Al-Monitor: Why Is Israel Still Silent On Armenian Genocide?

AL-MONITOR: WHY IS ISRAEL STILL SILENT ON ARMENIAN GENOCIDE?

21:02, 23 Apr 2015
Siranush Ghazanchyan

By Arad Nir
Al-Monitor

For years, close ties between Israel and Turkey were understood to be
the reason Jerusalem has avoided the repeated requests of Armenians
for the international community to recognize the genocide their
community suffered at the hands of the Ottoman Turks during World
War I. Not only has Israel refused to recognize that the massacre was
premeditated and planned by the Ottoman government in Istanbul, it has
also exerted its influence in Washington to prevent the United States
from recognizing the genocide. This alone was a good enough reason
for the various Turkish governments to maintain close ties with Israel.

Ankara believed that Israel had almost mystical powers of influence
over the White House and Capitol Hill.

Diplomatic relations between Israel and Turkey have been foundering
for over half a decade. During most of that time, there has been no
Turkish ambassador to Israel, while the Israeli ambassador to Turkey
was expelled from Ankara in disgrace. Pro-Israel lobbyists no longer
meet with the Turkish ambassador in Washington, and the Israel Defense
Forces have found apt and even successful alternatives to cooperation
with the Turkish military, at least as far as Israel is concerned.

This year, Armenians are marking the centennial of the genocide. Given
the deterioration of its relationship with Turkey, this occasion
would seem to provide Israel with a golden opportunity to respond to
the moral claim that it recognize the Armenian genocide, just as Pope
Francis recently did, followed by the European Parliament. In fact,
dozens of prominent Israeli artists and academics recently signed a
petition calling on the Israeli government and Knesset to recognize
the Armenian genocide.

Nevertheless, officially, Israel continues to squirm. The Foreign
Ministry recommends showing greater empathy to the Armenian issue,
and this will be the first year that Israel will send an official
delegation to participate in the memorial ceremony to take place in
Yerevan. It will, however, be a low-ranking delegation, made up of
Knesset members. Foreign Ministry spokesman Emmanuel Nahshon presented
Israel’s official position to Al-Monitor, saying: “Israel’s position
has not changed. We are sensitive and attentive to the terrible tragedy
of the Armenian people during the First World War, and express our
empathy and solidarity. Most of the international community’s efforts
must be focused on preventing humanitarian tragedies in the future.”

A few senior Israeli officials dealing with the issue spoke to
Al-Monitor about it on condition of anonymity. They emphasized that
this doesn’t just involve susceptibility toward Turkish sensitivities,
but also sensitivity that Israel wants to show toward Azerbaijan, which
is a neighbor of both Turkey and Armenia. Since the Soviet Union’s
collapse, the borders in the Caucasus region have been redefined. One
consequence is a continuing state of war between Azerbaijan and
Armenia. One of the pillars of Azerbaijan’s new national narrative
is the “Khojaly massacre,” which refers to a battle in the village of
Khojaly, located in the disputed Armenian enclave of Nagorno-Karabakh,
on Feb. 26, 1992. According to the Azeri narrative, Armenian forces
killed 600 Azeri civilians there, including 169 women and children.

In this instance, the Armenians deny responsibility for the massacre
of civilians, just as they do for a long list of atrocities that
the Azeris have blamed on them since WWI. Given this relationship,
it’s no wonder that the Azeris describe Armenian claims of genocide
as fabricated. Last week’s decision by the European Parliament to
use the term “Armenian genocide” was described by a spokesman for
the Azeri Foreign Ministry as “an attempt to falsify the history
[and] its interpretation for political purposes” stemming from the
parliament’s succumbing to Armenian pressure.

