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FM Addresses UN Commission on Human Rights, Addresses Genocide

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  • FM Addresses UN Commission on Human Rights, Addresses Genocide

    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

    FM Oskanian Addresses UN Commission on Human Rights
    Addresses Genocide and Karabakhıs Self-Determination

    Minister Vartan Oskanian addressed the 61st session of the UN Human Rights
    Commission in Geneva today. This is the first year of Armeniaıs second term
    on the 53-member Commission.

    The minister explained that Armeniaıs membership in this Commission is not
    simply an organizational matter. He said that membership is ³as much a
    product of our sense of responsibility as of our deep, immediate daily
    awareness that individual human rights, the basic human rights of a society,
    and individual and collective security are all inextricably, inarguably,
    expressly interconnected.² For Armenians, he said ³the human rights
    principle, the concept of manıs inalienable rights touches a raw nerve. We
    spent the greatest part of the last century under a regime that endured
    solely because of the absence of human rights. Immediately prior to that
    period, we had the dubious honor of being the centuryıs first victims of
    genocide. At the end of the century, we were still fighting to secure the
    rights of the Armenians of Nagorno Karabakh.²

    Then the Minister focused on Genocide and the issue of Nagorno Karabakh
    self-determination.

    On Genocide, he explained that for Armenians, ³As a minority, living in the
    Ottoman Empire, their call for the application of the lofty principles of
    liberty, equality and fraternity, led to their death sentence. Today, their
    survivors, living within and outside the Republic of Armenia expect that the
    worldıs avowal of the universality of those same noble principles will lead
    to recognition that Genocide was committed against Armenians.²

    Referring to recent calls by the Turkish leadership for a historical debate,
    the Minister reiterated Armeniaıs readiness for dialogue.

    ³Letıs not confuse the two kinds of dialogue,² he said. ³One is a debate
    about history. The other is a political discussion. Periodic calls by
    various Turkish administrations for historical debate simply delay the
    process of reconciling with the truth.²

    On the struggle of the people of Nagorno Karabakh for self-determination,
    the Minister remarked, ³Ironically, Mr. Chairman, even as societies have
    learned to support the victims of domestic violence, we have not yet
    graduated to offering the same support to victims of international or
    government violence. At best, the world watches silently as the victims
    attempt to defend themselves, and if somehow, against great odds, they
    succeed, then the world quickly pulls back, as the state loudly cries foul
    and claims sovereignty and territorial integrity.
    ³Just as the perpetrator of domestic violence loses the moral right to
    custody, so then, does a government that commits and promotes violence
    against its own citizens lose its rights. It is in such instances that the
    notion of self-determination is significant and legitimate.²

    The Minister concluded his remarks with, ³Mr. Chairman, for us, defense and
    protection of human rights is not an abstract principle. It is the
    difference between survival and annihilation. We believe it is the same for
    many in the world. Yet, our individual and collective tendency is to ignore
    or neglect problems for which we have no immediate answer or prospect for
    solution. This is even more true in situations which defy belief, surpass
    common norms, and shake our very assumptions and values. For these very
    reasons, in our ever-shrinking world, what is required is resolve on the
    part of the committed in order to expand the engagement of those still
    hesitant.²

    On the margins of the Commissionıs annual meeting, the Minister met with
    Dimitri Rupel, Sloveniaıs Foreign Minister and Chairman-in-Office of the
    Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe. He also met with the
    Foreign Minister of Finland, Laila Freivalds. He also met with the President
    of the ICRC, Jacob Kellenberger, and Sergei Orjonikidse, Director General of
    the Geneval office of the United Nations.

    Below is the full text of the Ministerıs statement.

    Mr. Chairman,

    This is a special year for multilateral diplomacy as we celebrate the 60th
    anniversary of the United Nations. This is also a critical year as we
    contemplate the reforms necessary to bring this institution, the UN, in line
    with the various evolutions and revolutions that the world has seen in this
    past 60 years. The UN is the place where we have built security institutions
    and structures on the foundations of human freedom and economic access.
    Here, we both take from and give to a more interdependent world. With the
    future in mind, this is place where we will eventually look to find ways to
    avoid threats as we broaden and enlarge human rights and civil liberties.

    It is noteworthy that the Commission on Human Rights is the only
    non-principal UN body which has been mentioned in the High Level Panel
    Report and for which far-reaching reforms have been recommended for this
    commission. That is because I believe all of todayıs biggest challenges
    affect and are affected by the absence of or adherence to human rights. This
    makes the nature of the report very important. How and with what instruments
    and mechanisms those rights are to be protected is the concern addressed by
    the report and by each of us. Everyone in the international community need
    to become engaged as we contemplate that report.

    The international communityıs increased focus on shared responsibility for
    promoting human rights and freedoms at the national level requires open and
    enhanced international co-operation. To justify the need to make new
    decisions about old problems, do we need to constantly remind ourselves that
    our world is not the same as it was 60 years ago, or even 15 years ago?
    Then, local human rights abridgements were local or domestic tragedies.
    Today, such abridgements are the first step toward international
    catastrophes. Hiding behind national sovereignty in order to avoid
    responsibility for to provide protection to human rights, today, risks
    proliferation of injustice, insecurity, misery and conflict,
    internationally.

