French Armenian Singer Marten Yorgantz In Armenia

FRENCH ARMENIAN SINGER MARTEN YORGANTZ IN ARMENIA

Noyan Tapan
Armenians Today
May 02 2007

YEREVAN, MAY 2, NOYAN TAPAN – ARMENIANS TODAY. French Armenian
singer Marten Yorgantz visited Armenia after a break of more than 10
years. The famous singer had concerts in Yerevan on April 29-30. As
M. Yorgantz informed the Noyan Tapan correspondent, the Yerevan
concerts again proved that his songs are favourite in Armenia. In his
words, taking into consideration that circumstance, it is envisaged
to organize new concerts in the Fatherland in September.

M. Yorgantz mentioned that today Yerevan has at all another
appearance. The dwelling buildings, restarants and hotels built during
the recent years, in his words, make Yerevan more beautiful. The
singer is sure that if this tendency continues, Yerevan will be
compared with European capitals in few years.

In his words, the fact that Diasporan Armenians more frequently come
to the Fatherland during the recent years, and many of them even want
to take up permanent residence in Armenia, is gratifying.

Touching upon his singing art, M. Yorgantz mentioned that his disks
are released in the Armenian, French and Italian languages once in
two years, and he goes on tours to those countries where there are
Armenian colonies.

"Diasporan Armenian young people today more prefer listening to
Armenian songs. And I do my best to perform them not only love but
also patriotic songs as a song has an important role for keeping the
nation," the French Armenian singer emphasized.

It is painful for M. Yorgantz that singers in Armenia make an attempt
to involve European and American elements in Armenian songs, by what,
in his words, the Armenian music is distorted. "The Armenian music
must be performed only and only in Armenian," he mentioned.

ANKARA: Azerbaijan Postpones US Visit Over Wording On Nagorno-Karaba

AZERBAIJAN POSTPONES US VISIT OVER WORDING ON NAGORNO-KARABAKH CONFLICT

Today’s Zaman, Turkey
April 30 2007

Azerbaijan said Sunday that it postponed a high-level visit to the
United States because of what it claimed were changes in US wording
describing its dispute with Armenia over the Nagorno-Karabakh
territory.

The Caspian Sea coast nation’s Foreign Ministry warned that the
issue "may become a serious impediment to further security-related
cooperation between our countries" — a possible reference to
Azerbaijan’s contribution to the US-led coalition in Iraq. The
government postponed the two-day visit for security talks, which
was to have started today and to have included high-level officials
from several ministries, because of "changes to the provisions"
on Nagorno-Karabakh in the State Department’s 2006 report on human
rights abroad, a ministry statement said. The changes "distort the
essence of the Armenia-Azerbaijan Nagorno-Karabakh conflict" and their
introduction "puts in doubt the US position of the ‘honest broker’
in the resolution of the conflict," the statement said. It did not
offer details, and officials were not available for comment after the
statement’s release. Nagorno-Karabakh is a territory inside Azerbaijan
that has been controlled by Armenian and local ethnic Armenian forces
since a six-year war that ended in 1994. Tension remains high between
Armenia and Azerbaijan, ex-Soviet republics in the Caucasus. There
was speculation in Azerbaijan that the government was angry at the
absence, in the State Department’s country report on human rights
practices in Armenia, of a statement saying that Nagorno-Karabakh is
Azerbaijani territory occupied by Armenia.

‘Heritage Has Greater Resources’

‘HERITAGE HAS GREATER RESOURCES’

A1+
[03:59 pm] 01 May, 2007

"’Heritage’ party has no intention to quit the election campaign as
we are sure to win and become a relevant majority in NA. Moreover,
provided equal terms and conditions, ‘Heritage’ would obtain absolute
majority." Hovsep Khurshudyan, pre-election headquarters executive
announced based on the campaign assessment results.

He has introduced the party activities and noticed that questions
addressed to Raffi Hovhannisyan are mainly about their programs. Hovsep
Khurshudyan believes their program to be very actual and essential:
"Heritage" is obliged to provide with 1 billion dollars investment,
pension and benefit increase, 150 thousand work places and the like.

In respond to "A1+", Hovsep Khurshudyan highly appreciated AAM party
self-refute action the latter viewing as a great sacrifice. He also
underlined the fact that "Heritage" would not follow their initiative
as far as they had greater resources hence it took the 2nd place,
due to social survey.

To make the timetable public and any relevant comments on the issue,
Hovsep Khurshudyan assured that Raffi Hovhannisyan traveled at his
expense.

