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NCWA Chairman Addresses Toronto Armenians

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  • NCWA Chairman Addresses Toronto Armenians

    NCWA CHAIRMAN ADDRESSES TORONTO ARMENIANS

    Jirair Tutunjian, Toronto, 26 January 2014

    TORONTO--The chairman of the Paris-based National Congress of Western
    Armenians (NCWA) outlined the aims and recent projects at a private
    gathering here on January 25.

    Addressing a cross section of the Toronto Armenian community,
    Souren Seraydarian said the NCWA mission is to initiate and carry
    out activities related to the defense of the interests and rights of
    Western Armenian descendants of the former Armenian citizens of the
    Ottoman Empire. He added that the NCWA mission is also to define or
    assist in defining the individual and collective losses and damages
    suffered in the territory of the Republic of Turkey since 1915.

    Safeguarding the Armenian cultural heritage in Turkey is also part
    of the NCWA mission, he said.

    Since its foundation at Sevres, outside Paris, in 2011, the NCWA
    has pursued a proactive agenda to engage progressive Turkish groups
    and individuals and to build bridges with the Kurdish leadership,
    especially in eastern Turkey (Western Armenia). The NCWA is an
    international NGO with members in Argentina, Armenia, Canada, Lebanon,
    France, the Russian Federation, the United States and half-a-dozen
    other countries. Like Armenians from the Middle East and the western
    world, NCWA members in Armenia and in the Russian Federation are
    descendants of Genocide survivors. Among the members are judges,
    lawyers, engineers, businessmen, authors, journalists, politicians from
    the RoA parliament, military personnel including a retired general who
    helped organize the Armenian Army during the Armenian-Azerbaijan War in
    the early '90s. Seraydarian stressed that to expand its work,the NCWA
    "needs further human and financial resources". He invited attendees
    to look up the NCWA website and become members of his organization.

    In a frank, informal and wide-ranging talk, Seraydarian cautioned
    attendees not expect dramatic or breakthrough developments on the part
    of the Turkish government as a result of the centenary of the Genocide
    next year. "April 24, 2015 is an important date, but it's just a date.

    What's more important is the day after. What do we do after that date?

    We have no illusions; we intend to continue on the long trail our
    campaign for Turkey's recognition of the Genocide and for compensation
    re the losses the Armenian nation suffered," he said.

    Outlining the recent work of the NCWA, Seraydarian said that his
    organization is seeking an observer status at UN's Economic and Social
    Council, in addition to the UN Human Rights Commission. It's also
    organizing nine Armenian compatriotic associations in Turkey into a
    single entity, and registering the NCWA as a national NGO in Turkey.

    He said the NCWA would soon start legal action in national courts as
    well as the European Court of Human Rights regarding the Genocide
    and Armenian rights. Meanwhile the organization will continue the
    dissemination of information in the Turkish media and strengthen
    NCWA's co-operation with Turkish institutions and individuals who
    already recognize the Genocide.

    During six trips to Turkey in the past three years, the NCWA leadership
    has met Armenian community leaders, compatriotic organizations,
    Islamized/Hamshen Armenians, Turkish lawyers, Freedom of Thought
    in Ankara, the Human Rights Association in Ankara and Istanbul, the
    Ismael Beskci Foundation, andthe BDP Kurdish party representatives
    in the Turkish parliament. During its dialogue with civil society
    organizations in Turkey, the NCWA leaders have put restitution and or
    compensation to Armenians at the top of their agenda, said Seraydarian.

    The NCWA leaders have also met representatives of the recently-created
    HCP Kurdish party in Turkey, the mayors of Diyarbekir and Van,
    members of the Hrant Dink Foundation in Istanbul and delegates from
    the European Union of Turks.

    Seraydarian said the NCWA leaders have also made three trips to
    Armenia and met its president and the Catholicos of All Armenians. He
    said the latter was less than enthusiastic about the organization's
    mission. Catholicos Aram I of the Cilicia See in Lebanon was far more
    enthusiastic, he said. During the Lebanese trip, the NCWA leaders
    also met the catholicos of the Catholic Cilicia See.

    The NCWA leader's informal and frank address, which included a
    power-point presentation, was followed by a question-and-answer
    session. The consensus among the more than 30 attendees was that the
    NCWA is doing important work which all Armenians should support. A
    number of people enrolled NCWA members while others said they would
    look up the group's website and most probably become members.

    http://www.keghart.com/Report-NCWA-Toronto



    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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