Visual Artists Guild mourns the death of Congressman Tom
Lantos (see AP report below), a giant defender of human rights.
Tom Lantos had consistently stood up for the oppressed around
the world; his most recent actions have been:
During a Congressional hearing in February, 2006, Tom Lantos
repeatedly asked Google, Cisco, Microsoft and Yahoo individually as to
whether they are ashamed of what their company had done in China. When
Microsoft answered that they were only complying with legal orders in
China, Lantos asked, "Well, IBM complied with legal orders when they
cooperated with Nazi Germany ... Do you think that IBM during that
period had something to be ashamed of?"
In a November, 2007 hearing, Tom Lantos once against expressed
concern of Yahoo's complicity in the repression apparatus of China's
government. Yahoo later apologized to Congress for lying during the
hearings.
In April, 2006, Tom Lantos with four other Congressmembers
were among eleven people arrested at the Sudan Embassy during a rally
against the Darfur genocide. Previously, Tom Lantos sponsored several
legislations on Darfur and in 2004 Congress officially called Darfur
genocide.
In October last year, Tom Lantos gave voice to the recognition
of the genocide of Armenians in Turkey during WWI by sponsoring a
legislation.
In December last year, the House passed the Lantos Burma Human
Rights Act against the military junta government.
Tom Lantos stood for the founding principles of the United
States; his legacy will forever be enshrined in the annals of human
rights actions of his adopted country.
Congressman Tom Lantos will be deeply missed.
Ann Lau
Chair, Visual Artists Guild