Armenian Chernobyl Victims Still Suffering

ARMENIAN CHERNOBYL VICTIMS STILL SUFFERING
By Marianna Grigorian and Gayane Mkrtchian in Yerevan

Institute for War and Peace Reporting, UK
April 27 2006

Twenty years on, a new generation of children is not getting the
treatment it needs for Chernobyl-related sickness.

The skin of Sennik Alexanian has a strange yellow hue to it, his
bones stick out and his eyes bulge. Alexanian is only 49 but his
immune system has collapsed. Like thousands of his compatriots he
divides his life into two periods – before and after Chernobyl.

Along with 3,000 Armenians – and tens of thousands of people from
across the Soviet Union – Alexanian was sent to help clear up the
aftermath of the Chernobyl nuclear disaster in Ukraine twenty years
ago. Half of the Armenians sent there have severe health problems
caused by the radiation they suffered and 350 of them have died.

On April 25, a group of Armenian rescuers were presented with awards
by the prime minister Andranik Margarian. He promised them greater
support, but many say the government of independent Armenia has let
them down.

“I went to work and they did not let me in,” recalled Alexanian, who
worked as a driver in 1986. “They put us in a train and didn’t tell
me or my family where they were sending me. If I hadn’t gone and I’d
run away, they’d have put me on trial as an enemy of the people.”

The rescuers were not told about the invisible dangers of the zone
they were entering.

“Radiation does not have a smell or a colour, you can’t define it,”
said Alexanian. “We just started feeling unwell and had constant
headaches and dizziness and everyone had constant nose bleeds.”

Gevorg Vardanian, now chairman of the Armenian Chernobyl Association,
spent eleven months in Chernobyl in total and suffers from serious
radiation sickness.

“In Ukraine, the public didn’t know what had happened and during the
May Day parade radioactive rain fell on people,” he recalled. “The
most terrible thing was that there were students amongst those who
brought people out of Chernobyl. They had no idea they had been
brought into a disaster zone.”

Six years after the Chernobyl accident, the Soviet Union broke up and
the rescuers became the responsibility of the new independent states
such as Armenia. But unlike many other countries, Armenia has not
allocated substantial funds for the medical treatment of Chernobyl
survivors. Although entitled to free medical check-ups twice a year,
the sufferers say they generally do not get even these.

Alexanian says his health is deteriorating every day but he has
not been given the money to treat his illnesses. His family has sold
everything they could, including their apartment. He receives a pension
of 21,000 drams, equivalent to 46 US dollars, every month, but says he
needs far more than that to pay for even one of the medicines he needs.

“When we apply to the appropriate offices hoping for help, they tell
us sarcastically ‘You shouldn’t have gone’, but it wasn’t up to us,”
said Alexanian. “No one went knowingly to a slow death.”

Six years ago he and his wife had a son, but the effects of Chernobyl
left their mark on the baby too. Little Vachagan was born with chronic
health problems and suffers from epilepsy and nervous fits.

Gevorg Vardanian says that most of the Armenian rescuers are no longer
fit for work. They live in poor conditions and lack the money for
their basic needs.

“We thought the troubles that began for us in Chernobyl would end in
Armenia, but it seems there is no end to them,” said Vardanian.

“Not just the rescuers, but more than thirty per cent of their
children suffer from a whole host of defects and have serious health
problems. Many don’t even have the chance to take their children to
the doctor.”

Vardanian says that the Armenian government has been particularly lax
in its responsibilities, “We have no special law which defends the
rights of those who took part in the Chernobyl emergency and gives
them the benefits that others from all over the former Soviet Union
are receiving.”

According to Vardanian, the Armenian government ratified a treaty
undertaking to pass a special law to protect Chernobyl survivors,
but since then no such law has been adopted.

Only at the beginning of this year did the parliamentary commission
on social issues, health and the environment draw up a draft law
that would guarantee the welfare of the Chernobyl victims and their
children.

“The draft law is being discussed,” said Gagik Mkheyan, head of
the commission.

