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MFA: FM Oskanian Addresses Second Convention of European Armenians

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  • MFA: FM Oskanian Addresses Second Convention of European Armenians

    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 BY
    H.E. VARTAN OSKANIAN
    MINISTER OF FOREIGN AFFAIRS
    At the SECOND CONVENTION OF EUROPEAN ARMENIANS
    Brussels, October 15, 2007

    Dear Friends and Colleagues,

    On behalf of the people and government of Armenia, and as a descendant of
    genocide survivors, I would like to express our appreciation for the efforts
    of those who passed this resolution 20 years ago. It has been an interesting
    coincidence that this anniversary comes at a time when the US Congress, too,
    is considering a resolution and there is much talk about the value -- or
    danger -- of third parties engaging in what are said to be old historic
    issues. In that context, I want to thank those who recognized the immense
    moral and political value of rejecting genocidal behaviors and criminal
    policies which are not in anyone¹s national interest nor in humanity¹s
    international interest.

    Let me say at the outset that the Republic of Armenia, the Government of
    Armenia, the Armenian people around the world would gladly have done without
    this distinction. It goes without saying that we would have preferred NOT to
    be the victims of Genocide, we would have wanted NOT to be sufferers who
    are often blamed for their own fate, but after having such a fate visited
    upon us, we would certainly have NOT wanted to have been swept aside by the
    pages of history, and today we do NOT want to be accused of having national
    aspirations which are at odds with international interests.

    But the international community has the capacity for more than one message.
    The international community can indeed carry on its business, develop
    coalitions, fight off threats and dangers, including the threat of genocide,
    and none of this should come at the expense of recognizing and condemning
    genocide anywhere, anytime - in Darfur in the 21st century, or in the
    Ottoman Empire in the 20th century.

    Dear Friends,

    The value of the 1987 resolution is that it did more than recognize and
    condemn the Genocide of Armenians in the Ottoman Empire. Believing as it did
    that the Armenian issue and the question of minorities in Turkey must be
    re-situated within the framework of relations between Turkey and the
    European Community, the European Parliament extensively and thoughtfully
    laid out all the facets of this complex issue including recognition of the
    rights of the Armenian minority which still lives in Turkey, and recognition
    of the need to move Armenians and Turks towards understanding and
    reconciliation.

    This resolution also revealed political common sense. The message of the
    resolution was: a country aspiring to join Europe must look like Europe, act
    like Europe, imagine and see like Europe. It must view history for what it
    is - the product of political and social tensions of the time - and it must
    accept its own role in that history, learn from it and move forward, as
    Europe has done.

    Turkey ignored that message. Worse, just half a decade later, when
    independence came to all the Soviet republics, including Armenia, Turkey
    ignored a huge opportunity for a new start. Turkey refused to establish
    diplomatic relations with Armenia, and two years later closed the border,
    hoping perhaps that Armenia¹s vulnerability and fragile statehood would
    force it to renounce its past and with it, any possible claims for
    compensation.

    The country that could have been, should have been, the regional leader, the
    bridge between Europe and Asia, the bridge across the Black Sea, the bridge
    between the past and the future, that country abdicated its responsibility,
    because of unfounded fears.

    What is it that Turkey is afraid of? We have asked that question often, and
    particularly so this last week. We don¹t know. We are certainly not the only
    neighbors in the world who have had, and who continue to have, a troubled
    relationship. Troubled memories, a tortured past, recriminations, unsettled
    accounts and the enduring wounds of victimhood plague the national
    consciousness of peoples on many borders.

    Let¹s hear the Turks out. Their fears, their concerns, their excuses, their
    accusations, have been ringing loudly all week.

    First, they insist that labeling the events of 1915 as genocide is an insult
    to the Turkish people. It seems to me that a mature society that believes in
    free speech is beyond insults. But be that as it may, it can safely be said
    that the Turkish state created its own image, its identity, its modern
    history based on something less than reality. They boast of 1000 years of
    statehood, but they choose to assume only the glory of the Seljuk and
    Ottoman periods and not the burdens. Their textbooks lack the context that
    explains what befell the Ottoman Empire¹s many minorities, the Greeks,
    Kurds, Jews and Armenians among them. Now, with that gap in public
    knowledge, they are afraid that the their own people will be insulted by the
    truth. But they are not the only country or the only people which has had to
    come to terms with the undesirable contradictions at the base of their
    statebuilding process. The United States, France, Russia, Germany all have
    had to deal with the consequences of the an unconscionable past. And all
    have survived and flourished. Turkey cannot be afraid of being insulted,
    afraid of being asked questions, afraid of looking in the mirror.

    Second, Turkey insists that Armenians are trapped in the past. Actually it
    seems to us that the opposite is true. We do not forget the past, we do
    honor the victims and the survivors, but we don¹t make the past, the
    recognition of the past, a precondition for normalizing relations today and
    moving forward tomorrow. Turkey does. Turkey somehow expects that Armenians
    will renounce the past in order to appease Turkey and arrive at open
    borders. So who is living in the past? Who is making the present and the
    future conditional on the past? Who is allowing the dreaded past to
    confound, complicate and generally determine our collective future?

    Third, Turkey fears that what will follow recognition will be even more
    costly and more damning. Turkey must de-link history from politics.

