russian
consulate in the city, demanding handover of Valery Permyakov, the
Russian soldier accused of killing a seven-member family in Gyumri, to
Armenian law enforcement authorities. During the protest, the group
will hand over consulate representatives a ‘present’ for Russian
Prosecutor General Yuri Chaika.

The group has left a post on their Facebook account which reads in part,

“Mr Chaika,

“Please accept this gift as a token of friendship between the two
countries, fill your inactivity or respond to the letter of your
Armenian counterpart. Any wrong step can strain the friendly relations
between Armenia and Russia.”

http://en.a1plus.am/1209645.html

Turkey Recalls Its Ambassador In Vatican For Consultations After Pop

TURKEY RECALLS ITS AMBASSADOR IN VATICAN FOR CONSULTATIONS AFTER POPE’S GENOCIDE COMMENTS

ITAR-TASS, Russia
April 12, 2015 Sunday 08:01 PM GMT+4

ANKARA April 12.

Turkey has recalled its Ambassador to the Vatican Mehmet Paraci for
consultations after Pope Francis’ genocide comments, the Turkish
Foreign Ministry said on Sunday

The Turkish authorities are “disappointed” by the comments made by
Pope Francis, who used the word “genocide” in describing the mass
killing of Armenians under Ottoman rule in World War I, Reuters said
on Sunday. The statement made by the Pope causes a “problem of trust”
between Turkey and the Vatican, the authorities said.

Pope Francis’ comments about the genocide of Armenians are unacceptable
as they distort history, Turkish Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu
told journalists. “The Pope’s statement which is far from historic and
legal truths is unacceptable,” Cavusoglu said. “Religious positions
are not places where unfounded claims are made and hatred is stirred,”
he added.

Pope Francis’ comments came at a service in Rome’s St. Peter’s Basilica
attended by Armenian President Serzh Sargsyan.

The Pope said humanity had lived through “three massive and
unprecedented tragedies” in the last century. “The first, which is
widely considered ‘the first genocide of the 20th Century’, struck
your own Armenian people,” Pope Francis said, referencing a 2001
declaration by Pope John Paul II and the head of the Armenian church.

The Pope said that “Catholic and Orthodox Syrians, Assyrians, Chaldeans
and Greeks” were also killed in the bloodshed a century ago.

The Turkish Foreign Ministry summoned the Vatican envoy Antonio
Lucibello for explanations earlier on Sunday. –0 –sap

Pope Francis’s recognition of the Armenian Genocide

POPE FRANCIS ON THE ARMENIAN GENOCIDE

First Things
April 14 2015

by Mark Movsesian

Last Sunday in Rome, Pope Francis celebrated a Mass in St. Peter’s
Basilica to commemorate the 100th anniversary of the Armenian Genocide,
an ethnic cleansing campaign that took place at the end of the Ottoman
Empire. In the course of a two-hour liturgy in the Armenian rite, and
in the presence of the Armenian Catholic patriarch, patriarchs of the
Armenian Apostolic Church, the president of the Republic of Armenia,
and many Armenian pilgrims from around the world, Pope Francis made
what should have been an entirely uncontroversial statement. The
Armenian Genocide, he said, quoting his predecessor Pope St. John
Paul II, “‘is generally referred to as the first genocide of the
twentieth century.'”

The essential facts are well known. Armenian Christians made up a
significant percentage of the population in the Ottoman Empire’s
eastern provinces. For a few decades, there had been unrest. In
religious and political reforms known as the Tanzimat, the Ottomans
had formally granted equal status to Christians and Muslims. Equality
for Christians caused a backlash among Turkish Muslims, though, and
oppression of Armenians and other Christians continued, particularly in
the countryside. Armenian paramilitary groups began to resist. When
World War I began, the Young Turk government worried that these
groups would side with Christian Russians. So it decided to solve the
“Armenian Question” once and for all by deporting the entire Armenian
population from Anatolia to Syria, through the Syrian desert.

Deportation through a desert, without adequate protection or
supplies, is obviously a recipe for mass extermination. And that
is what happened. Historians estimate that 1.5 million Armenian
Christians perished, under horrible conditions, in the death marches
and slaughters. The enormities are well documented.