However, the bill is already being criticised by government ministries.

“In our opinion, Armenia does not need a law like this,” Jemma
Baghdasarian, head of the department for the problems of invalids
and the elderly at the labour ministry, told IWPR, arguing that the
Chernobyl survivors are sufficiently well looked after by current
welfare legislation.

Nikolai Hovhannissian, head of Armenia’s Centre for Radioactive
Medicine and Burns, says he understands the concerns of the Chernobyl
rescuers, but that Armenia simply cannot afford to look after them.

“The state envisages spending 100,000 drams (222 dollars) on each
sick person, which includes the cost of the electricity used by the
hospital, the salaries of the medical staff, medicine, food,” said
Hovhannissian. “What can you say? This amount is not enough to solve
even a part of the problems of the sufferers.”

The survivors themselves say they have pinned hopes on the new law
and that existing social provision is woefully inadequate.

“We have the impression that everyone is against us, we are like
walking corpses, whom no one needs,” said Vazgen Gyurjinian, a
Chernobyl survivor.

Gyurjinian, an electrician, was 28 when he was sent to the Chernobyl
disaster zone. Now 46, he talks in a hoarse voice and is short of
breath. He has had three heart attacks. His third daughter Lusine,
born on his return, was an invalid at birth and gets just 3,600 drams
(around eight dollars) a month in state benefit.

“It’s not just us, who are unsuited for life by now, who need this
law, but our children and grandchildren,” said Gyurjinian. “Maybe
some of us have healthy children but that does not guarantee us from
sick grandchildren. Our genes have been damaged.”

Marianna Grigorian and Gayane Mkrtchian are reporters fro
Armenianow.com in Yerevan.

The Armenian Wrestler In The European Championship Finals

THE ARMENIAN WRESTLER IN THE EUROPEAN CHAMPIONSHIP FINALS

A1+
[08:04 pm] 27 April, 2006

The Armenian wrestler Karen Mnatsakanyan (65 kg) moved on the finals in
the European wrestling championship held in Moscow and will struggle
with the Georgian David Bedinadze for the European champion’s place
tonight. At present Mnatsakanyan already has a bronze medal and will
strive to provide his success.

Karen Mnatsakanyan beat the Azeri Fuad Aliev in the quarterfinals
and the Ukrainian Aleksey Mnatsakanyan.

Let us mention that Karen Mnatsakanyan is a former European champion,
a bronze medal winner and the World vice-champion.

Unfortunately, Mkitar Hunanyan (74kg) and Robert Petrosyan (96kg)
were beaten in the first phase and will not continue their further
participation in the championship.

Armenian Organizations Council Of Javakhk To Have Few Representative

ARMENIAN ORGANIZATIONS COUNCIL OF JAVAKHK TO HAVE FEW REPRESENTATIVES IN COUNCIL ATTACHED TO GEORGIAN OMBUDSMAN

Noyan Tapan
Armenians Today
Apr 27 2006

AKHALKALAK, APRIL 27, NOYAN TAPAN – ARMENIANS TODAY. The Armenian
Public Organizations’ Council of Samtskhe-Javakhk addressed to the
National Minorities’ Council attached to the Georgian Ombudsman with a
proposal of membership. According to the “A-Info” agency, the Council
made such a decision arising of the principles of the National
Minorities’ Council’s Declaration. According to the preliminary
agreement and arising of the circumstance of having more than 20
public organizations in its staff, the Samthskhe-Javakhk Armenian
Public Organizations’ Council will have few representatives in the
National Minorities’ Council attached to the Georgian Ombudsman.

AUA And Nork Marash Medical Center Author A Study On Quality OfInten

AUA AND NORK MARASH MEDICAL CENTER AUTHOR A STUDY ON QUALITY OF INTENSIVE CARE

Armenpress
Apr 26 2006

YEREVAN, APRIL 26, ARMENPRESS; The American University of Armenia
(AUA) said the April 2006 issue of the peer-reviewed journal Asian
Cardiovascular and Thoracic Annals presented findings from a study by
lead author Lusine Abrahamyan, MD, MPH, which demonstrated that quality
of care at Nork Marash Medical Center (NMMC) following coronary artery
bypass grafting (CABG) surgery, measured in terms of post operative
complications and ICU stays, are comparable to those reported by
major international cardiac surgery centers.

