OSKANIAN: NKR PEOPLE HAS RIGHT TO LIVE IN PEACE AND WITHOUT FEAR
Noyan Tapan News Agency, Armenia
Sept 26 2006
We Ask For Nothing More And We Expect Nothing Less
YEREVAN, SEPTEMBER 26, NOYAN TAPAN. On September 25, RA Foreign
Minister Vartan Oskanian made a speech at the 61st session of
UN General Assembly. Below is the text of the Minister’s speech
submitted to Noyan Tapan from RA Foreign Ministry Press and Information
Department.
"Madame President,
It is a pleasure to congratulate you and to wish you a year that is
relatively free of crises and catastrophes. In other words, a year not
like the one we’ve just had during which my good friend Ian Eliasson
successfully navigated through troubled waters.
The year of turmoil, as he called it, included conflicts, as well as
man-made and natural disasters that required our collective response.
These challenges to our united will are becoming more numerous,
more dangerous and more complex.
Of all the events last year, the one which stood out most tragically
was the war in Lebanon. There I believe we lost a great deal of
credibility in the eyes of the peoples of the world who had a right
to expect that political expediency would not prevail. We watched
with great disappointment and dismay the political bickering within
the Security Council and the reluctance to bring about an immediate
ceasefire, even as the bombs were being dropped indiscriminately.
When any world body or power loses moral authority, the effectiveness
to undertake challenges which require collective response is
undermined.
In other areas, a united international community has succeeded. It
has played a supportive role in the civilized process which brought
Montenegro to this day and this body. Together, we created and
empowered the Peace building Commission and the Human Rights Council
– two bodies which hold great promise in delivering deeper and more
purposeful engagement by a world community committed to building
peace and protecting human rights.
The most insipid and threatening challenges in the world remain those
of poverty and hopelessness. When the world’s leaders met six years
ago, they decided that the UN was the ideal mechanism to confront
the social ills facing our societies, they publicly accepted their
combined responsibility in achieving accelerated and more even social
and economic development. They said to the world that, together, we
will channel international processes and multinational resources to
tackle the most basic human needs. Thus, they placed the principle and
potential of united action on the judgment block. Six years later,
the world continues to watch in earnest to see if individual and
regional interests can be rallied in striving for the common good.
Madame President,
We are faced with the same challenges, locally. In Armenia, we are
encouraged and rewarded by our extensive reforms. These reforms are
irreversible and already showing remarkable results. We are going to
move now to second generation reforms in order to continue to register
the successes of the last half decade: legislative and administrative
strides forward, an open, liberal economy, double-digit growth.
Encouraged by our own successes, this year we have determined to build
on our course of economic recovery and target rural poverty. We are
reminded of the remarkable promise made to the victims of global
poverty in 2000: "To free our fellow men, women and children from
the abject and dehumanizing conditions of extreme poverty." To do
this at home, we will leverage the philanthropy of international
organizations and friendly governments with the traditional generosity
of our Diaspora to build and repair infrastructure, which is essential
to facilitate and enable economic development.
But infrastructure alone does not reduce poverty and remove unjust
inequalities. Creating economic opportunities, teaching the necessary
skills – these are essential to erase the deep development disparities
that exist today between cities and rural areas.
Madame President, we will begin in our border communities, because
unlike other countries, where borders are points of interaction and
activity, Armenia’s borders to the east and the west remain closed.
As a result, regional economic development suffers.
But with Turkey, it is more than our economies that suffer. It is the
dialogue between our two peoples that suffers. Turkey’s insistence on
keeping the border closed, on continuing to prevent direct contact and
communication, freezes the memories of yesterday instead of creating
new experiences to forge the memories of tomorrow. We continue
to remain hopeful that Turkey will see that blocking relations
until there is harmony and reciprocal understanding is really not a
policy. On the contrary, it’s an avoidance of a responsible policy
to forge forward with regional cooperation at a time and in a region
with growing global significance.
Madame President, let me take a minute to reflect on Kosovo,
as so many have done. We follow the Kosovo self-determination
process very closely. We ourselves strongly support the process
of self-determination for the population of Nagorno Karabakh. Yet,
we don’t draw parallels between these two or with any other conflicts.
We believe that conflicts are all different and each must be decided
on its own merits. While we do not look at the outcome of Kosovo as a
precedent, on the other hand, a Kosovo decision cannot and should not
result in the creation of obstacles to self-determination for others
in order to pre-empt the accusation of precedence. Such a reverse
reaction – to prevent or pre-empt others from achieving well-earned
self-determination – is unacceptable.
Efforts to do just that – by elevating territorial integrity above
all other principles – are already underway, especially in this
chamber. But this contradicts the lessons of history. There is a reason
that the Helsinki Final Act enshrines self-determination as an equal
principle. In international relations, just as in human relations,
there are no absolute rights. There are also responsibilities. A
state must earn the right to lead and govern.
States have the responsibility to protect their citizens. A people
choose the government which represents them.
The people of Nagorno Karabakh chose long ago not to be represented
by the government of Azerbaijan. They were the victims of state
violence, they defended themselves, and succeeded against great odds,
only to hear the state cry foul and claim sovereignty and territorial
integrity.
But the government of Azerbaijan has lost the moral right to even
suggest providing for their security and their future, let alone to
talk of custody of the people of Nagorno Karabakh.
Azerbaijan did not behave responsibly or morally with the people
of Nagorno Karabakh, who it considered to be its own citizens. They
sanctioned massacres in urban areas, far from Nagorno Karabakh; they
bombed and displaced more than 300,000 Armenians; they unleashed
the military; and after they lost the war and accepted a ceasefire,
they proceeded to destroy all traces of Armenians on their territories.
In the most cynical expression of such irresponsibility, this last
December, a decade after the fighting had stopped, they completed the
final destruction and removal of thousands of massive hand-sculpted
cross-stones – medieval Armenian tombstones elaborately carved and
decorated.
Such destruction, in an area with no Armenians, at a distance from
Nagorno Karabakh and any conflict areas, is a callous demonstration
that Azerbaijan’s attitude toward tolerance, human values, cultural
treasures, cooperation or even peace, has not changed.
One cannot blame us for thinking that Azerbaijan is not ready or
interested in a negotiated peace. Yet, having rejected the other
two compromise solutions that have been proposed over the last 8
years, they do not want to be accused of rejecting the peace plan on
the table today. Therefore, they are using every means available –
from state violence to international maneuvers – to try to bring the
Armenians to do the rejecting.
But Armenia is on record: we have agreed to each of the basic
principles in the document that’s on the table today. Yet, in order
to give this or any document a chance, Azerbaijan can’t think, or
pretend to think, that there is still a military option. There isn’t.
The military option is a tried and failed option. Compromise and
realism are the only real options.
The path that Nagorno Karabakh has chosen for itself over these two
decades is irreversible. It succeeded in ensuring its self-defense,
it proceeded to set up self-governance mechanisms, and it controls
its borders and its economy. Formalizing this process is a necessary
step toward stability in our region. Dismissing, as Azerbaijan does,
all that’s happened in the last 20 years and petulantly insisting
that things must return to the way they were, is not just unrealistic,
but disingenuous.
Madame president, Nagorno Karabakh is not a cause. It is a place,
an ancient place, a beautiful garden, with people who have earned the
right to live in peace and without fear. We ask for nothing more. We
expect nothing less."