    Mr. Chairman,
    Armeniaıs membership in the Commission on Human Rights is as much a function
    of our sense of responsibility as of our deep sense of belief and conviction
    that the basic human rights of a society, and individual and collective
    security are all inextricably, inarguably, expressly interconnected. For
    Armenians, the human rights principle, the concept of manıs inalienable
    rights touches a raw nerve. We lived the greatest part of the last century
    under a regime that endured solely because of the absence of human rights,
    civil liberties and freedoms. Immediately prior to that period, we had the
    dubious honor of being the centuryıs first victims of genocide. At the end
    of that century and today still, we were still fighting to secure the rights
    of self-determination of the Armenians of Nagorno Karabakh.

    Let me reflect on each of these.

    After living, as I said, under an ideologically different helmet only
    fourteen years ago, our domestic experience has been difficult and sometimes
    bumpy. We have learned to believe less in snap changes, we have our reasons
    to be sceptical of revolutions, we know that smooth public relations do not
    last as long as decent human relations. Therefore, as last year, so next
    year, we will continue to build on our successes, through evolutionary,
    incremental ways: poverty reduction, protecting the rights of conscientious
    objectors and religious sects, reforming the judicial system, strengthening
    political diversity and free expression, protecting and promoting the rights
    of women and children, fighting human traffickers.


    As for Genocide, Mr. Chairman, it is the ultimate manifestation of the
    violation of human rights. This year marks the 90th anniversary of the
    Armenian Genocide. Two-thirds of the Armenian population perished between
    1915 and 1918. As a minority, living in the Ottoman Empire, their call for
    the application of the lofty principles of liberty, equality and fraternity,
    led to their death sentence. Today, their survivors, living within and
    outside the Republic of Armenia expect that the worldıs avowal of the
    universality of those same noble principles will lead to recognition that
    Genocide was committed against Armenians.


    Ninety years after the event, we still live with the memory of suffering
    unrelieved by strong condemnation and unequivocal recognition. In this we
    are not alone. The catharsis that victims deserve and societies require in
    order to heal and move forward together, obliges me to appeal to the
    international community to call things by their name, to remove the veil of
    obfuscation, of double standards, of political expediency.


    Very recently, at the highest levels, the Turkish leadership called for a
    historical debate. They suggested that historians from Turkey and Armenia go
    thru archives and sort out this issue. My immediate response that Armenia
    would not participate in a historical debate was interpreted as rejection of
    dialogue.

    Letıs not confuse the two kinds of dialogue. One is a debate about history.
    The other is a political discussion. Periodic calls by various Turkish
    administrations for historical debate simply delay the process of
    reconciling with the truth. The facts are clear. The historical record is
    clear. We know well what happened to our forebears. Even in the first days
    of the Turkish Republic, the local Turkish authorities who had actually
    carried out the genocidal acts were tried and found guilty by their own
    Turkish courts. The Turks themselves, for their own reasons, put aside that
    historical record and moved away from that honest, dignified approach to one
    of denial and rejection. Turkey owes the worldıs generation that recognition
    so we move forward.


    Mr. Chairman,

    This slice of our history is even more reason for the international
    community to denounce genocide, once and for always, as a political tool. We
    commend the Secretary Generalıs 5-point action plan, we believe in
    strengthening the capacity and mandate of his Advisor on Genocide, and we
    believe that governments who commit Genocide must be persecuted and
    prosecuted the governments who commit genocide.

    Inability to continue down this path means we have failed structurally and
    institutionally. It also means we have failed to make the difficult policy
    choices because of short-term political costs, even though we know well that
    there will be long-term human and international consequences. A financially
    bankrupt government is turned over to international organizations until it
    reforms and renounces its wrongs. Can we tolerate any less of a government
    which is morally bankrupt? Do we want successive generations to believe that
    genocide is inevitable in each generation, on each continent? Can we allow
    governments to commit such massive violence against their own people? How
    can we explain why a report on Threats Challenges and Change must consider
    genocide a threat, even at the beginning of the 21st century?


    Finally, the third human rights issue is that of the self-determination of
    the Armenians of Nagorno Karabakh.

    Ironically, Mr. Chairman, even as societies have learned to support the
    victims of domestic violence, we have not yet graduated to offering the same
    support to victims of international or government violence. At best, the
    world watches silently as the victims attempt to defend themselves, and if
    somehow, against great odds, they succeed, then the world quickly pulls
    back, as the state loudly cries foul and claims sovereignty and territorial
    integrity.

    Just as the perpetrator of domestic violence loses the moral right to
    custody, so does a government that commits and promotes violence against its
    own citizens lose its rights. It is in such instances that the notion of
    self-determination is significant and legitimate.

    This is exactly what happened to the people of Nagorno Karabakh during the
    days of the collapse of the USSR when they opted, peacefully, for
    self-determination. The government of Azerbaijan immediately not only
    rejected the peaceful dialogue but resorted immediately to forceful
    suppression of those aspirations. Azerbaijan continued to militarily
    respond. At one point, the people of Nagorno Karabakh were on the verge of
    annihilation had there not been the last minute mobilization and their
    determination to fight for their lives, homes and their homeland. Today the
    government of Azerbaijan has lost the moral right to even suggest providing
    for their security and their future, let alone to talk of custody of the
    people of Nagorno Karabakh.

    Mr. Chairman, for us, defense and protection of human rights is not an
    abstract principle. It is the difference between survival and annihilation.
    We believe it is the same for many in the world. Yet, our individual and
    collective tendency is to ignore or neglect problems for which we have no
    immediate answer or prospect for solution. This is even more true in
    situations which defy belief, surpass common norms, and shake our very
    assumptions and values. For these very reasons, in our ever-shrinking world,
    what is required is resolve on the part of the committed in order to expand
    the engagement of those still hesitant.




    END
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