Gallia Lindenstrauss of Israel’s Institute for National Security
Studies says that Azerbaijan is the Muslim country with which Israel
currently has the closest ties. Trade between Israel and Azerbaijan is
estimated at over $5 billion. Israel imports some 40% of its oil from
there, and exports mainly weapons and sophisticated defense systems
to it. In 2012, when talk of an Israel strike against Iran was at its
peak, Foreign Policy quoted a senior US official as saying (apparently
with considerable hyperbole), “The Israelis have bought an airfield …

and the airfield is called Azerbaijan.”

About six months ago, Defense Minister Moshe Ya’alon paid his first
public visit to Azerbaijan. Foreign Minister Avigdor Liberman has
visited Baku, the capital, on several occasions. While there, both
of them heard from their hosts that Azerbaijan, like the Israeli
government, considers Iran’s nuclear capacity to be an existential
threat.

Azerbaijan’s border with Iran stretches for 611 kilometers (380 miles),
making it longer even than Turkey’s border with Iran, which is 499
kilometers (310 miles) long. Meanwhile, Armenia’s border with Iran
stretches for just 35 kilometers (22 miles). If the length of their
borders can be used to determine the importance of relations with
those countries, then Armenia is the least important of all of them.

And in general, it is considered an ally of the country that Israeli
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu compares to Hitler’s Germany.

Coming back to the official position presented by the Israeli Foreign
Ministry spokesman, it would seem that the call to the international
community “to prevent humanitarian tragedies in the future” might
not refer only to the incidents of mass murder committed daily by
the Islamic State against anyone who is not one of them — Yazidis,
Christians or Alawites. It is mainly directed against Iran’s “explicit
intent of obliterating the Jewish state,” as Netanyahu reiterated
April 16 at Yad Vashem during a memorial service for the victims
of the Holocaust. Herein lies the real reason for Israel’s policy
concerning whether it will recognize the Armenia genocide. The reason
isn’t Turkey; it’s Iran.

Arad Nir Is the head of the foreign news desk and international
commentator for Channel 2 News, the largest news provider in Israel.

Arad has covered international politics and diplomacy, ethnic
conflicts around the world and interviewed various world leaders,
decision-makers and opinion leaders. He teaches TV journalism at the
IDC Herzliya and Netanya Academic College.

http://www.al-monitor.com/pulse/originals/2015/04/israel-armenian-genocide-ajerbaijan-world-war-i-delegation.html?utm_source=Al-Monitor+Newsletter+%5BEnglish%5D&utm_campaign=fa217c60ef-April_23_2015&utm_medium=email&utm_term=0_28264b27a0-fa217c60ef-102341793
http://www.armradio.am/en/2015/04/23/why-is-israel-still-silent-on-armenian-genocide-read-more-httpwww-al-monitor-compulseoriginals201504israel-armenian-genocide-ajerbaijan-world-war-i-delegation-htmlixzz3y9yaul6c/

Aram I. The Church Courageously Faced The Evils Of All Times And Ind

ARAM I. THE CHURCH COURAGEOUSLY FACED THE EVILS OF ALL TIMES AND INDEED IT “WON THE WAR AGAINST EVIL”

The summary of the pontifical message of His Holiness Aram I.

“Today the church celebrates the sacred memory of saints who in the
power of the Holy Spirit won the war against evil”. These simple
yet deeply penetrating words of prayer, said at the celebration of
saints in the Armenian Church, depict the particular importance of
saints in the life and witness of the church. In fact, empowered by
the committed engagement of the saints in the witness, evangelism
and mission of the church, the church courageously faced the evils
of all times and indeed it “won the war against evil”.

Saints are those persons who, being endowed with spiritual and moral
virtues, live their life according to the Gospel values and sacrifice
their lives for their Christian faith.

Saints transform our life with eternal truths and lead us to
Christ-centered “way, truth and life” (John 14: 6). Saints are the
beams of divine holiness, keeping us away from the corruption of life.

They are the radiation of heavenly light, illumining the darkness of
our life. They are ladders extended from the earth to heaven, lifting
us up from the domination of worldliness. Saints are, in the words
of Armenian hymn , “strong armour against the invasion of the enemy”.

