Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

FM Oskanian Addresses 60th Session of the UN Human Rights Commission

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

  • FM Oskanian Addresses 60th Session of the UN Human Rights Commission

    PRESS RELEASE
    Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the Republic of Armenia
    Contact: Information Desk
    Tel: (374-1) 52-35-31
    Email: [email protected]
    Web: http://www.ArmeniaForeignMinistry.am


    MINISTER OSKANIAN ADDRESSES 60TH SESSION OF THE HUMAN RIGHTS COMMISSION

    Minister Vartan Oskanian addressed the 60TH SESSION OF THE COMMISSION ON
    HUMAN RIGHTS in GENEVA on 16 MARCH. On the occasion of this meeting,
    foreign ministers from 70 countries addressed the Commission on global and
    local human rights issues and concerns.

    Less than a week after a terrorist attack resulted in massive deaths and
    injuries in Spain, the Minister called for unity in implementing the ideas
    that are shared in order to make possible democratic systems which breed
    stability and protect the human rights of all mankind.

    In his statement, Minister Oskanian reflected on the links between human
    rights and development explaining that many of todayıs social and economic
    ills can be resolved if human rights are accepted, absorbed, respected and
    implemented as inarguable, inalienable, unalterable rights.

    He spoke about Armenia's commitment to the Human Rights agenda, Armenia's
    accmplishments over these 10 years, including the abolition of the death
    penalty and the appointment of an ombudsman, and reforms in legislation. The
    Minister cited the recent killing of an Armenian soldier in Budapest by an
    Azerbaijani soldier as example of ethnic hatred. He explained that today's
    grievances in the region are the results of human rights abuses and called
    on the international community to recognize the Karabakh population's
    inherent basic human right to self-determination.

    Withiin the margins of the Commission Session, the Minister held a series of
    important bilateral meetings. Below is the complete text of the statement.


    STATEMENT BY THE MINISTER FOR FOREIGN AFFAIRS OF ARMENIA
    MR. VARTAN OSKANIAN

    60TH SESSION OF THE COMMISSION ON HUMAN RIGHTS
    GENEVA, 15-16 MARCH 2004


    Mr. Chairman, the first time I addressed this forum seven years ago, Armenia
    was not yet a member of the Council of Europe, was not a member of this
    Commission, and the responsibilities and obligations facing us appeared
    overwhelming. Today, as I take stock of where we were and how far weıve
    come, I am pleased to say that Armenia has had a role to play in the efforts
    to promote, espouse, advocate, even celebrate human rights. The freedoms
    enjoyed in many countries, the freedoms that make some societies the envy of
    the world, are the right of each individual man, woman and child. As
    societies and governments represented here, we gather to reaffirm our
    commitments and to continue the search for ways to make those ideals real.


    This 60th session is symbolic of all our hard-learned lessons. The struggle
    to articulate, explain, codify, legislate, impose, ensure human rights in
    each society has been both international and local. We wish to achieve
    universal access to and guarantee of human rights for all the worldıs
    citizens. Whether motivated by altruism or enlightened self-interest, we
    want the same civil liberties for the old and new democracies, the big and
    small powers, the developed and developing nations. As a new democracy, a
    small country following the path to development, we know that what happens
    inside countries - large and small -- can have and has had, a huge effect on
    the rest of the world.

    While symbols should not be mistaken for substance, they should not be
    dismissed as insubstantial, either. The gains that we have made are
    testimony to the truism that what is right is also good. Many of todayıs
    social ills, and the economic ones, too, will be well on their way to
    disappearing if human rights are accepted, absorbed, respected and
    implemented as inarguable, inalienable, unalterable rights.

    This is why older democracies - having suffered first-hand the risks of
    civil societies which do not extend human rights protections -- are
    determined to instill good governance mechanisms around the world. That is
    why international organizations include the human dimension as a significant
    component of their security concerns. That is why the terror of terrorism
    has imposed discussions of the elimination of human rights violations as
    solutions.


    The driving force is not just philosophy and idealism but also politics and
    pragmatism. Societies which respect the human rights of their own people are
    more likely to respect the rights of their neighbors. Countries which
    acknowledge that national aspirations can be given their just dues without
    resorting to violence or aggression are the kinds of societies in which we
    ourselves wish to live, and which we all want at our borders. Those among us
    who can confront remembered wrongs without committing new ones will have
    earned the right to call ourselves modern, inclusive, tolerant, neighborly.

    That is what we want for our neighborhood.

    >From the Caspian to the Black Sea, the Caucasus, the South Caucasus, the
    Northern Middle East is a cauldron of constant dynamic change, geopolitical
    fermentation, domestic and sub regional threats, and multi-power interest
    and competition. An uneven distribution of resources, mixed with a bumpy
    path to regional development and cooperation makes good governance based on
    a respect for individual rights even more critical for the interests of
    governments and citizens alike. We know that this requires a determination
    generated inside our societies. It necessitates intellectual and practical
    conversions that go beyond our international commitments.



    Towards this end, the comments, observations and even admonitions of various
    countries and international organizations on our human rights
    accomplishments and goals is acknowledged, and appreciated. We know that
    this is a win-win struggle, where what is good for Armenia is also good for
    the region. But we also know that preaching democracy is no substitute for
    the sustained efforts essential to create a healthy society, which in turn
    will guarantee the health of the state. We are ready to work with all those
    who comprehend the natural process of maturation needed for these changes to
    be authentic and deep-rooted, not cosmetic and short-lived.


