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President Kocharian addresses international conference on Genocide

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  • President Kocharian addresses international conference on Genocide

    President Kocharian addresses international conference on Genocide

    20.04.2005 13:05

    YEREVAN (YERKIR) - President Robert Kocharian addressed the
    international conference "Ultimate Crime, Ultimate Challenge,"
    opened in Yerevan on Wednesday. Below is the full text of President
    Kocharian's speech.

    Mr. Chairman, Ladies and Gentlemen:

    We pay tribute to the memory of vanished victims as we commemorate
    the 90th anniversary of the tragic events. We do it with doubled pain,
    since we are still bound to continue the struggle for the international
    recognition of the committed crime.

    The First World War aimed at global re-distribution of the world and
    the big ideological controversy of the 20th century that followed
    became the major obstacles to recognition of the legitimate rights
    of the Armenian people. We became victims of the First World War even
    though we were not the initiators of that war. And our right for memory
    was sacrificed to the Cold War even though we were not its masterminds.

    When the planned policy of extermination of the Armenian nation was
    executed, the term "genocide" did not exist. Nor was it defined. There
    were no international structures that could serve as a floor for
    discussion to give a united response to that crime of genocide.

    Obviously the world is changing. It took time for the world to
    treat genocides as crimes against humanity with all the relevant
    consequences. It took time to prevent the practice of sacrificing
    fundamental humanitarian values to the geopolitical interests of
    great powers and to include the moral considerations into foreign
    policy making of the civilized world.

    The avenue of that change was tragic for many peoples. For the Armenian
    people the price of that change equals one and a half million of
    human lives. Today also, the Armenian question is kept hostage to
    some geopolitical interests.

    Modern technologies allow watching live the military operations
    unfolding in differentt parts of the world, the term "genocide"
    is well defined, and numerous regional and universal international
    organizations are put in place.

    Countries are more determined in responding to a threat or attempt
    to commit genocides. Yugoslavia, Rwanda, East Timor, Sumgait - in
    all these places once again innocent people were slaughtered. This
    comes to prove that there is a need to amplify the efforts aimed at
    effective suppression of the genocidal attempts.

    That is exactly why the recognition and condemnation of genocides
    is so crucial. Recognition bears in it a huge potential for adequate
    response. Prevention of that crime is particularly important.

    Condemnation of genocides committed in the past is also very
    important. It first of all comes to prove that the crime has no
    expiration clause, and those guilty will be bbrought to justice in
    any case. It is important in terms of containment of future genocidal
    intentions.

    It is through recognition and condemnation that states educate their
    citizens. The lessons is: the state machinery shall not become a toll
    in implementation of that terrible crime. We the duty of establishing
    atmosphere that would exclude any extremist divisions based on the
    nationality, ethnos, and religions or along any other dividing lines,
    any propaganda of hatred by one group against another.

    Another important component is the future fate of a people that
    has survived genocide. The Armenian people, due to genocide,
    were displaces, became a refugee people and were scattered across
    the globe. International recognition of the Armenian Genocide and
    necessity of restoration of historic injustice were sacrificed to
    the grand politics.

    Most of the criminals who planned and implemented the genocide
    escaped the punishment. Moreover, the remains of Taleat pasha who
    was assassinated in Berlin, were returned to Turkey and buries with
    honors in Istanbul. The humanity pays a tremendously high price of
    forgetting such crimes.

    Using this opportunity I would like to thank all those countries,
    which at different levels have addressed the issue of the Armenian
    Genocide and have recognized it, as well as all those individuals and
    organizations that have contributed to wards that recognition. The
    role of Diaspora in that regard is absolutely inestimable.

    By such recognitions states also say "no" to all possible future
    genocides. The number of victims of the Armenian genocide could be
    incomparable higher and the fate of survivors much more severe if
    not for a number of outstanding individuals, including Morgenthau,
    Bruce, Nansen, Verfel, Briusov, Wegner, Lepsius, and many others who
    stood by our people in those terrible days.

    Dear Ladies and Gentlemen:

    The Republic of Armenia, as an independent state, has put its position
    straight forward: recognition of the Armenian Genocide is also
    important for prevention of future possible genocides. Recognition is
    important for Armenian-Turkish relations, since it could give answers
    to many questions that exist between our two peoples, it would allot
    to look ahead.

    We remember the past with pain, but without hatred. For us it is
    difficult to comprehend the response of the TTurkish side, which
    is represented not only by the denial of the past, but also by the
    blockade of nowadays Armenia. We have come across a paradox that
    still needs to be apprehended. The perpetrator, not the victim is
    furious with the past.

    Are confident that international recognition of the Genocide will help
    Turkey to come to terms with its own past and to overcome the complex
    which is inherited from generation to generation and which creates
    additional complexities in the relations of our neighboring nations.

    I once again welcome all of you and wish you effective work. Thank you.
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