    It is a political reality that both Turkey and Armenia exist today in the
    international community with their current borders. It is a political
    reality that we are neighbors and we will live alongside each other. It is a
    political reality that Armenia is not a security threat to Turkey. And
    finally, it is a reality that it is today¹s Armenia that calls for the
    establishment of diplomatic relations with today¹s Turkey.

    Turkey¹s idea to resolve these issues about the past is to form a historical
    commission which it says is the best way to resolve our historical
    differences. Our answer is threefold.
    First, really, let¹s face it: outside of Turkey, the question is not a
    historical one - the International Association of Genocide Scholars, the
    International Center for Transitional Justice, Raphael Lemkin, archives in
    countries the world over have established the historical veracity of the
    Genocide. Second, the penal code restrictions and their discriminatory
    application, especially to minorities, and especially to Armenians and those
    who dare to explore Armenian issues, has become frightening, and would
    certainly prohibit an open, healthy discussion about what have come to be
    called the events of 1915. Look, after the world inside and outside Turkey
    stood up to protest the murder of Hrant Dink last January, the son of the
    slain Hrant Dink has now also been convicted, again under Article 301, again
    for publishing an interview of his father¹s, the same interview for which
    Hrant was convicted, and which created the atmostphere of intolerance that
    resulted in his assassination, an assassination that has yet to be
    persuasively and persistently concluded. The threat hanging over the head of
    Hrant Dink¹s associates and successors cannot be ignored. Third, there are
    no diplomatic relations between the two countries and the border is closed
    between us and a discourse under those conditions would be hard to imagine.

    However, if Turkey indeed wants to discuss 1915, Armenia will be ready to do
    so at a governmental level, if relations between our two countries have a
    semblance of normalcy. At a minimum, with open borders. You see, we have
    experienced a decade-long series of efforts by Ankara to engage Armenia in a
    process, for the sake of showing the world that there is some ongoing
    process, and that third parties need not engage. The most insignificant,
    inconsequential meetings are held up as signs of progress. Let me be clear:
    short of movement on the border, there is no other measure of forward
    movement in our relations. Any other call will not be taken seriously.



    Armenia believes there is simply no reason to keep the border closed. Closed
    borders are not normal. Countries not at war with each other do not maintain
    closed borders. There is nothing in the current history of Armenia and
    Turkey that warrants closed borders. It is the unsettled memories of the
    past against which it has slammed shut the door between us.



    Armenia believes that Armenia and Turkey must confront those memories and
    histories. Armenia believes that there is no history in a vacuum, making it,
    assessing it and overcoming its obstacles the two sides have to do together.
    Armenia believes that Turkey must open the borders so that our people will
    interact to create new experiences to replace the old memories.


    Armenians believe that today¹s Turks do not bear the guilt of the
    perpetrators, unless they choose to defend them and identify with them.

    Armenia believes that Armenians and Turks, together with the rest of the
    modern world, can reject the actions and denounce the crimes of the Ottoman
    Empire. Turkey and Armenia together must exorcise the demons of the past.
    Turkey itself must summon the deep force of humanity and goodness and must
    renounce the deed, its intent, its consequences. And we, the descendants of
    the victims must exhibit the dignity, capacity and willingness to move on.


    Dear Friends,

    If anyone thinks that genocide is only a matter for the past, that it is
    indeed to be forgotten, they are not only wrong, but they do not understand
    the security implications for living alongside a strong, unrepentant
    neighbor, and the safety implications for those living within that society
    that has not come to terms with its past.

    I fear the ignorance that prompts those in positions of influence to label
    irrelevant the attempts of responsible leaders to bring some semblance of
    normalcy, morality and responsibility to relations between neighbors.

    I fear the reactions of a world power that counts on an ally whose
    allegiance is conditional.

    I fear there will never come a time that is the right time for the world to
    tell the government of Turkey, or any government for that matter - remember
    Darfur - that it has a responsibility to acknowledge such crimes.

    Dear Friends,

    Genocide is the ultimate crime against humanity. It is the extreme abuse of
    power. The human rights challenge facing all of us is to be able to
    recognize that a government has the capacity for such immorality and
    inhumanity, and that particular governments have indeed committed genocide.
    The political challenge is to call things by their name, to acknowledge that
    genocide is not just mass murder, not just massacre and deportation, but the
    betrayal of the responsibility of custody by the very people entrusted with
    insuring the security of their own population. Thus it requires a different
    kind of response, a different level of reaction, an unorthodox solution
    commensurate to the extraordinary crime.

    Twenty years after the European Parliament¹s call for condemnation and
    reconciliation, with even greater urgency, we repeat the call. The burden is
    on us all.

    When next the Parliament discusses this issue, we can only assume that
    Europe will expect that a Turkey which is serious about EU membership, which
    is indeed able to juggle the complex relationships that EU membership
    entails, will have to come to terms with its past, and to open borders with
    its neigbors.

    As you see, third parties still have a huge role to play.

    Parliaments and congresses must continue to insist that there be morality at
    the starting line and the goal line of all our foreign policies and foreign
    relations. It is essential that administrations and executive bodies not
    bend the rules, nor turn a blind eye or lower standards. Instead, let the
    international community consistently extend its hand, its example, its own
    history of transcending, in order for us all, to move on to making new
    history.

    Thank you.
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