To remind, Raffi Hovhannisyan is out of the republic 4 months a
year average.

FRA Dashnaksutyun Of France Invites To Vote Segolene Royal To Te Pre

FRA DASHNAKSUTYUN OF FRANCE INVITES TO VOTE SEGOLENE ROYAL TO TE PRESIDENCY
Jean Eckian

KarabakhOpen
01-05-2007 19:15:54
Paris

The FRA Dashnaksutyun, recalls in an Press release that, the French
socialist party always supported the Armenian claims. Particularly
in 1981: Claude Cheysson, Foreign Minister of the first socialist
government, recognizes the Armenian genocide.

1984: Franзois Mitterrand is a first Head of State in the world
to recognize the Armenian genocide. 1987: It’s thanks to the French
socialist Party that the European Parliament recognizes the Armenian
genocide to Strasbourg. 1998: the socialist Party makes adopt the bill
on the recognition of the Armenian genocide to the French National
Assembly. 2006: Socialist party makes adopt a bill sanctioning the
negation of the Armenian genocide.

Thus, testifying that French socialist Party always held its promises,
FRA Dashnaksutyun invites all the voters of Armenian origin to vote
for Sйgolene Royal on next May 6.

–Boundary_(ID_UlAqG/knAZjCqpOPgZbnpA)–

Sarkisian Urges Patience, ‘Realism’

SARKISIAN URGES PATIENCE, ‘REALISM’
By Karine Kalantarian

Radio Liberty, Czech Rep.
May 1 2007

Prime Minister Serzh Sarkisian cautioned against excessive
socioeconomic expectations from his governing Republican Party of
Armenia (HHK) as he took its well-funded election campaign to the
southern Ararat region on Tuesday.

"We are a realistic party," Sarkisian told a campaign rally in Vedi,
a small local town close to the Turkish border. "We are a realistic
government. That is why we don’t and won’t give excessive promises."

"In 2003, we didn’t give any promises here. We just promised to work
and be attentive to various problems," he said, referring to the
last parliamentary elections that were controversially won by the
HHK. The economic situation in the country will continue to improve
if the HHK repeats that success in next week’s elections, he added.

Local residents’ dissatisfaction with that situation showed during a
brief question-and-question session that followed Sarkisian’s speech
at the outdoor gathering. "We are asking you to provide financial
assistance to rebuilding our streets," one man said, contradicting
Vedi Mayor Varuzhan Barseghian’s assurances that the town is now much
better shape than it was four years ago.

Another participant of the meeting asked the Armenian premier to help
restore natural gas supplies to his neighborhood. Sarkisian promised
to instruct government officials to look into the matter.

As was the case with the HHK campaign in other parts of Armenia, local
authorities had a direct involvement in the event, mobilizing public
sector employees and even school students. In Vedi, schoolchildren
were handed white HHK flags to greet the high-ranking visitor.

For some local people, it was also an opportunity to relay their
grievances to Sarkisian. "I’ve just come to hand him a letter,"
said one elderly man. "Nobody else has come here willingly."

The HHK campaign rally in the nearby town of Masis was attended not
only by local residents but also people from nearby villages that
were bused to the town free of charge. The buses were provided by an
HHK candidate in the local single-member constituency. The villagers
insisted that they were not forced to attend the event.

Kobzon Sympathizes With Kocharyan

KOBZON SYMPATHIZES WITH KOCHARYAN

Arminfo Agency
2007-05-01 21:08:00

Well-known Russian singer, People’s Artist of USSR Iosif Kobzon is
giving a concert in Yerevan today in the framework of his tour of 25
cities in 17 countries.

During a press-conference today Kobzon said that he is happy to give
a concert in Armenia. He will sing pre-war, lyrical and patriotic
songs as well as songs in Armenian. He noted that Armenian composer
Arno Babajanyan is one of his favorites. "He is a musician of global
significance. Just like Charles Aznavour, he is not just Armenian. He
is a unique artist."

Asked about the forthcoming parliamentary elections, Kobzon said
that he has no right to speak in favor or against anybody. "I can
just say that I sympathize with your young and energetic president,"
Kobzon said.

This year Kobzon is marking his 70 birthday. Before Yerevan he
has given concerts in Sofia, Baku and Tbilisi. "Despite tensed
relations between Georgia and Russia, Georgians gave him most cordial
welcome. The same was in Azerbaijan." "All conflicts happen because
of politicians rather than ordinary people," Kobzon said.

