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Robert Kocharyan: Strong, Democratic Armenia Must Be Response To Org

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  • Robert Kocharyan: Strong, Democratic Armenia Must Be Response To Org

    ROBERT KOCHARYAN: STRONG, DEMOCRATIC ARMENIA MUST BE RESPONSE TO ORGANIZERS OF ARMENIAN GENOCIDE

    Arka News Agency, Armenia
    April 25 2007

    YEREVAN, April 25. /ARKA/. Strong and democratic Armenia must become
    the Armenian people's response to the organizers and perpetrators
    of the Armenian Genocide, RA President Robert Kocharyan stated on
    the occasion of the 92nd anniversary of the Armenian Genocide in the
    Ottoman Empire.

    "Every year we revere the memory of the innocent victims of the
    Armenian Genocide in Ottoman Turkey. However, the memory of that
    heinous crime has always been in our hearts," says the President's
    message.

    Together with the Armenian people, this day is commemorated in many
    countries of the world.

    "The international community has come to realize that the Genocide
    is a crime not only against one people, but also against the entire
    humankind. Denial and concealment of this crime are as dangerous as
    organization and perpetration," Kocharyan said.

    According to the Armenian President, hardships and the sense
    of injustice are uniting. "The Genocide made Armenians unite,
    strengthened their feeling of identity and aspiration for independent
    statehood. The Republic of Armenia, as a realization of all the
    Armenians' centuries-old dream, must develop as homeland for all
    Armenians," Kocharyan said.

    The RA President, accompanied by his wife Bella Kocharyan, laid a
    wreath to the Memorial to the victims of the Armenian Genocide of 1915.

    The Armenian Genocide was the first genocide in the 20th century
    organized by the Government of Young Turks in 1915-1923. The
    recognition of the Armenian Genocide is of principal importance for
    the entire Armenian people, for the Genocide was aimed at doing away
    with the Armenian Cause.

    The Armenian Genocide has been officially recognized by a number of
    countries, 40 US states, as well as a number of foreign Parliaments.

    The best representatives of the world's intelligentsia raised their
    voice in support of the Armenian people.

    The international community is now more active is expressing its
    indignation over the crime against the Armenian people. Politicians
    and intellectuals state that timely denouncement of the Armenian
    Genocide would have prevented such tragedies as the Jewish Holocaust,
    genocides in Cambodia, Sudan and Rwanda.
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