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Serzh Sargsyan: My Short Yet Too Eventful Trip About Diaspora's Comm

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  • Serzh Sargsyan: My Short Yet Too Eventful Trip About Diaspora's Comm

    SERZH SARGSYAN: MY SHORT YET TOO EVENTFUL TRIP ABOUT DIASPORA'S COMMUNITIES GAVE ME VERY IMPORTANT IMPULSES

    Noyan Tapan
    Oct 8, 2009

    YEREVAN, OCTOBER 8, NOYAN TAPAN. RA President, National Security
    Council Chairman Serzh Sargsyan convened a National Security Council
    enlarged meeting on October 8. According to a report by the RA
    President's Press Office, besides members of the National Security
    Council, Catholicos of All Armenians Karekin II, Bargavach Hayastan
    (Prosperous Armenia) party Chairman Gagik Tsarukian, Public Council
    Chairman Vazgen Manukian, and Minister of Diaspora Hranush Hakobian
    also participated in the meeting.

    At the National Security Council meeting the participants discussed
    the current stage of normalization of Armenia-Turkey relations and
    country's future tasks in this direction, summed up the public
    discussions over the normalization process of Armenian-Turkish
    relations, as well as RA President's pan-Armenian trip.

    Serzh Sargsyan opening the National Security Council meeting said:

    "Dear colleagues,

    We have a single issue on today's agenda of the National Security
    Council meeting, the current condition of our initiative to
    normalize the Armenia-Turkey relations and our future tasks in this
    connection. Now it is time to sum up the public discussions lasting
    for nearly six weeks. My pan-Armenian trip has also finished, during
    which I had a possibility to get acquainted with opinions of our
    sisters and brothers in the Diaspora, their concerns and proposals.

    Today I will tell you my impressions and conclusions from
    that trip. Then we will touch upon the problems of signing the
    Armenia-Turkey initiated protocols and the next stages of the process.

    During a week I visited the most important centers of Armenian Diaspora
    - Paris, New York, Los Angeles, Beirut, and Rostov-on-Don. Regional
    meetings were held in each place, and representatives of Armenian
    national structures functioning in each community and of separate
    communities were present at the meetings. From the very start
    we realized that we could not ensure a level of representation
    to please everybody. However, I think we managed to ensure a
    circle of invitees that permitted to provide a wide spectrum of
    opinions and approaches. As the goal of my visit was not to give a
    numerical analysis to Diaspora's collective opinion, we did not attach
    importance to ensuring equal representation of each view's supporters
    in the hall. For us, it was more important to listen to all possible
    approaches and to receive the whole possible consultation in this
    issue. I think we managed to.

    A question was often voiced during my trip: aren't these consultations
    late in consideration of the fact that the protocols have been
    already initiated?

    I think it is only the opinion of people who sincerely believe that
    normalization of Armenia-Turkey relations is limited to initiation of
    protocols. Certainly, it is not so. For me, the discussions in the
    Diaspora were too important in the respect of planning our strategy
    and tactics in each link of the chain from initiation to signing,
    from signing to ratification, and from ratification to fulfillment.

    A concern was often voiced during my meetings that Armenia does not
    have sufficient resources - human, financial-economic, political
    to organize those relations as an equal side. I think it is a wrong
    approach. Yes, we need to mobilize our resources, to use Diaspora's
    potential completely.

    However, in my opinion, that argument cannot be enough for shutting
    ourselves up inside our country.

    There were concerns that establishment of relations and opening of
    the border can result in an economic and demographic expansion. I
    think it is the same as to suppose that beheading is the best method
    of getting rid of a headache.

    I had an occasion to reaffirm our approach that we do not consider
    that the protocols can be interpreted as documents binding Armenia's
    negotiations positions in the Nagorno Karabakh conflict. Moreover,
    I reaffirmed our approach to possible settlement conditions - without
    a limitation, through expression of free will, determination of its
    legal status by the Nagorno Karabakh people. I consider it important
    that U.S. President Barack Obama once more reaffirmed it when I had
    a telephone talk with him during my stay in Los Angeles. The concerns
    of our compatriots, as well as statements on this issue periodically
    voiced by the Turkish leadership are understandable.

    Certainly, in our small region all processes can influence each other.

    Another thing is important here: we are not ready and will never make
    one-sided concessions in the issue of Nagorno Karabakh, irrespective
    of the thing what we can be suggested for it.

    The next main concern is the alleged possible retreat in the issue of
    international recognition and condemnation of the Armenian Genocide. I
    think it is obvious that any Armenian cannot but voice the reasons
    of our being a people spread throughout the world and deprived of its
    territory. We have a duty in the issue of recognition and condemnation
    of the Genocide and will do that duty to the end. I feel sorry that
    giving way to their emotions some of our sisters and brothers lost
    the ideological basis of their steps. If the fair demand of all of
    us is voicing the importance of accepting the fact of the Genocide
    in the Armenia-Turkey relations, then it was the very purpose of
    starting my pan-Armenian trip, as a symbol, with paying the tribute
    of our respect to the Genocide victims at the monument to Komitas in
    Paris. I expected that not with a provocation of 100 people but with
    an action of protest of many thousands of people we should have shown
    our consolidation and position in this issue.

    And lastly, there was a concern in the issue of recognition of
    the current borders. My answer was unchanged: making territorial
    demands is not the best start for normalizing relations. There are
    facts of political culture of the 21st century we are obliged to
    take into consideration. I also had an opportunity to emphasize and
    repeatedly heard the fair approach of our sisters and brothers in the
    Diaspora that the Armenian-Turkish relations are much wider than the
    Armenia-Turkey relations.

    Dear colleagues,

    My short yet too eventful trip about Diaspora's communities gave me
    very important impulses. I had an occasion to once more appreciate
    the potential of our collective identity. I had an opportunity to
    once more feel how different we are depending on our birthplace,
    community where we live, organization where we work and meanwhile how
    much alike we are thanks to our collective Armenian identity. I also
    heard many words of support and encouragement in the Diaspora. I do
    not want to touch upon them separately because it is us as a state
    and state officials who bear full responsibility for the signing and
    we are not going to lay the burden of responsibility on someone. My
    goal was not returning from the pan-Armenian trip to say that the
    Diaspora is for signing the Armenia-Turkey current protocols."

    Then the National Security Council discussed the current stage of
    normalization of Armenian-Turkish relations. The report read that
    all participants of the National Security Council enlarged meeting
    expressed their support for the initiated documents.
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