Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Armenian Foreign Minister Delivers Speech At The 35th Session Of UNE

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

  • Armenian Foreign Minister Delivers Speech At The 35th Session Of UNE

    ARMENIAN FOREIGN MINISTER DELIVERS SPEECH AT THE 35TH SESSION OF UNESCO GENERAL CONFERENCE

    ARMENPRESS
    Oct 8, 2009

    YEREVAN, OCTOBER 8, ARMENPRESS: Armenian Foreign Minister Edward
    Nalbandyan delivered speech at the 35th session of UNESCO General
    Conference Armenian Foreign Ministry Media and Information Department
    told Armenpress that the speech of the minister runs as follows:
    "Distinguished Mr. President, Distinguished Director General,
    Distinguished Delegates, Ladies and Gentlemen, First of all, I would
    like to congratulate Ms. Irina Bokova, on her upcoming election as
    Director-General of UNESCO. I am confident, that with her leadership
    this distinguished forum will make a remarkable step forward in
    achieving major goals of this Organization. I am also honored to
    express my sincere thanks to H.E. Koichiro Matsuura, the outgoing
    Director General, for his dedicated work for the last 1o years.

    Mr. President, Since the first day of its membership to this
    Organization, Armenia's policy in cooperation with UNESCO has pursued
    the goal of benefiting from its tremendous capacity, and adding
    value through contribution by its own cultural values, scientific
    and educational potential in the achievement of UNESCO's noble goals.

    We welcome the policy of the Organization in the context of the
    overall UN reform, to bring its offices close to the regions it deals
    with and become a more active member of the UN country team in the
    implementation of "One-UN" concept. The conclusion of the UNESCO
    Country Programming Document of Cooperation between UNESCO and the
    Republic of Armenia in March 2008 provides with ample opportunities
    to extend its activities in Armenia by developing inter-sectoral
    country programs linked with and complementary to the United Nations
    Development Assistance Framework (UNDAF).

    Mr. President, Armenia has developed vast cooperation with UNESCO
    in all areas of its interest implementing multiple programs and
    initiatives. Just to name a few, within the "Education for All"
    program, we hosted this Septe n "Enhancement of quality of Education
    and Curriculum Development." This November, the Armenian National
    Commission together with the Ministry of Culture is organizing under
    the auspices of UNESCO a regional conference entitled "Cultural Policy
    and Policy for Culture." The inclusion of the 800th anniversary of
    the world renowned manuscript illuminator Toros Roslin, and 1600th
    anniversary of the founder of the Armenian historiography Movses
    Khorenatsi in the UNESCO list of anniversaries for 2010-2011 would
    allow us to pay tribute to the work and memory of these exceptional
    figures that left an inerasable footprint in the minds and history
    of mankind.

    Mr. President, Armenia is a country rich with cultural monuments
    dating back to 4th millennium BC. As of today there are nearly 33 000
    historical and cultural monuments in Armenia under state protection,
    included in the State Register of National Heritage. For centuries, the
    Armenian people have erected numerous and diverse cultural monuments
    most of which, due to known historical events, are currently located
    outside the borders of the present-day Republic of Armenia. Armenia's
    neighbors have displayed different approaches towards the question
    of the preservation of Armenian historical heritage.

    There is an excellent cooperation with the Islamic Republic of Iran
    (IRI) that takes proper care of the Armenian monuments situated in its
    territory. The living proof of the aforementioned is the inclusion of
    St. Thaddaeus Monastery in the World Heritage List by the suggestion
    of Iran.

    In the recent years the 17th-century Persian mosque erected in Yerevan
    has been restored in cooperation with the Iranian specialists, and
    has become functioning.

    Unfortunately, this positive experience is not reciprocated by our
    other neighbors. As a result of the policy of destruction of the
    Armenian historical heritage, thousands of cultural monuments that
    were of universal value, have been lost forever.

    Mr. President, In an era when the protection and promotion of hum
    erpinning concept for a civilized nation, damaging or destroying
    cultural or religious memory intentionally, consistently, repeatedly,
    must be condemned with the same resolve and determination as violence
    aimed against people.

    Unfortunately, with Azerbaijan, efforts to do away with Armenian
    heritage go on unabated despite the continuous alarm rang by Armenia. A
    painful proof of the monument demolition that has been in process
    for years, is the annihilation of the centuries-old Jugha (Julfa)
    Cemetery in Nakhichevan with its tens of thousands of delicately
    carved, unique cross-stones dating from the 9th to the 16th centuries,
    that bore to the talent and the artistic skill of the masters of Jugha.

    There was no war in the years between 1998 and 2005 when thousands of
    these giant sculptures were knocked over, piled onto railroad cars and
    carted away under the Azerbaijani government's watchful eyes. In 2005,
    this enormous cultural gem was bulldozed down, leveled and turned into
    a military training ground in a government-sanctioned operation. As
    regretfully stated in the 16th ICOMOS General Assembly resolution:
    "this heritage that once enjoyed its worthy place among the treasures
    of the world's heritage can no longer be transmitted today to future
    generations."

    There was no war also in 1975, when a 7th century Armenian church was
    completely demolished in the center of Nakhichevan, for no reason
    other than to wipe out the memory of the Armenians who constituted
    a majority there just decades earlier.

    Mr. President, Armenia gives high priority to the protection of
    cultural values which are not "mine" or "yours" but "ours" -- those
    cultural values that are truly universal and shared, those that are
    worthy not just of national attention but international. Armenia's
    commitment to protection and promotion of human rights and cultural
    diversity is very real. Both cultural diversity and the protection of
    monuments are especially significant for nations which have monuments
    beyond national borders, indeed in countr ur neighborhood. Doomed
    from its very beginning, the annihilation of the civilization of any
    people is incompatible with and unallowable for any country aspiring
    to membership in such international organizations, as UNESCO.

    We do believe that this organization, the United Nations Educational,
    Scientific and Cultural Organization, would be able to stand up to
    the challenge of unabated violation of cultural rights and thus bring
    its contribution to enhancing intercultural dialogue and tolerance
    all over the world.

    Thank you Mr. President."
Working...
X