Indeed, with their profound faith and saintly life, the saints
challenge us to live heaven on earth, to imbue our life with the
message of Bethlehem, to profess Christ as the true way of life,
and affirm His Gospel as the absolute truth against the “truths”
offered by the world. With their confession of faith and martyrdom
in life and in death, and as mediators before Christ, saints inspire
and lead us to fulfill our God-given vocation in the world as the
ambassadors of the Son of God.

Therefore, without the transforming presence of saints, our life has
no purpose; without the empowering presence of saints our life has
no meaning.

It is highly significant that the saints in the Armenian Church were
not canonized by strictly following church procedures. Their saintly
life and dedicated witness have led the people to consider them as
saints even in their life-time and then, only then, the church has
canonized them.

Our saints are not confined to liturgy; they are not regarded mere
outstanding figures in the annals of church history. They have been
transformed into an existential reality permeating all aspects of our
life, touching in one way or another every individual in and making
difference in our personal and community life.

Today as the two Catholicoi, together with our bishops, canonize
collectively the one-and-a-half-million martyrs of the Armenian
Genocide, we should remind ourselves that for the past hundred years,
our martyrs have become a living and life-giving reality in our life.

With their martyrdom they deepened our faith, strengthened our resolve,
increased our hope, and sustained our struggle aimed at the restoration
of justice.

Today the Armenian Church is in joy because it is being spiritually
enriched with new saints who will certainly give a new vitality to
the life and witness of church, in general and the Armenian Church,
in particular.

Today our people in Armenia and in Diaspora are in joy because their
forefathers and foremothers, who were the victims of the genocide
planned and executed by the Ottoman government in 1915, join the
multitude of saints and martyrs who sacrificed their lives for Christ.

Our martyrs, who, empowered by the Holy Spirit overcame the “war
against evil”, empower us with renewed faith to face boldly the new
evils of new times.

Our martyrs, who shed their blood for their Christian faith, undergird
our life, thought and action by spiritual and moral values and ideals.

This is a unique moment in our modern history; a moment marked by
profound meaning and message. This moment calls us not only to look
backward by remembering our martyrs, but also to look forward by
reaffirming our commitment to carry on, with renewed vigor and sense
of responsibility, the cause of our martyrs. Indeed, the cause of the
martyrs is a cause of justice and human dignity. We do believe that
truth must be accepted and the human rights of our people restored.

Only the acceptance of the truth will lead to reconciliation.

23.04.15, 19:51

http://www.aysor.am/en/news/2015/04/23/Aram-I-the-church-courageously-faced-the-evils-of-all-times-and-indeed-it-won-the-war-against-evil/940618

Collectif VAN : L’ephemeride Du 23 Avril

COLLECTIF VAN : L’EPHEMERIDE DU 23 AVRIL

Publie le : 23-04-2015

Info Collectif VAN – – La rubrique Ephemeride
est a retrouver quotidiennement sur le site du Collectif VAN. Elle
recense la liste d’evenements survenus a une date donnee, a differentes
epoques de l’Histoire, sur les thematiques que l’association suit au
quotidien. L’ephemeride du Collectif VAN repose sur des informations en
ligne sur de nombreux sites (les sources sont specifiees sous chaque
entree). Vous pouvez retrouver tous les ephemerides du Collectif VAN
dans la Rubrique Actions VAN, en cliquant sur ces liens:

Les ephemerides du Collectif VAN (1ère partie)

Les ephemerides du Collectif VAN (2ème partie)

Legende photo : 23 avril 1915 — Une reunion du Conseil mixte
armenien, elargie aux deputes et senateurs Zareh Dilber, Krikor
Zohrab, Vartkès Seringulian, Haroutiun Bochguezenian, Hovsèp Madatian,
est convoquee. Le patriarche y fait le compte-rendu de toutes les
violences survenues ces derniers temps a Kayseri, Mouch, Bitlis,
Van, Dortyol et Zeytoun. Le patriarche y souligne la malveillance et
la defiance dont le gouvernement fait preuve a l’egard de tous les
Armeniens. Tous les presents suggèrent de reaffirmer au gouvernement
leur fidelite a la patrie ottomane. Krikor Zohrab et Zareh Dilber
redigent un memorandum dans ce sens.

