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Armenian Leader On "Genocide" Recognition, Karabakh Settlement

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  • Armenian Leader On "Genocide" Recognition, Karabakh Settlement

    ARMENIAN LEADER ON "GENOCIDE" RECOGNITION, KARABAKH SETTLEMENT

    Public Television of Armenia
    April 7 2009

    Armenian President Serzh Sargsyan has said that the recognition as
    genocide of the killings of Armenians in Ottoman Turkey in the early
    1900s is about justice. In an interview with German sociologist Tilman
    Alert, aired on Armenian Public TV on 7 April, Sargsyan said that the
    day when the Turkish president visited the Armenian Genocide Memorial
    would be "one of the happiest moments" in his life.

    "I don't think that a Turkish president may pay a visit to the
    Genocide Memorial in the visible future," Sargsyan said. "If
    something like that happens, it would be one of the happiest moments
    in my life because no Armenian doubts the fact of the genocide. For
    Armenians, the recognition of the genocide is not an end in itself;
    nor do Armenians want an additional confirmation of the fact of the
    genocide. The recognition is more about preventing things; it is more
    related to justice."

    Speaking about the Nagornyy Karabakh conflict settlement and
    developments, Sargsyan, who himself comes from this breakaway
    Azerbaijani region, said he would be glad to resign from politics
    if the Karabakh conflict was settled. "The happiest day in my life
    would be the day when Azerbaijan recognizes the self-determination
    right of Nagornyy Karabakh, and Nagornyy Karabakh is declared either
    an independent state or unites with Armenia, and I resign," he said.

    The rest of the interview was about Sargsyan's life, with almost no
    political statements. Speaking about his early years, Sargsyan said
    he had planned to become a historian when in school but then decided
    to study the Armenian language and literature so enrolled in Yerevan
    State University. Sargsyan spoke about his background, family, brothers
    and other relatives. He said that while being a senior member of the
    Communist Party in Nagornyy Karabakh in the late 1980s, he chose to
    join the popular movement in 1988 when the Karabakh people rose to
    cede from Azerbaijan.
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