According to co-author and Surgical Consultant at NMMC Dr. Hrair
Hovaguimian, “This article is an important step toward establishing
systems for outcomes reporting in parallel with international
standards.”

AUA/CHSR faculty Anahit Demirchyan, MD, MPH, and Michael Thompson,
MS, DrPH, also co-authors noted, “The study reported here was a small
part of a five-year privately funded collaborative project between the
Center for Health Services Research and Development of the American
University of Armenia (AUA/CHSR) and the Nork Marash Medical Center
focused on assessing and improving the quality of care at NMMC.” Lead
author Lusine Abrahamyan, now a PhD candidate at the University of
Toronto, noted that “These results not only attest to the quality
of care at NMMC, but also provide important insights for individual
patient counseling.”

“AUA students, graduates and faculty working together with the Medical
Staff of the Hospital undertook a thorough study and evaluation of all
functions and procedures in the hospital with the express purpose of
raising its standards to accepted international norms. To say that
the Hospital and AUA achieved its goals is both an understatement
and a tribute to all those who worked on the project.

Their professional expertise and personal commitment has manifested
itself in a higher standard of care, the direct beneficiary of which is
each and every patient that enters the Hospital. My congratulations
to them all,” added Mr. Edward Avedisian, who generously funded
this project.

BAKU: Azeris Staging Protests At Yerevan’s Genocide Claims

AZERIS STAGING PROTESTS AT YEREVAN’S GENOCIDE CLAIMS

AzerNews Weekly, Azerbaijan
April 27 2006

Azerbaijani and Turkish communities are staging actions of protest
worldwide to condemn the so-called Armenian genocide campaign. The
Armenians allege that on April 24, 1915, they fell victim to genocide
on the part of the Turks.

The objective of the Azerbaijani and Turkish communities is to provide
an accurate account of what really happened in Turkey in 1915. The
World Azerbaijanis Congress is now conducting one such action in the
capital of Russia’s Tatarstan, Kazan.

Ethnic Azeris and Turks are expected to launch a series of protests in
a number of American and European countries to counter the genocide
claims. A representative of the US-Azerbaijan Friendship Society,
Badir Mammadli, said in Washington that large-scale campaigns will
be held outside the Turkish embassy. For this, posters and photo
stands have been prepared documenting the atrocities unleashed by
the Armenians in Khojaly. Hundreds of civilians were brutally killed
by Armenian forces in the Khojaly district on February 26, 1992,
which marks one of the bloodiest pages in Azerbaijan’s history. A
representative of the Movement for Azerbaijan in Germany, Guldana
Rzayeva, said local Turks and Jews would join the actions of protest
to be staged by the movement. Similar actions will be held through
May 8 in many parts of the world.

BAKU: Nagorno-Garabagh Azerbaijanis’ Majlis To Set Up

NAGORNO-GARABAGH AZERBAIJANIS’ MAJLIS TO SET UP

Democratic Azerbaijan
April 26 2006

Nagorno-Garabagh Azerbaijanis’ Majlis initiated by the International
Garabagh Foundation (IGF) and Garabagh’s intelligentsia, due to 14
anniversary of the occupation of Shusha will be set up. According to
Mehman Ismayilov, Chairman of IGF to Azerbaijan, IGF considers as
necessary setting up of this organization and has already launched
to its realization.

M. Ismayilov informed that Armenians desiring to occupy the highlands
of Garabagh are waging border information war. According to him,
to date information war is one of the crucial aspects of this
confrontation. The State waging regular systematic information
struggle in accordance with international conduct standards, provides
more successful future for itself: “To date there are such situation
that Nagorno-Garabagh is associated with Armenians living there. We
have to put an end to that. State is interested in involvement of
Azerbaijanis living in highlands of Nagorno-Garabagh in this process.

