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Minister Oskanian Addresses UN Human Rights Council

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  • Minister Oskanian Addresses UN Human Rights Council

    PRESS RELEASE
    Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the Republic of Armenia
    Contact: Information Desk
    Tel: (374-10) 52-35-31
    Email: [email protected]
    Web: http://www.ArmeniaForeignMinistry.am


    Statement of H.E. Vartan Oskanian
    At the UN Human Rights Council
    Geneva, Switzerland
    March 13, 2004

    Mr. President of the Council,
    Madame High Commissioner,

    In this first year of this new Council, together with the human rights
    community, we have been refining the processes that will empower this body
    in order for it to meet our shared high expectations. The expectations of
    this Council were high at the outset. They would have remained high, even
    if the world were not embroiled in destructive explosive conflicts. It is
    no surprise that at the heart of most of those conflicts, lies an absence
    of a respect for basic human rights.

    Our collective responsibility is to those individuals and groups, those
    millions represented through their governments here, as well as to those
    whose voices remain muted. They are not interested in our debates, they
    know little about the nuance and the detail, but our seriousness and
    sincerity will be judged either by their trust and confidence or by their
    cynicism and disdain.

    With this realization, the strengths of the Commission on Human Rights
    drove the need for an even more powerful body. The limitations of that
    Commission compelled the creation of a more effective structure with
    broader reach. The Universal Periodic Review process, if it lives up to
    its name, holds the promise of the impartiality and inclusiveness we seek
    and require, in order for the process to transform itself from a means to
    an end - from a way of investigating the human rights environment to
    enabling an environment where there are human rights.

    Our objective is a world where the rights of individuals and groups are
    respected, where each neighborhood and each community, each city and
    country, each region and continent, are safe havens for all who live or
    travel there. Religion does tear people apart, as do economic disparities,
    language and ideology. But the frustrating and fascinating contradiction
    is that
    faith has also bound people together, prosperity has been a common goal,
    language and ideology have been shared.

    Mr.President, this universal truism is also true in our region.
    Unfortunately, the human rights record in our whole region during the past
    fifteen years is nothing to be envied; it is a case study in how human
    rights abuses lead to conflict and how conflicts heighten human rights
    abuses. From pogroms to ethnic cleansing, from destruction of spiritual
    markers to vilification of ethnic groups, we have lived through the worst
    that man can do to man. It is no wonder that the region has been mired in
    conflict since the first days of independence. As we search for ways to
    build a peace atop this pain and destruction, however, it is clear that
    solutions can only be found through the genuine and universal acceptance
    and application of basic, fundamental individual and collective human
    rights. There is the formula for peace: The violation of human rights
    brought us to this quagmire; the respect for human rights will get us out.

    Indeed it is an entangled web of human rights abuses of varied scope,
    nature and depth that has brought our region to this situation. First,
    there is the total disrespect of the cultural values of other people. When
    a government intentionally plans and executes the destruction of
    centuries-old monuments of profound cultural, artistic and religious
    significance, that government has violated the spirits of the dead and the
    trust of the living. Five thousand Armenian monuments have been destroyed
    by the Azerbaijani government in the region of Nakhichevan in the past few
    years, simply to eliminate the trace of a whole nation from that
    territory.

    Second, there is the violation of the right of people to
    self-determination. In the waning days of the USSR, the people of Nagorno
    Karabakh opted for self-determination. The Azerbaijani authorities decided
    to attack their own citizens to suppress those calls. And by doing so,
    they lost the political and moral right to govern people they considered
    their own citizens.

    Third, there are the negative consequences of the double denialism of the
    Turkish government. The denial of the right of their own people to freely
    discuss and debate their common past with Armenians, and the denial to
    both Armenians and Turks to forge a common future, by keeping borders
    closed. Hrant Dink, the Turkish-Armenian journalist who fell victim to an
    assassin's bullet, was the embodiment of both Turkishness and
    Armenianness. Hrant Dink had two missions in his life - to break all
    taboos within his own society, Turkish society, and to forge a dialog
    between Turks and Armenians to reach understanding and reconciliation.

    Indeed, that's exactly what we want today. There needs to be an open
    society within Turkey so that their people can, without the fear of
    persecution, freely debate the past, and there has to be an open border
    between us so that our two peoples can interact and engage. Only in this
    way can we transcend our differences and reconcile.

    Now, Mr. President, a word about our own commitment to human rights and
    democracy. In this, our 16th year of independence, our people will be
    going to the polls to elect a parliament whose powers the people chose to
    enhance, to invest them with broad authorities for social and economic
    advances. The task of our next government is clear: to stay the course
    and more aggressively promote human rights, alleviate poverty and build
    effective governing institutions, to enable our society to embrace
    democracy individually and collectively.

    But the cruelties inherent in the process of massive economic readjustment
    that we have been undergoing have led to a sense of powerlessness on the
    part of ordinary citizens. As a consequence, they are cynical about the
    value of expressing their voice. This means we must work harder to
    strengthen democratic institutions and processes, including elections,
    because they are not just ends. They are also means to creating the
    necessary political and economic environment which lead to distributed
    growth and dignified development.

    Finally Mr. President, this Council and each of us, its members, have a
    responsibility to promote the human rights we hold so dear in the world,
    in our regions and in our own societies. There is nothing new in this
    formula. Our challenge is to commit to it and make it work.

    Thank you.
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