Ca s’est passe un 23 avril (les evenements sont classes du plus ancien
au plus recent) :

23 avril 1283 — Debut du massacre des juifs de Rockenhausen (province
du Palatinat, Allemagne). 13 juifs sont egorges, d’autres convertis
de force.

Israelvivra.com

23 avril 1338 — Les juifs de Pulkau (Basse-Autriche) sont accuses
de profanation d’hostie. La foule s’en prend a eux, les massacre
et brûle leurs cadavres. Leurs maisons sont pillees. De Pulkau,
l’agitation gagne d’autres villes de Basse-Autriche.

Israelvivra.com

23 avril 1679 — Un autodafe tenu a Palma de Majorque juge 52
judaïsants, descendants de juifs convertis de force, qui pratiquent
encore secrètement la religion juive. Ils sont condamnes a la prison
et leurs biens sont confisques au profit de l’Eglise et de la Couronne.

Israelvivra.com

23 avril 1905 — Un pogrome eclate a Jitomir (province de Volhynie,
Ukraine). Il dure jusqu’au 26 avril. Des soldats participent au pillage
des maisons juives. 22 juifs sont massacres, 60 grièvement blesses,
dont de nombreux membres de l’organisation juive d’autodefense.

Israelvivra.com

23 avril 1909 — Empire ottoman: Le capitaine de vaisseau commandant
du Victor-Hugo Dufaure de Lajarte est informe, par le consul de France
a Mersine, des

http://www.collectifvan.org/article.php?r=0&id=63338
www.collectifvan.org

watch live the Canonization of the Holy Martyrs of the Armenian G

PRESS RELEASE
Capital District Armenian Genocide Committee
Hilltop Plaza #4
143 Troy Schenectady Rd.
Watervliet NY 12189
Rafi Topalian , Event Organizer / Chairman / Co-Founder

Join us in the Gdanian Auditorium of St. Peter Armenian Church 100
troy-schenectady rd watervliet this Thursday morning, April 23 at 9:00
am to watch live (via Internet) the Canonization of the Holy Martyrs
of the Armenian Genocide of 1915. Truly a historic event!

The victims of the Armenian Genocide will be canonized at The Mother
See of Holy Etchmiadzin. Divine Liturgy will begin at 5pm (Yerevan
time). The canonization marks a major event in the history of the
Armenian nation, as no elevation to sainthood has taken place in the
Armenian Apostolic Church since the fourteenth century.

If students wish to be present, a written note for an excused absence
will be available to take to your school.

Turkish Authorities Must Apologize To Armenians – Yusuf Alatas

TURKISH AUTHORITIES MUST APOLOGIZE TO ARMENIANS – YUSUF ALATSA

15:45 â~@¢ 23.04.15

Yusuf AlataÃ…~_, Vice-President of the Human Rights Association of
Turkey, told reporters in Yerevan on Wednesday that genocide is a
combination of a number of problems – human rights, political and
other ones.

Turkey must take serious steps without any preconditions. Turkey’s
authorities must admit the Armenian Genocide at a state level,
apologize to Armenians and start looking for ways to reconciliation,
he said.

This is a universal problem, and other nations’ approaches are of
importance. However, Turkey must take steps of its own accord. Turkey
has the necessary potential, and the two nations must immediately
start a dialogue.

A dialogue is sure to begin because Turkish society is changing.