    In Armenia, where human rights has been on our collective agenda for just
    one sixth of these 60 years, changes have already begun to take root. This
    year, the death penalty was abolished. The inherent right to life is now
    guaranteed for all our citizens. Just a few months ago, an ombudsman was
    appointed to hear grievances and facilitate solutions.

    Armeniaıs minority populations, although small in number, continue to enjoy
    the governmentıs attention and equal protections under the law.

    Trafficking, an emergent global evil, is the object of an interagency plan
    to eradicate the local conditions and mechanisms that enable this crime.

    The National Plan of Action for Children was approved to coordinate
    Armeniaıs obligations and programs for children - a vulnerable group whose
    basic quality of life indicators are paradoxical, just like those of their
    parents. Our kids are the victims of drastic and still incomplete economic
    and social transitions. Their access to nutrition and medicine is sometimes
    in jeopardy, but not to culture and education. This same dilemma is at the
    root of our implementation of the Millennium Development Goals, which when
    met, will go farther than any declaration to protect the basic rights of
    each individual citizen.

    Just as those goals are still not completely met, neither are programs to
    grow an independent judiciary. The road plan is there, but we still have far
    to travel. We are working with the Council of Europe on judicial and
    electoral reforms. The same is true for a fully participatory transparent
    legislative process. The existence of laws does not mean that their
    implementation is full and comprehensive. Our laws on press freedoms
    continue to be reformed in line with Council of Europe standards. We are
    committed to arriving at improved legislation. But we also know that
    legislatively facilitated press freedoms have still not resulted in an
    intellectually and fiscally free and responsible press.

    That we can even make these lists, and slowly cross off some of the items
    listed there, is ample indication that we are fully engaged in one of
    societyıs hardest tasks: to equally and broadly allocate the rights,
    privileges, benefits of human civilization.

    But, Mr. Chairman, the world is not there yet. Even as the world champions
    human rights, we tolerate excessive human wrongs.

    We tolerate atrocities, massacres, ethnic cleansing so long as they happen
    in distant lands. We tolerate their memories and approve the deniers. We
    tolerate historians who claim that there are circumstances in history that
    justify ethnic cleansing and its logical progression, genocide. Armenians
    have experienced these inexplicable human wrongs for a hundred years. We who
    have suffered these crimes have declared that the best way, the only way to
    restore faith and confidence is for perpetrators and victims to acknowledge
    the past, and move on to the future. Ironically, it is we the victims who
    have and who continue to make these unconditional offers. The perpetrators,
    old and new, do not. We do so, moved by a need to restore relations between
    peoples who have been and will continue to be neighbors. It is not for
    historyıs sake alone that we insist on acknowledging the past, but for the
    sake of the future. The political obstacles, the economic blockade that
    exist today are left over from an unfinished and unreconciled past. We want
    to move on to a collaborative and cooperative future. For that, our
    neighbors must sit with us today, in the present, with a will to recover
    that which the past has erased.

    In our neighborhood, the past is not buried in history. Todayıs grievances
    in our region are the consequences, expressions and manifestations of human
    rights abuses, not their causes.



    There were no refugees and no territorial issues when the people of Nagorno
    Karabakh, legally, in accordance with the legislation of the time, followed
    all necessary steps, to opt for self-determination. The state abrogated its
    responsibility to provide safety and security for its population. Instead,
    the response was military aggression.


    It is very telling that a sovereign government responded to its peopleıs
    democratic calls for self-determination with military means. Moreover, the
    violent, military response was not directed against the population of
    Nagorno Karabakh alone, but also against Armenians in Sumgait and Baku,
    miles away from the territory and population of Nagorno Karabakh.

    This was ethnic cleansing -- the first time that 'solution' was brought to
    and utilized in the former Soviet space -- even before it showed its head in
    the Balkans. The Armenians who were driven out were the first refugees in
    the former Soviet Union.

    Despite Armenians' continuous victimization, despite recent memories of
    pogroms and deportations, despite the continuing fragile defensive,
    protective position of Armenians in Nagorno Karabakh, Armenians continue to
    express readiness to arrive at some compromise settlement. This is not
    diplomatic talk. The Armenians of Nagorno Karabakh have held legitimate
    elections, are building a civil society based on legislation which protects
    human rights, and are preparing for the day when their own rights to
    self-determination and a life of peace and dignity will be recognized.

    Mr. Chairman,
    Unfortunately, the past is not behind us. Earlier this month, in Budapest,
    in a North Atlantic Cooperation Council training program, the concept of
    cooperation was shockingly shaken by the murder of an Armenian soldier by an
    Azerbaijani officer. This expression of ethnic hatred is more than
    disturbing, as we continue to search for solutions that will allow us to
    coexist in peace in this region.

    That is why we continue to call on our neighbors to join us in searching for
    ways to go forward. In a complex, problematic neighborhood, heavily burdened
    with history, we know full well that human rights, when equally and
    indiscriminately protected, will mean the ability to protect the safety,
    security and dignity of entire populations, whole countries and regions. It
    truly does start with each country, one person at a time.


    Mr. Chairman,

    We wish to join in welcoming Justice Louise Arbour to her new position as
    the new High Commissioner for Human Rights. We would have wished her good
    luck even had this meeting taken place a week ago, and we do so, even more,
    today. In the wake of the shocking, frightening, inexplainable horror that
    hit Spain and the world just a few days ago, I must repeat that which we all
    know: there is a way to beat the terrorism, to defeat those who are bent on
    destroying a way of life. That way is to unite in implementing the ideas
    which we all hold dear, in making possible the democratic systems which
    breed stability, in protecting the human rights of all mankind so that we
    never again need to protect ourselves from ourselves.

    Thank you.
Working...
X