These people should participate in conflict settlement turning into
figures of public & political situation”.

According to M. Ismayilov, setting up of the Majlis composed
of Nagorno-Garabagh Azerbaijanis will complete in near future. He
informed that this Majlis will be a general Parliament and turn into
Working Group and one of the necessary instruments of the State.

.pl?s=001&p=0055&n=001447&g=

http://www.demaz.org/cgi-bin/e-cms/vis/vis

Trees And Fauna Of Shikahogh Reserve Will Be Restored,Reserve Durect

TREES AND FAUNA OF SHIKAHOGH RESERVE WILL BE RESTORED, RESERVE DURECTOR ASSURES

Noyan Tapan
Apr 26 2006

KAPAN, APRIL 26, NOYAN TAPAN. According to the changed variant of
construction program of Kapan-Tsav-Shvanidzor-Meghri alternative road,
the 6.5-km road length will pass through the Shikahogh reserve. As
reserve Director Ruben Mkrtchian mentioned in his interview to
Noyan Tapan correspondent, the alternative inter-state road is a
necessity. According to him, though trees will be cut down during the
construction, in accordance with the contract, the reserve area will be
enlarged and this will make possible to plant new trees. Not denying
the fact that the explosions made for building the road damage the
fauna of the region, R.Mkrtchian meanwhile said that “after the works
are over we will have a possibility to restore the region within a
year or two”. He also assured that numerous programs of restoration
have been already worked out for this purpose.

Lithuania Will Assist Armenia Within European Neighborhood Policy

LITHUANIA WILL ASSIST ARMENIA WITHIN EUROPEAN NEIGHBORHOOD POLICY

PanARMENIAN.Net
26.04.2006 00:08 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Talks with the Lithuanian President were
productive, a range of matters of mutual interest, specifically
the current bilateral relations, including European Neighborhood
Policy were discussed, Armenian President Robert Kocharian stated
at a joint news conference with his Lithuanian counterpart Valdas
Adamkus in Yerevan. “We are grateful to Lithuania for assistance in
implementation of political reforms within the European Neighborhood
Policy,” Kocharian said.

In his words, during the talks the parties agreed to hold joint
business forums that will determine priorities of development
of economic ties. “During the talks we discussed cooperation in
agriculture, security of foodstuffs, exchange of students,” the
Armenian leader said.

In his turn Lithuanian President Valdas Adamkus remarked that the talks
held were constructive. “We will assist and promote Armenia within the
European Neighborhood Policy. Time has come to speak about regional
cooperation between South Caucasus and Baltic states. I believe this
will become real soon,” the Lithuanian President said.

Recognise The Armenian And Assyrian Genocide

RECOGNISE THE ARMENIAN AND ASSYRIAN GENOCIDE
By Peter Marshall

Assyrian International News Agency
April 24, 2006

On Saturday 22 April, around a thousand Armenians living in the UK
marched from Marble Arch to the Cenotaph in Westminster where a wreath
was laid to draw attention to their demands for the recognition of
the Turkish genocide of 1915-23 in which around 1.5 million Armenians
were killed.

Genocide has been around throughout history, but it was only in
the twentieth century that the term was invented. It was needed to
describe both the fate of the Jews under the Nazis and the earlier
Turkish crimes against the Armenians.

Ethnic groups such as the Armenians just didn’t fit in with the concept
of a new Muslim Turkey held by the Young Turks in the early years of
the twentieth century. The only solution was to kill them.

The Turks started on the job on 24 April 1915 by arresting 1000
intellectuals and other leaders and executing them.

Next they conscripted 300,000 male Armenians for army service, but
but instead of sending them to the trenches, they were alleged to be
traitors, disarmed and killed.

Finally, the remaining Armenians – women, children and the elderly –
were dealt with my mass killings and enforced marches into the desert
where they starved. Rape and other atrocities were common.

