CHARLES AZNAVOUR: ARMS SUPPLIERS BECAME BEST FRIENDS OF AZERBAIJAN
14:47 | April 20,2015 | Politics
Le Monde, a popular daily newspaper published in Paris, has published
an article by world renowned chansonnier Charles Aznavour, Nouvelles
d'Arménie magazine reports.
In the article entitled "Death continues to rotate around Armenians"
Aznavour expresses his opinion about Turkey's denial policy and
cowardice.'
He calls on Armenians and Turks to start dialogue. Addressing Turkish
President Recep Tayyip Erdogan, the chansonnier asks why the Turkish
government continues to remain loyal to the denial policy of their
predecessors.
In the article, Charles Aznavour also refers to the situation in
Karabakh and in Syria and reminds of the struggle of Missak Manouchian,
a French-Armenian poet and militant communist, a survivor of the
Armenian Genocide, who went to France where he took up arms and fought
for that country.
"How often the Armenian nation has been betrayed and abandoned by
fate," the singer said adding, "Those who supplied arms have now
become the best friends of Azerbaijan."
Charles Aznavour ends the article with the hope in today's Turkish
people. "The crime was not committed by them," he writes.
http://en.a1plus.am/1209954.html
14:47 | April 20,2015 | Politics
Le Monde, a popular daily newspaper published in Paris, has published
an article by world renowned chansonnier Charles Aznavour, Nouvelles
d'Arménie magazine reports.
In the article entitled "Death continues to rotate around Armenians"
Aznavour expresses his opinion about Turkey's denial policy and
cowardice.'
He calls on Armenians and Turks to start dialogue. Addressing Turkish
President Recep Tayyip Erdogan, the chansonnier asks why the Turkish
government continues to remain loyal to the denial policy of their
predecessors.
In the article, Charles Aznavour also refers to the situation in
Karabakh and in Syria and reminds of the struggle of Missak Manouchian,
a French-Armenian poet and militant communist, a survivor of the
Armenian Genocide, who went to France where he took up arms and fought
for that country.
"How often the Armenian nation has been betrayed and abandoned by
fate," the singer said adding, "Those who supplied arms have now
become the best friends of Azerbaijan."
Charles Aznavour ends the article with the hope in today's Turkish
people. "The crime was not committed by them," he writes.
http://en.a1plus.am/1209954.html