Congress Weighs Armenian Genocide Resolution

-0704230714apr24,1,6312103.story?coll=chi-newsnati onworld-hed&ctrack=1&cset=true

Congress weighs Armenian genocide resolutions
Turkey’s opposition prompts caution

By Karoun Demirjian
Washington Bureau
Published April 24, 2007

WASHINGTON — Every April 24, U.S. presidents commemorate the official
day of remembrance of the Armenian genocide with a speech or statement
carefully crafted to avoid use of the word "genocide."

U.S. officials have avoided the word because Turkey, a key ally,
strongly opposes the characterization to describe the early 20th
Century deaths of an estimated 1.5 million Armenians at the hands of
Ottoman Turks.

In the past, members of the House and Senate have proposed resolutions
calling on the president to utter the phrase "Armenian genocide," but
the efforts have run aground in the face of political concerns voiced
by both Democratic and Republican administrations.

In the past year, however, the struggle over the word "genocide" has
received international attention through a series of high-profile news
events, commencing with the passage of a bill in the lower house of
the French parliament criminalizing denial of the Armenian genocide
and extending to the political murder of a prominent Turkish-Armenian
journalist.

The issue has caught the attention of many U.S. lawmakers, and with
House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) sympathetic to the cause,
advocates are hopeful that by next year’s commemoration survivors and
their descendants will find closure to a 92-year struggle to gain
official recognition for the mass killings that took place in the
Ottoman Empire in World War I.

Aram Hamparian, executive director of the Armenian National Committee
of America, a Washington-based lobbying group, said that if the
resolutions came to a vote in the full House and Senate, they would
pass. "It’s time to let public policy catch up with the truth," he
said.

The House version is co-sponsored by 190 lawmakers, with 29 senators
supporting the nearly identical Senate version presented by Sen. Dick
Durbin (D-Ill.).

Should the measures reach the floor, it would be the first time since
2000, when then-House Speaker Dennis Hastert (R-Ill.) responded to a
request from the Clinton administration by pulling a resolution on the
use of the word "genocide" only minutes before a scheduled vote.

Bill stays in committee

The bill’s advocates had hoped that Pelosi, a longtime advocate for
recognition of the Armenian genocide, would bring the bill to a floor
vote by Tuesday.

Yet the bill still is lingering in the House Foreign Affairs
Committee, where it has not been scheduled for a vote.

As a member of NATO and a key transit link for oil, Turkey has long
been an important U.S. ally, and officials at the highest levels of
the Bush administration are wary of straining that relationship.

In a letter to Pelosi and House Foreign Affairs Committee Chairman Tom
Lantos (D-Calif.) last month, Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice and
Defense Secretary Robert Gates wrote that Turkey — which borders
Syria, Iraq and Iran — is "a linchpin in the transshipment of vital
cargo and fuel" to U.S. troops in the Middle East.

A negative reaction from Turkey to a resolution on the Armenian
genocide "could harm American troops in the field, constrain our
ability to supply our troops in Iraq and Afghanistan, and
significantly damage our efforts to promote reconciliation between
Armenia and Turkey," Rice and Gates wrote.

Daniel Fried, assistant secretary of state for European and Eurasian
affairs, added to the alarm in March when he told Lantos’ committee
that Turkey could respond to a genocide bill by blocking U.S. access
to Incirlik air base, a transit point in southeastern Turkey for
nearly three-quarters of all military cargo headed for Iraq.

But some legislators see the administration’s warnings as misapplied
fear-mongering.

"You can essentially sum up the argument against recognition in one
word: expediency," said Rep. Adam Schiff (D-Calif.), who is author of
the House resolution and represents a district with the largest ethnic
Armenian population in the country.

"I don’t see how we can speak with moral authority on the genocide in
Darfur if we’re unwilling to speak with clarity about the genocide
against the Armenians," Schiff said. "It cannot be our policy that
we’ll recognize genocide when it’s committed by the politically weak,
as in Sudan, but not the politically strong, as in Turkey."

Advocates of the bill add that a negative reaction from Turkey would
not be crippling.

"Each time we discuss this, Turkey has predicted the end of the world,
or threatened to cut off all ties," Hamparian said.

But since Turkey refused to let the U.S. use its territory as an
entry point into Iraq during the 2003 invasion, he said, American
dependence on Turkey has waned.

"Turkey has relationships with the U.S. because it makes sense for
Turkey," Hamparian said. "So these doomsday threats are really just
threats to punish themselves."

