Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

PM addresses nation on 89th anniversary of Armenian Genocide

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • PM addresses nation on 89th anniversary of Armenian Genocide

    ArmenPress
    April 23 2004

    PRIME MINISTER ADDRESSES NATION ON OCCASION OF 89-TH ANNIVERSARY OF
    ARMENIAN GENOCIDE

    YEREVAN, APRIL 23, ARMENPRESS: In a message to the nation on the
    occasion of the 89-th anniversary of the Armenian Genocide, Armenian
    prime minister Andranik Margarian said the massacres of Armenians in
    1915, planned and carried out by the government of the Ottoman Turkey
    was a crime against the civilized humanity, which was not prevented,
    recognized and condemned at that time, serving as a precedent of
    impunity for repetition of future such crimes.
    The message says that Armenia hails the united efforts of the
    international community aimed to prevent repetition of new genocides
    regarding it as one of its foreign policy priorities. "The geography
    of nations and parliaments which have officially acknowledged the
    Armenian genocide is expanding, which is a key prerequisite for
    preventing future such crimes, for strengthening the international
    security system and promoting dialogue among civilizations," the
    message says.
    It runs further that the protracted policy of denial or distortion
    of the historical truth, adopted by heirs of perpetrators of the 1915
    genocide who are trying to send it to oblivion is an evidence of
    their failure to surmount the feeling of inferiority which cannot
    help establish the environment of co-existence and meet the demands
    of the modern world. "The climate of impunity is fraught with new
    repetitions of such crimes at any moment at any corner of the globe,"
    the message says.
    "Today when Armenians throughout the world pay tribute to the
    memory of thousands of innocent victims of 1915 massacres we once
    again underline that Armenia wants to see Turkey a nation free of its
    past burden, wants it to give up its policy of denial to become a
    country truly coveting to integrate with the family of civilized
    European nations," the message runs.
    The prime minister says then that next year will mark the 90-th
    anniversary of the Armenian genocide and the 6-th anniversary of the
    end of one of the bloodiest wars, WW II, suggesting that the year of
    2005 be declared A Year of Commemoration of and Struggle Against
    Wars, Genocides, Deportations and Abuse of Human Rights.
    The message also says that the issue of the international
    recognition of the Armenian genocide and its condemnation will remain
    on Armenia's foreign policy agenda. It says that concurrently Armenia
    reaffirms its desire to have natural relations with all its neighbors
    and its resolution to build a strong and prosperous country.
    "I am confident that Armenia will make its contribution to global
    efforts together with other nations for building a just and safe
    world," the message concludes.
Working...
X