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Ambassador Yeganian's address on the occasion of the 99th Anniversar

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  • Ambassador Yeganian's address on the occasion of the 99th Anniversar

    Ambassador Yeganian's address on the occasion of the 99th Anniversary
    of Armenian Genocide

    May 1, 2014

    Honourable guests, compatriots and friends,

    Another year has passed and we are commemorating already the 99th
    Anniversary of Armenian Genocide. 99 years ago today more than 300
    Armenian intellectuals were arrested, tortured, murdered or set to be
    deported by the Young Turks of the fading Ottoman Empire. The Armenian
    Genocide was the first genocide of the 20th century. It was a
    governmentally devised plan to annihilate an entire nation, a plan
    aimed at creation of a Pan-Turkic Empire. It was a tragedy that took
    lives of 1.5 million Armenians and was continued with persecution and
    genocides of other Christian nations living in the Ottoman Empire.

    Medz Yeghern is not just a memory in the hearts of Armenians
    worldwide, it was the beginning of the practice of racial
    extermination that had its continuation in Holocaust, genocides in
    Cambodia, Rwanda, Darfur and other tragedies throughout the world.

    The plan to exterminate Armenians was created and implemented by the
    Young Turks regime, but brutal slaughters of Armenians weren't unheard
    of in the Ottoman Empire. Only the massacres of mid 1890s in Western
    Armenia took lives of more than 300.000 Armenians. It seems now, that
    the Ottoman Empire's only way of dealing with its Christian population
    was through massacres, evidence to which are the genocides of
    Armenians, Greeks and Assyrians, with total number of slaughtered
    passing over 3 million.

    It is well known that after the World War II a Polish lawyer with
    Jewish heritage, Raphael Lemkin introduced the term `genocide' to the
    international community. In 1921 still a student of philology Raphael
    Lemkin asked his professor why the masterminds of the Armenian
    slaughters were not arrested, and the answer, that there was no law
    under which they could be arrested, was the reason he devoted his life
    to the studies of crimes against humanity. Lemkin's input was
    tremendous in the drafting of the `Genocide Convention', which was
    signed by the United Nations in 1948 in order to prevent the
    repetition of such atrocities in the future. History of the last six
    decades shows, though, that the international community was not
    successful in this endeavour and the ongoing denial of the Armenian
    Genocide by the successor of its perpetrators has its impact on it.
    The international recognition of the Armenian Genocide is essential
    for the practice of the Convention, research and inclusion of the
    issue in educational systems worldwide is crucial.

    Nowadays, more than 20 countries, 43 states of the USA, many
    international organizations have already recognized the Armenian
    Genocide. The independent legal analysis by the International Center
    for Transitional Justice in 2003 has also concluded that the `events¦
    include all of the elements of the crime of genocide as defined in the
    (Genocide) Convention'. Moreover, the most renowned International
    Association of Genocide Scholars not only recognized and condemned
    Armenian Genocide, but also wrote an open letter to the Turkish Prime
    Minister Erdogan calling upon Turkish government to `acknowledge the
    responsibility of a previous government for the Genocide of the
    Armenian people'.

    We are everlastingly grateful to Canada for its recognition of the
    Armenian Genocide on legislative and executive levels, for its support
    to the cause of international recognition of the Genocide and for the
    wonderful relations our countries have established during the two
    decades of Armenia's Independence. We are grateful to Canada for the
    establishment of very important institution such as Museum of Human
    Rights in Winnipeg, where Armenian Genocide will be at the permanent
    exhibition. We are grateful for standing firm despite all the
    blackmailing from the Turkish government.

    Despite growing recognition of the Yeghern, the modern Turkish
    government presses on its policy of denial ` spending millions of
    dollars on anti-propaganda against calling the slaughters a Genocide.
    Despite geopolitical or national interests, the members of the
    international community and the community as a whole should stand in
    the condemnation of genocide and work towards its prevention.

    The campaign of the Turks against non-Turkic minorities at the
    beginning of the 20th century `solved' the Armenian Question in their
    favor, Armenians, Pontic Greeks, Assyrians were dispossessed of their
    ancestral homelands and the Turks proclaimed them their own.

    Their ongoing policy of denial is outrageous; coming to terms with
    their history should be their own priority. Unfortunately I don't see
    this coming anytime soon, an indication of which was Turkey's recent
    blatant support to terrorist groups that attacked the peaceful
    Armenian town of Kessab in Syria. Three Armenian churches were
    desecrated and all Armenian homes looted.

    Still there is hope: it's several years now, that brave Turkish
    individuals join their Armenian compatriots in Istanbul and
    commemorate the tragic date with them, bright Turkish intelectuals
    speak out about the Genocide out loud ` without fearing possible
    persecution. Just today they gathered at HaydarPasa, the train station
    from which Armenian intellectuals were sent into the Turkish interior
    99 years ago and then had a memorial program in Taksim Square.

    Dear friends,

    As President Sargsyan stated in his address `Today, we stand on the
    threshold of the 100th anniversary of the Armenian Genocide. This can
    afford Turkey a good chance to repent and to set aside the historical
    stigma in case if they make efforts to set free their state's future
    from this heavy burden.'

    Next year we will commemorate the Centennial Anniversary of the
    Armenian Genocide. Special committees of Armenian communities around
    the world are preparing for this important landmark. It will not be a
    date that will extinguish the fires in our hearts, it will not make
    our sorrow disappear. On the contrary, it will be a date of a new
    beginning: the Armenian nation, once again standing tall, will demand
    justice and justice must be served.

    April 24, 2014, Ottawa, Parliament Hill

    http://www.horizonweekly.ca/news/details/37483

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