Turkey vehemently rejects the assertion that Armenian deaths during
World War I constituted genocide, maintaining instead that those
killed — which it numbers at 300,000 — were the unfortunate
casualties of widespread war.

Contentious issue in Turkey

Genocide — or lack thereof — is a contentious issue within
Turkey. Tension spiked in January with the murder of Hrant Dink, a
prominent Turkish-Armenian journalist who had been sentenced to jail
under Article 301 of the Turkish penal code, which makes it a crime to
insult "Turkishness."

Turkish officials have invoked his death — publicly mourned by
Armenians and Turks alike — as a rallying point to call for more
academic and historical dialogue between the two ethnic groups. That
same call is being echoed by those attempting to stymie debate over
the genocide issue in Congress.

But Schiff questioned calls for dialogue from a country that he says
is still campaigning to censor parts of the debate."There’s really no
denying that the murder of a million and half Armenians constituted
genocide," he said. "Iran is in the business of hosting conferences
denying the Holocaust. We shouldn’t be in the business of supporting
conferences to debate undeniable facts of genocide."

http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/nationworld/chi

By denying Armenian Genocide, the Turkish Government continues to pe

By denying Armenian Genocide, the Turkish Government continues to perpetrate
genocide or oppression of its minorities: US Congressman

Arminfo
2007-04-28 13:25:00

Senators and Representatives joined Armenians around the world this
week in commemorating the 92nd anniversary of the Armenian Genocide
in statements on the floors of their respective chambers of Congress,
reported the Armenian National Committee of America (ANCA)

Rep. Frank Pallone (D-NJ) – "Mr. Speaker, if America is going to
live up to the standards we set for ourselves, and continue to lead
the world in affirming human rights everywhere, we need to finally
stand up and recognize the tragic events that began in 1915 for what
they were: the systematic elimination of a people… And the fact
of the matter is that when some of my colleagues say to me, ‘Well,
why do you need to bring up something that occurred 92 years ago,’
I say, ‘Because by denying this, the Turkish Government continues to
perpetrate genocide or oppression of its minorities.’"

Rep. Adam Schiff (D-CA): "Opponents take issue with the timing of the
[Genocide] resolution and argue that Turkey is making progress with
recognizing the dark chapters of its history. This claim lost all
credibility when Orhan Pamuk, Turkey’s Nobel Prize winning author
was brought up on charges for ‘insulting Turkishness’ for alluding
to the genocide, and Turkish Armenian publisher Hrant Dink was gunned
down outside his office in Istanbul earlier this year.

Yet some opponents go even further, such as a former Ambassador to
Turkey who argued that the time may never be right for America to
comment "on another’s history or morality." Such a ludicrous policy
would condemn Congress to silence on a host of human rights abuses
around the world. After more than ninety years and with only a few
survivors left, if the time is not right now to recognize the Armenian
Genocide, when will it be?"

Rep. Jim Costa (D-CA) – "On April 24, 1915, 300 Armenian leaders were
rounded up and deported and killed under the orders from the young
Turk Government.

And so began the genocide that lasted for 7 years, resulting in an
estimated over 1.5 million Armenian deaths. To this day, unfortunately,
the Turkish Government denies that this occurred…Ladies and
gentlemen, Members of the House, I just returned from Darfur with a
group of our colleagues 2 weeks ago.

Over 450,000 people have been killed and millions displaced in Darfur;
yet government officials claim there in Darfur and Sudan that there
is no genocide, that the situation is overblown. Yesterday Rwanda,
today Darfur. And we can remember the Holocaust. Clearly, silence is
genocide’s best ally. It is time that the Congress end this silence
and pass the Armenian genocide resolution."

Rep. Chris Van Hollen (D-MD) – "As the first genocide of the 21st
century–this time in Darfur–began to take shape, the world again
hesitated, this time to debate for months the definition of genocide,
as thousands died and thousands more were displaced. Today, 200,000
people have been killed in Darfur and 2.5 million driven from their
homes. And so, I rise Mr. Speaker not only to acknowledge and remember
the horrific events that befell the Armenian people at the dawn of the
last century, but also to highlight the horrific events occurring one
hundred years later in Darfur at the dawn of this century… For the
past few years, as the anniversary of the Armenian Genocide approached,
I hoped that year would be the year a solution to the crisis would
come. But, this year, instead of speaking of how the lessons of the
Armenian Genocide helped unite the world around a solution for Darfur,
I can only report of ongoing suffering and continued killings."