Turkey must prepare grounds for a dialogue, which requires admission
of the Armenian Genocide and opening of the borders. Each state must
be able to face its own history, Mr AlataÃ…~_ said.

http://www.tert.am/en/news/2015/04/23/alatash/1655398

State Department Representative Under Fire Of Armenian Genocide Ques

STATE DEPARTMENT REPRESENTATIVE UNDER FIRE OF ARMENIAN GENOCIDE QUESTIONS

11:46, 23.04.2015
Region:World News, Armenia, Turkey
Theme: Politics

State Department representative Marie Harf dodged the direct questions
about the Armenian Genocide during the briefing in Washington on
Wednesday.

Marie Harf admitted that “there are some who I think were hoping to
hear some different language this year. We certainly understand their
perspective.” However, she noted that the president consistently
stated his views about what happened in 1915.

Responding to her remark, the reported added that there were certainly
some people who wanted no change.

Asked whether President Obama believes what happened was a genocide,
Marie Harf asked to address the question to the White House. State
Department representative also dodged the questions about Obama’s
campaign pledge to recognize the Armenian Genocide that was not
honored.

“The President – and look, we all understand there are some who
wanted to hear different language this year, and I do think we can
expect that the President will issue a statement this year that marks
the historical significance of the centennial, and as in past years,
mourns the senseless loss of 1.5 million Armenian lives. So he will
speak about this in some way, but I don’t think you should compare
any of these issues. I think if you want to talk about Iran and the
commitments the President’s made, we can talk about that separately,”
Ms. Harf said.

The State Department official admitted “there were discussions inside
the interagency about what to say”.

Responding to a remark that the United States never “had this issue
in calling the Holocaust what it was,” Marie Harf said she was not
going to compare those two events.

Finally asked whether Administration is basically submitting itself
to a gag order from the Turks, she made it clear that they “make
decisions on our own about what we say and how we talk about things.”

http://news.am/eng/news/263461.html

Des Suisses Ont Aide Les Victimes Du Genocide Armenien

DES SUISSES ONT AIDE LES VICTIMES DU GENOCIDE ARMENIEN

REVUE DE PRESSE
Commemoration : Le genocide armenien de 1915-1916 a eu des
repercussions jusqu’en Suisse. Plusieurs structures d’accueil ont
ete mises sur pied pour venir en aide aux victimes des massacres.

De nombreux Armeniens se sont refugies sur le territoire helvetique,
en particulier en Suisse romande, et divers projets ont ete mis sur
pied pour venir en aide aux victimes des massacres.

Le Vaudois Antony Krafft-Bonnard (1869-1945) s’est notamment engage
pour l’accueil en Suisse d’orphelins armeniens. Ce pasteur, qui a
commence son oeuvre après les pogroms de 1895-1896, a fonde en 1921
les > de Begnins (VD) et de Genève.

Plus de 150 orphelins y recurent une education dans la tradition
armenienne (langue et religion) en meme temps qu, considere
par les Armeniens comme un temoignage de première importance sur
le genocide.

Le > de Cilicie (Liban), Aram Ier, se rendra en Suisse
en septembre pour remercier le peuple suisse et ses autorites au
nom des Armeniens. Il s’exprimera a Berne, mais aussi a Begnins et
a Wazenhausen (AR), en l’honneur de Jakob Kunzler.

Aujourd’hui, quelque 5000 Armeniens vivent en Suisse. Une messe doit
etre celebree vendredi dans l’eglise apostolique armenienne de Troinex
(GE).

jeudi 23 avril 2015, Stephane (c)armenews.com

http://www.tdg.ch/suisse/suisses-aide-victimes-genocide-armenien/story/28400200
http://www.armenews.com/article.php3?id_article=110581

Genocides Kill Twice, The Second Time By Silence: Lebanese MP

GENOCIDES KILL TWICE, THE SECOND TIME BY SILENCE: LEBANESE MP

14:00, 23 Apr 2015
Siranush Ghazanchyan

“On the centennial of the Armenian Genocide we are all Armenians,”
Member of Lebanese Parliament Hassan Nahabiye said at the Global Forum
Against the Crime of Genocide under way in Armenia’s capital Yerevan

“We remember, we demand. Moreover, it’s not enough to speak, as
parliamentarians, we must also act,” he said.