The Armenians had been living inside what became modern Turkey for
some 3000 years. At the start of 1915 there were over 1.5 million of
them. Most were killed during that year, and by 1923 there were only
around 50,000 left.

The Turkish government still refuses to accept this genocide
occurred. In 1916, a UK parliamentary report by Lord Bryce and Arnold
Toynbee, ‘Treatment of Armenians in the Ottoman Empire 1915-16’
detailed these systematic politically motivated killings, and many
other reports, including some from the UN have given simiilar accounts.

Over recent years, many governments and other organisations around the
world have passed resolutions affirming that the Armenian genocide
occurred. Like the Nazi holocaust, it is a fact of 20th century
history, and like that, totally reprehensible.

Various Early Day motions in the British parliament have called upon
our government to take some action. The most recent, sponsored by
Stephen Pound MP, “calls upon the UK and Turkish governments publicly
and officially to recognise the Assyrian and Armenian genocide of
1915” and for the “UK Government to call on the European Union to
make official Turkish recognition … one of the pre-conditions for
Turkey’s membership of the EU.” So far this has only attracted 38
signatures – only one from a Conservative.

The march was one of a number of events this year organised by the
Campaign for the Recognition of the Armenian Genocide, CRAG, together
with other Armenian community groups. Among those leading the march
was Bishop Nathan Hovhannisian, Primate of the Armenian Church of
Great Britain.

htm

http://www.aina.org/news/20060423163906.
www.indymedia.org.uk

The Armenocide

THE ARMENOCIDE
Armen Manvelyan

24.04.2006 11:35
“Radiolur”

Armenocide – this was how the known Arab historian Musa Pren
characterized the tragedy that occurred 90 years ago in the Osman
Empire. By creating the word “genocide” through uniting the Latin-Greek
“race” and “murder” words, Famous Polish attorney Rafael Lemken wanted
to show the whole horror that threatens peoples subject to mass
assassinations, while Pren’s “Armenocide” concretizes and gives an
ethnic characteristic of the matter. At the start of the 20th century
the tragedy that happened in Western Armenia, on the territory of Osman
Empire, changed the fate of a whole nation, and penetrating into the
memory of peoples, it turned into a desire to live and to strive.

The tragedy left a fatal spot, making a whole people suffer a
complex. Such complexes, however, are not cured through short memory
or through the loss of the latter. These are cured to spite the
organizers of the Genocide, due to life, development and victory. To
exclude repetition of similar tragedies it is important to understand
the historic and political motivations of it.

Historic and Political Reasons of the Armenocide

If we speak about the history of the Armenian nation, we can divide
it into two parts – before and after the Genocide. This watershed,
which we call genocide, assassination, Armenian massacres and at
last Armenocide, needs serious study and analysis, particularly from
the point of view of developing security of the second independent
Republic of Armenia.

Turning to the Armenian Genocide – the Armenocide – we should note
that it became possible because of a number of historic events:
it occurred under the conditions of collapse of the Osman Empire,
the World War Two and the strengthening of the idea of creating the
state of Turan. We can state that these events, however, came to
complete the policy the Osman Empire was executing against Armenians
since the day of its creation. Generally, turning to the history of
creation and existence of the Osman Empire, we should mention that it
was some kind of totalitarian Empire. Preceding that or in that period
similar empires were being created not only owing to military power,
but also due to economic and cultural expansion.

Before, the metropolises forming the Empire were superior over the
peoples under their domination in regard to the level of economic,
military and cultural development, which allowed them to actively
influence these people and keep them under their domination. Different
from this, from the above-mentioned economic, military and cultural
factors only the military one was vital in Turkey. That is to say that
being on a lower level of development, the people forming the Empire –
the Turks – could control other peoples of the Empire only with the
military force. Thus, there was no ideological, political, ethnic or
cultural unity within the Empire. It was solely the power of arms that
provided the opportunity to retain the Empire for centuries. Being
on a lower level of economic, cultural and political development than
other peoples of the Empire, Turks could only grab.

