ARMENIAN YOUTH OF MOSCOW COMMEMORATES GENOCIDE VICTIMS
PanARMENIAN.Net
April 24, 2012 - 09:56 AMT
PanARMENIAN.Net - On April 22, the Armenian Youth Association of Moscow
held a protest action at Taras Shevchenko embankment in Russian capital
to commemorate victims of the Armenian Genocide in the Ottoman Empire
in 1915.
"This action aimed to demonstrate the solidarity of the Armenian youth
and attract the attention of Moscow and Russian society to this issue,"
says the statement PanARMENIAN.Net received from the organizers.
The event brought together several hundreds of people, mostly the
young students of Moscow universities, as well as people of different
nationalities and age groups.
The action commenced with a minute of silence in memory of those
killed during Genocide. Then the participants took off their coats,
and the crowd appeared to be dressed in red symbolizing the bloodshed
committed by Young Turks in 1915.
Following it, the organizers and participants of the action unrolled
a huge black poster saying "The 1915 Armenian Genocide is a crime
with no statute of limitation. Justice will triumph."
The event was sanctioned beforehand and held within legal framework,
the security being provided by the law enforcement.
PanARMENIAN.Net
April 24, 2012 - 09:56 AMT
PanARMENIAN.Net - On April 22, the Armenian Youth Association of Moscow
held a protest action at Taras Shevchenko embankment in Russian capital
to commemorate victims of the Armenian Genocide in the Ottoman Empire
in 1915.
"This action aimed to demonstrate the solidarity of the Armenian youth
and attract the attention of Moscow and Russian society to this issue,"
says the statement PanARMENIAN.Net received from the organizers.
The event brought together several hundreds of people, mostly the
young students of Moscow universities, as well as people of different
nationalities and age groups.
The action commenced with a minute of silence in memory of those
killed during Genocide. Then the participants took off their coats,
and the crowd appeared to be dressed in red symbolizing the bloodshed
committed by Young Turks in 1915.
Following it, the organizers and participants of the action unrolled
a huge black poster saying "The 1915 Armenian Genocide is a crime
with no statute of limitation. Justice will triumph."
The event was sanctioned beforehand and held within legal framework,
the security being provided by the law enforcement.