He hailed the contribution of the Armenian community to Lebanon and
said “it’s a portion of Lebanese population we are all proud of.”

“Survivors can be creators,” he said, adding that “it is an evident
proof that the genocide in the Ottoman Empire has failed, because
you have continued to live.”

He said to be proud of his parliament, which by unanimous decision
recognized the Armenian Genocide in April 2000, and reminded that
half of the Parliament Members are Muslim.

He informed that tomorrow, April 24, all schools in Lebanon will be
closed, and there will be a major march in Beirut to commemorate the
genocide of the Armenian people.

“It is sad that genocides kill twice, second time by silence,”
he said. It is our duty as members of parliament to speak loudly
irrespective of any pressure.

It’s not enough that the genocide of the Armenian people has become
a historic fact, it’s time to act and not only to demand. “We must be
active in the prevention, not only of future crimes against humanity,
but also the current ones,” the Lebanese MP said.

http://www.armradio.am/en/2015/04/23/genocides-kill-twice-the-second-time-by-silence-lebanese-mp/

Urging Recognition, Jerusalem Armenians Mark 100th Anniversary Of Ge

URGING RECOGNITION, JERUSALEM ARMENIANS MARK 100TH ANNIVERSARY OF GENOCIDE

14:43 23/04/2015 >> SOCIETY

Thursday evening at 6:15 p.m., church bells will peal over the Old
City of Jerusalem, echoing through its ancient stone alleyways. The
bells from 18 churches will ring 100 times in succession, one toll
for each year since the Armenian Genocide, which started on April 24,
1915, the Times of Israel reports.

Armenians around the world will be marking the centennial anniversary
of the genocide, when the Ottomans killed 1.5 million Armenians
during WWI. Israel’s Armenian population has been planning events
throughout the year to mark the centennial, including concerts,
lectures, documentary screenings, and special religious masses.

But the evening of April 23 through April 24 is the central day of
mourning, with processions, candlelight vigils, and solemn ceremonies.

On Thursday night after the bells go silent, thousands of Armenians
will march with torches through the Old City, where Armenian Christians
have lived since the 4th century.

“We are fighting two wars in parallel,” said Kevork Nalbandian,
a lawyer and social worker in the Old City who is on the planning
committee for the 100th anniversary in Jerusalem. “One war is to guard
the memory of the Armenian genocide, to ensure that the memories of
what happened are passed to our children and the younger generations.

The second war is for the international awareness of this pain. We
want the world to recognize this.”

This plea takes on outsized importance in Israel. “Israel is a country
that was founded because so many of the citizens were survivors or
connected [to the Holocaust],” said Father Koryoun Bahdasaryan, a
priest originally from Armenia who has lived in Jerusalem for 20 years.

“How can you expect other countries to recognize your Holocaust when
you yourself refuse to recognize the first genocide [of the 20th
century], the genocide of the Armenian people?” asked Nalbandian.

In the domed living room of Nalbandian’s stone apartment in the Old
City, he keeps a framed picture of a quote he photographed at the
Holocaust museum in Washington, DC. The quote is from August 22, 1939,
a week before Hitler invaded Poland. “I have issued the command —
and I’ll have anybody who utters but one word of criticism executed
by a firing squad — that our war aim does not consist in reaching
certain lines, but in the physical destruction of the enemy,” Hitler
said in a speech at Obersalzberg to his top officers, rationalizing his
decision to begin an ethnic cleansing campaign against the Poles. “Who,
after all, speaks today of the annihilation of the Armenians?”

“Twenty-two years after [the Armenian genocide] happened, the world
forgot,” Nalbandian said. “Hitler harnessed this power of the world
forgetting, and he used it to build everything. He used the same tools
and developed them further. Instead of taking them to the desert,
he used gas chambers, but everything else was the same, like the
death marches.”