Azerbaijani Government Intensifies Media Crackdown Through ‘Criminal

BBSNews, NC
April 28 2007

Azerbaijani Government Intensifies Media Crackdown Through ‘Criminal
Libel’ Charges

Azerbaijan: Opposition Editor Sentenced to Prison

HRW via BBSNews – New York, April 28, 2007 — The conviction of
Eynulla Fatullayev, the editor of Azerbaijan’s largest independent
newspaper, for "criminal libel" and "insult," underscores
deteriorating press freedoms in that country, Human Rights Watch said
today.

Map of Azerbaijan, 2005.

Photo Credit: The University of Texas at Austin.

For the map shown above in it’s full size, see "Map of Azerbaijan,
2005.

More maps are available in BBSNews Maps.

On April 20, Yasamal District Court in Baku convicted Fatullayev, the
outspoken editor-in-chief of the independent Realni Azerbaijan and
Gundelik Azerbaijan newspapers, for having committed "criminal libel"
and "insult." The charges were based on an internet posting that the
prosecution attributed to him, which blamed Azerbaijanis for a 1992
massacre in Nagorno-Karabakh. Fatullayev denied writing the posting,
but was sentenced to 30 months in prison.

The same day, unknown assailants attacked one of Fatullayev’s
colleagues at Realni Azerbaijan, Uzeyir Jafarov, who sustained
serious injuries. Fatullayev is the fifth journalist to be imprisoned
in Azerbaijan in the last 10 months.

"Fatullayev’s prosecution was politically motivated, and he should be
immediately released from custody," said Holly Cartner, Europe and
Central Asia director at Human Rights Watch. "The steady rise of
politically motivated defamation charges and violent attacks against
critical journalists is clearly aimed at silencing critical voices in
Azerbaijan."

In its letter to Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliev on February 9,
Human Rights Watch documented numerous cases of violence and criminal
defamation charges against journalists in Azerbaijan, including
Fatullayev. Human Rights Watch urged the president to take steps to
end impunity for such violence, and ensure that Azerbaijan complies
with its international obligations on freedom of expression and the
press.

Fatullayev’s conviction comes just two weeks after the same court
fined him 10,000 Azeri manats (about US$12,000) for the same offense
in a civil claim brought by Tatiana Chaladze, head of the Azeri
Center for Protection of Refugees and Displaced Persons. Chaladze
also initiated the criminal libel and insult charges against
Fatullayev.

The Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe has called
for Azerbaijan to abolish the offense of criminal libel. Human Rights
Watch echoed this call in February in its letter to President Aliev.

Fatullayev’s conviction was based on a statement attributed to him
that was posted to the website Azeritricolor. The statement blamed
Azerbaijanis for the 1992 massacre in the village of Khojali in
Nagorno- Karabakh. Chaladze alleged that the statement defamed the
village’s residents.

According to Azerbaijani official statistics, more than 600 people
were killed on February 25, 1992, when ethnic Armenian forces stormed
the predominantly Azeri town of Khojali. Fatullayev denies making the
remark and maintains that it was a set-up intended to put him behind
bars. The remark was apparently linked to an article Fatullayev had
published in 2005, "Karabakh Diary," in which he expressed the view
that Armenian forces maintained a civilian corridor for Azeri
villagers to flee Khojali.

Fatullayev wrote the 2005 article while working as an investigative
journalist for the newspaper Monitor, where he worked until the
murder of his close friend, Monitor editor Elmar Huseynov, in March
2005. Huseynov’s murder remains unsolved. Fatullayev’s Realni
Azerbaijan newspaper is the successor to Monitor, which closed after
Huseynov’s murder.

Fatullayev’s lawyer told Human Rights Watch that, although his
client’s conviction was partially based on statements made in the
2005 article about the Khojali massacre, the article itself was not
included in the evidence against him. Fatullayev plans to appeal his
conviction.

"As a member of the UN’s Human Rights Council, Azerbaijan should be
exemplary in its protection of fundamental human rights like freedom
of expression," said Cartner. "Instead, the authorities have launched
a series of politically motivated flawed trials against critical
journalists, fueling an atmosphere of fear and hostility for the
independent and opposition media."

Just hours after Fatullayev’s conviction on April 20, unknown
assailants brutally beat Fatullayev’s colleague, Realni Azerbaijan
journalist Uzeyir Jafarov. Jafarov told Human Rights Watch that as he
left the Realni Azerbaijan office around 11:45 p.m., two people
attacked him from behind and hit him several times on the head. The
assailants fled only after Jafarov’s colleagues responded to his
calls for help. Jafarov was hospitalized for head trauma and remains
in the hospital. He claimed to have seen one of the assailants in the
court room at Fatullayev’s hearing earlier in the day.