This found its expression also in the fact that the nomadic tribe that
penetrated into Small Asia from Central Asia aimed at evading also
these territories to make these a permanent place of their inhabitance.

There were only two ways to do this, either by assimilating the local
nations or by annihilating them. The first one seemed to be a rather
complex problem, since, as it was mentioned, the nations living here –
the Armenians, Greeks, Arabs and Syrians were ahead of dominant Turks
in regard to the level of their development. While the second way was
rather simple and dear to them, considering also that the latter had
great experience of it, since they were keeping the Empire only with
the military force and cruelty. However, if in the period of power
and flourishing of the Osman Empire the idea of having a homeland
was not primary, then in the 19th century it turned essential for
the founders of the collapsing Empire – the Turks. We can say that
this was also one of the peculiarities of this Empire. Other Empires –
the Roman, the Russian or the British – had their original motherland,
a historic land, where they could continue to live after the collapse
of the Empire. The homeland of Turks was Central Asia and Siberia,
where they were not going to return.

Therefore, an own motherland – the metropolis – had to be
created. Small Asia could become such motherland for Turks, since it
had strategic importance both due to its geographical position and
in respect to the possibility of establishing a new Empire in the
future. However, the Armenians, Greeks and Assyrians had been living
here for centuries. And because Armenians occupied the heart of this
territory, they became the primary targets of attack.

We should note that to prevent the collapse of the Osman Empire, in
the 19th century Turks tried to suggest different ideologies, which,
according to them, could unite the peoples of the Empire. The idea of
New Osmanism that emerged in the second half of the 19th century aimed
at uniting the nations of the Empire notwithstanding their religious
or ethnic belongingness. According to ideologists of New Osmanism,
this national ideology could be attractive for other nations of the
Empire and would create the opportunity to prevent the separatist
dispositions of the peoples under Turkish domination. However, from
the very beginning the artificialness and bareness of this ideology
was apparent. Therefore, it could not become the force that would
unite the peoples of the Osman Empire. The idea of Islamism or Pan
Islamism suggested by Abdul Hamid Second did not justify itself,
either. The aim of this ideology was to unite Turks with the Muslim
peoples comprising majority in the Empire, particularly Arabs – the
founders of Islam. However, for Arabs Turkish Sultans could not become
founders of a new Caliphate, therefore the unification on the ground
of Islam did not succeed, either. Different from their predecessors,
these aimed at creating a new Empire, the heart of which had to be the
Small Asia. Different from the collapsing Empire, it had to stretch
to Caucasus, to Central Asia and Siberia, i.e. those territories
where Turkic nations lived. In fact, being deeply nationalistic, this
ideology targeted at returning to own roots and uniting all Turkic
nations. Armenians were standing across this route; they stood between
the Turkic tribes of Small Asia and Caucasus. The latter intended
to lead an active policy of “Turkisation,” and it is not in vain
that after gaining power, the Young Turks, preaching the ideology of
Pan Turkism, prohibited all national unions – the Armenian, Greek,
Arabic ones, etc.

Thus, judging from the above we can conclude that all attempts to
preserve the Osman Empire had failed, so had the policies of Osmanism
and Islamism.

There was no time for implementing the policy of
“Turkisation.” Therefore, Turks had put an aim to create a purely
Turkic state, annihilating all non-Turkic peoples. The largest
Christian nation of the Empire – the Armenians – was hindering the
accomplishment of these programs. Thus, in this period it was already
clear that the destiny of Armenians was predetermined.

The Armenocide and the Islam

We should mention that Armenian and foreign historians have written
much about the Islamic factor in the Armenian Genocide. The opinions
here are unequivocal – although the Turks tried to use the religious
factor to organize the massacre of Armenians, it was not a success. The
people comprising majority in the Osman Empire – the Arabs – did not
back the idea, therefore, it became impossible to escalate large-scale
interreligious clashes. Nevertheless, despite these facts, the idea
dominates among the Armenian society that the Armenian Genocide
occurred just on the religious ground, and that being surrounded with
Muslims, Armenians are doomed. From time to time this idea, having
nothing to do with reality, is being articulated by interior and
exterior political circles to show the fact of lack of alternative
in foreign policy. However, in reality the holy war – the Jihad –
declared by the last Sultan Sehmed Fifth against Christians was
targeted at justifying the brutalities and mass assassination of
Armenians, as well as the involvement of all Muslims in this.