“If you want to be the moral standard and want other countries to
follow, that’s fine,” Nalbandian added. “But then when you take up
that torch of morality and march forward, it’s on you as well. There’s
no exemption.”

For the first time, Israel is sending a delegation of two MKs to the
official memorial service in Yerevan, the capital of Armenia. MKs
Nachman Shai (Zionist Union) and Anat Berko (Likud) will travel
to Armenia after Israel was formally invited to send an official
delegation.

Both Nalbandian and Father Bahdasaryan are incensed when politicians
utilize the threat of recognizing the Armenian Genocide as a diplomatic
tool against Turkey.

“This is all politics,” said Bahdasaryan. “When they’re politicians
they say they will support [resolutions recognizing it as genocide]
but once they’re presidents they don’t write their own speeches.”

http://www.timesofisrael.com/imploring-for-recognition-jerusalems-armenians-to-mark-100th-anniversary-of-genocide/
http://www.panorama.am/en/society/2015/04/23/jerusalem-armenian-genocide/

Serge Sarkissian Prend La Parole Contre Le Negationnisme

SERGE SARKISSIAN PREND LA PAROLE CONTRE LE NEGATIONNISME

Forum international des crimes contre l’humanite

Serge Sarkissian a critique la Turquie pour avoir refuse de reconnaître
le genocide armenien de 1915 alors que l’Armenie etait invite hier
au forum international sur les crimes contre l’humanite.

Le Forum mondial contre les crimes contre l’humanite, qui a reuni
environ 600 participants de plus de 50 pays, a commence ses travaux
a Erevan dans le cadre des evenements dedies au 100e anniversaire du
genocide des Armeniens.

“La negation du genocide est lourde d’incitation a une nouvelle
vague xenophobe et est souvent accompagnee par l’intolerance et
la justification des crimes deja commis de genocide”, a declare
Sarkissian dans un discours a la conference. “En cas de forte pression
internationale, le deni acquiert une nature apparemment plus douce
mais tout aussi dangereuse.”

Il a clairement fait reference a l’assouplissement de la politique
turque qui nie depuis toujours le genocide des Armeniens. Plus
tôt cette semaine, le gouvernement turc a de nouveau offert ses
condoleances aux descendants d’Armeniens massacres par les Turcs
ottomans pendant la Première Guerre mondiale. Mais il a insiste pour
dire que les massacres ne constituaient pas un genocide.

Sarkissian a dit qu’une plus grande reconnaissance internationale
de la tragedie de 1915 rendrait non seulement justice aux Armeniens,
mais previendrait aussi de futurs crimes contre l’humanite. “Une des
raisons de la recidive des crimes contre l’humanite a ete le manque
de coherence, d’unite et la determination a reconnaître et condamner
les genocides commis.”

A egalement assiste et pris la parole lors de ce forum Thorbjorn
Jagland, secretaire general du Conseil de l’Europe. “Il y avait un
potentiel en chaque homme, femme et enfant”, a t-il declare. “Il y a
cent ans, de trop nombreux Armeniens se sont vu refuser la possibilite
de realiser ce potentiel quand ils ont ete brutalement assassines.

“Des centaines de milliers d’autres ont ete condamnes a la pauvrete.

Et ce n’etait pas seulement une perte pour l’Armenie, c’etait une
perte pour le monde … Mais nous pouvons – nous devons – essayer
que cela ne se reproduise pas “.

Jagland a pris soin de ne pas appeler ces massacres “genocide” pour
ne pas heurter la Turquie, membre du Conseil de l’Europe. Il a salue
la place des contacts croissants entre les societes civiles turque
et armenienne et a exprime l’espoir que les gouvernements des deux
Etats voisins finiront par normaliser leurs relations.

jeudi 23 avril 2015, Claire (c)armenews.com

http://www.armenews.com/article.php3?id_article=110768