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Oskanian States That Part Of Ordinary Citizens Of Armenia Have Sense

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  • Oskanian States That Part Of Ordinary Citizens Of Armenia Have Sense

    OSKANIAN STATES THAT PART OF ORDINARY CITIZENS OF ARMENIA HAVE SENSE OF POWERLESSNESS

    Noyan Tapan
    Mar 15 2007

    GENEVA, MARCH 15, NOYAN TAPAN. On March 13, RA Foreign Minister Vartan
    Oskanian made a speech a the UN Human Rights Council.

    The Minister, in particualr, regretted to say that 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," he said.

    The Minister stated that 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.

    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," Oskanian stated.

    The third phenomenon, in Oskanian's words, is 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," Oskanian said.

    Speaking about Armenia's commitment to human rights and democracy,
    Oskanian said that in 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.

    In the Minister's words, 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," Oskanian stated.
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