Nonetheless, the Turkish side refuses to acknowledge what happened
as genocide, denying that there was any plan to eliminate Armenians
from Anatolia, while also arguing, inconsistently, that the Armenians
were a potentially disloyal population and that the Ottomans had a
right to do what they did. Besides, they say, many Turkish Muslims
also suffered and died in World War I–surely true, but a non-sequitur.

Because of Turkey’s sensitivities on the subject, and because of
geopolitical realities, many Western governments, including our own,
dance around the issue. When running for office, President Obama
promised that he would officially recognize the Genocide, a promise
he immediately broke as president. So Pope Francis’s forthright
statement–even if he was, in fact, only quoting a predecessor, who
was in turn referring to a general consensus–was remarkable, and
praiseworthy. (The words on paper don’t capture the tone of the pope’s
remarks. Watch this video of the event from Rome Reports. Francis is
not simply reading from a text. He obviously means every word of it).

In response, Turkey has condemned the pope’s remarks as religious
hate-mongering and recalled its ambassador from the Vatican. The
repercussions will no doubt continue. Yesterday, Turkey’s minister
for European affairs suggested the pope had been brainwashed by the
Armenian community in Argentina. Today, Turkish President Recip Erdogan
reacted in rather personal terms. According to the English-language
Turkish Daily News, Erdogan–who actually has gone farther than many
Turkish leaders in acknowledging the suffering of the Armenians in
1915–said the pope’s remarks were characteristic of a “politician”
rather than a religious leader. “I want to warn the pope to not repeat
this mistake and condemn him,” Erdogan said.

In his remarks, Francis correctly linked the Armenian Genocide to the
persecution of Mideast Christians generally–a hundred years ago, and
today. Religion was not the only factor in the Genocide, of course,
but it had a major role. Armenians who converted to Islam were often
spared; some of their descendants still live in Turkey today. Many
Armenians died as Christian martyrs; indeed, the Armenian Apostolic
Church will canonize these victims of the Genocide at a ceremony in
Armenia this month. Moreover, as the pope told the crowd at St.

Peter’s, the Genocide struck not only the “Armenian people, the
first Christian nation”–here the pope is referring to the fact that
Armenia was the first state to adopt Christianity as its religion,
in 301 a.d.–but also “Catholic and Orthodox Syrians, Assyrians,
Chaldeans and Greeks.” In all these communions, “bishops and priests,
religious, women and men, the elderly and even defenseless children
and the infirm were murdered.”

In addition, as everyone knows, the persecution of Christians in the
Middle East continues today. The pope referred to these new martyrs
as well: “Sadly, today too we hear the muffled and forgotten cry
of so many of our defenseless brothers and sisters who, on account
of their faith in Christ or their ethnic origin, are publicly and
ruthlessly put to death–decapitated, crucified, burned alive–or
forced to leave their homeland.” Many Christian communities in Syria
and Lebanon took in the refugees of 1915, saving their lives, giving
them a place to raise their children and preserve their faith. Now
those communities themselves are the victims of ethnic and religious
cleansing. To whom shall they go?

In an insightful column, Walter Russell Mead argues that Pope
Francis’s remarks show that he has decided to raise the rhetorical
stakes in the crisis facing Christians in the Mideast. Up until now,
the Vatican has taken a “‘softly, softly'” approach to the conflict,
so as not to endanger the lives of vulnerable Christians still there.

Outside intervention often makes things worse for Mideast Christians,
after all. But how much worse can things get? Mideast Christians are
threatened with extinction.

Today’s Turks are not responsible for what their ancestors did one
hundred years ago. God willing, Turks and Armenians will one day be
able to reconcile in a way that honors justice. Acknowledging the
truth about what happened to the Armenians is a start. Meanwhile,
drawing attention to the Armenian Genocide may be a way to mobilize
the world to save suffering Christians now–before it is too late.

Mark Movsesian is the Frederick A. Whitney Professor of Contract Law
and the Director of the Center for Law and Religion at St. John’s
University School of Law. His previous blog posts can be found here.

http://www.firstthings.com/blogs/firstthoughts/2015/04/pope-francis-on-the-armenian-genocide