However, the Arab theologians and religious leaders, who enjoyed
great respect in the Muslim world, did not back the idea of Jihad. The
Governor of Hijaz and the Sheriff of Mecca Hussein ibn Ali al-Hashemi,
who was considered the greatest authority in the Muslim word, did
not only refuse to support the Sultan’s decision, but also urged all
Orthodox Muslims to help Armenians and defend them. Many Arab leaders
and the Arab people were assisting the Armenians in the desert of
Der Zor. Arab divisions of the Turkish army were refusing to fight
against Armenians.

The attempts of Turks to use the Arabs to suppress the self-defense
struggle of Armenians failed. Arab Governors of a number of Turkish
provinces were just refusing to execute the orders from Constantinople
to displace and massacre Armenians. However, Turks could not keep from
noting all this, and many Arabs suffered for protecting Armenians. It
is important to mention here that Sultan Mehmed Fifth declared the
holy war against the Christian population of the Empire only after
getting the “blessing” of allied Christian Germany.

Generally, it should be said that at the time when Muslim Arabs
were sacrificing their lives to help Armenians, the Christian Europe
was either supporting Turkey or was pretending not to see the mass
assassinations in Western Armenia.

Generally, turning to the position of European powers, we should
note that on one hand they were using the Armenian Issue to interfere
with the interior affairs of the Empire, thus causing the discontent
of Turkey, on the other hand many times the activeness of Europeans
was preventing or suspending the massacre of Armenians in this or
that Province. Nevertheless, to say that during the war the European
countries were unable to influence the policy of Young Turks would be
incorrect, either. Rather, the factor of political appropriateness
played its decisive role here, i.e. the fact of the massacre of
Armenians would later enable the European powers to present accusations
on Turkey to seize additional concessions from the latter.

Historic lessons of the Armenocide

To exclude reoccurrence of the Armenian Genocide and provide for the
security of the nation it is necessary to seriously investigate the
historic and political reasons of the events.

The study of the policy of the most dreadful crime against humanity
– the genocide – is of great importance not only for contemporary
generations but also for current politicians and for all those who
determine or somehow influence the directions of Armenia’s interior
and foreign policies. It is essential to understand the most crucial
– the fact that contemporary Turkey has been formed in the result of
the Armenian Genocide, the Armenocide. If not the Armenian Genocide,
there would be no Turkey, either. This is the truth, which the former
and current authorities in Ankara understand pretty well, and it
is this fact that explains the denunciation that they demonstrate
towards the fact of Genocide recognition. It can be asserted even
that contemporary Turkey avoids recognition of the Genocide not as
much because of the fear of material or territorial demands, rather
it is concerned with the moral side of the question. Kemal Turkey was
built on the basis of a fault value system, where people carrying the
burden of executing the Genocide were considered divine. In reality the
heroes and famous political figures of this nation resembled a butcher,
whose hands are foul with the blood of millions of innocent people.

Such findings can become the moral blow and loss of faith for the
contemporary Turkish generation, which is not even aware of the events
in the Osman Empire at the start of the 20th century, which can in
its turn lead to the collapse of the country. It is a historic truth
that the flattening of own power and moral characteristics can be
destructive for any state and nation.

It needs to be mentioned that regardless of our will the fact is that
the historic memory of the Armenocide will always endure in the fate of
the Armenian nation, shaping and directing its policy not only toward
neighboring Turkey, but also towards those countries which somehow
contributed to the execution of the Armenian Genocide. At the same
time this memory provides the opportunity to exclude reoccurrence
of the Armenocide in the future and to build the national security
system proceeding from the principle of excluding similar tragedies.