"Attacks on journalists and the lack of accountability for these
crimes are crushing freedom of the press and expression in
Azerbaijan," said Cartner. "If this crackdown on the media continues,
it will be nearly impossible for Azerbaijan to hold free and fair
presidential elections next year."

Background

Eynulla Fatullayev is known for his frequent criticism of Azeri
officials and for exposing instances of government corruption.

Pressure on Fatullayev to stop his journalism had been building for
over a year. Fatullayev was forced to suspend publication of his
newspapers on October 1, after his father was kidnapped. The
kidnappers threatened to kill both Fatullayev and his father if he
continued publishing the newspapers. The editor had to stop
publication of the paper in exchange for his father’s release.

Fatullayev renewed publishing only two months later, but acknowledged
that he did so at his own peril, since the kidnappers remained at
large.

In March, after publishing an article accusing the Azeri authorities
of obstructing the investigation into the murder of Monitor editor
Elmar Huseinov, Fatullayev reported death threats against him and his
family. The Azeri authorities refused to investigate these claims or
offer to protect Fatullayev.

Soon after the statement attributed to Fatullayev about the Khojali
massacre began to circulate on the internet in February, protestors
organized several rallies in front of the Realni Azerbaijan office
and threw eggs and stones at the office windows. Police did nothing
to stop the protestors.

In recent months, high-ranking state officials have initiated
criminal defamation charges against Fatullayev. In September,
Fatullayev was handed a two-year suspended sentence and forced to pay
damages in a criminal libel case brought by Interior Minister Ramil
Usubov. Usubov has brought similar charges against numerous other
independent journalists and newspapers.

The conviction of Fatullayev comes amid the Azerbaijani government’s
growing hostility toward independent and opposition media, which
raises serious concerns about the future of independent media and the
security of journalists in the country. Violence and the threat of
violence against journalists have become frequent in Azerbaijan, and
often such crimes are committed with impunity. A dramatic increase in
defamation charges brought against journalists by state officials has
further contributed to the deteriorating environment for freedom of
expression.

Minister Oskanian Speaks On Genocide Remembrance In Brussels

MINISTER OSKANIAN SPEAKS ON GENOCIDE REMEMBRANCE IN BRUSSELS

ArmRadio.am
27.04.2007 10:27

RA Foreign Minister Vartan Oskanian participated in a commemorative
evening in the Royal Conservatory of Brussels.

The event was attended by representatives of the Belgian Parliament,
EU senior officials, Ambassadors accredited in Belgium, the European
Union and NATO, Armenian and Jewish organizations of Europe, musicians
and journalists.

Press and Information Department of RA MFA informs that the opening
speech was delivered by the Chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations
Committee of Belgium Roelants du Vivier. The Senator, who is one
of the initiators of the resolutions on recognition of the Armenian
Genocide in the European Parliament in 1987 and the Belgian Senate
in 1998, noted that the depiction of the massacres in the Ottoman
Empire in 1915 fully corresponds to the Convention on the punishment
of genocide the UN adopted in 1948. He also underlined that 92 years
after the events there are still people, a government and a state
that refuses to recognize the Armenian Genocide. Senator Roelants du
Vivier assured that he and his supporters are fighting against those
who threaten the public order of Belgium by denying the genocide. "We
are obliged to do that in memory of 1.5 million Armenians and survivors
who chose Belgium as their new motherland," said the Senator.

Turning to the attempts of Turkey to distort own history, Foreign
Minister Vartan Oskanian noted that for a long time we memorialized
these events by ourselves. "We were left alone because there
were two versions of history – the official and the alleged,
the acknowledged and the denied. The Ottoman Empire that fell
was succeeded by a Republic with an immaculate, almost divine,
self-image. Such murderous acts and their tolerance could not fit
within this self-definition. Minister Oskanian welcomed the speech
of those Turkish intellectual who said: "I’m neither guilty nor
responsible for what was done 90 years ago. But I feel responsible
for what can be done now."

Turning to Turkey’s policy of denial, the Minister said: "I believe
that we must distinguish between the Ottoman Empire and today’s
government of Turkey. But I must say that although that is possible
to do when speaking of the events of 1915, it becomes increasingly
difficult to do when speaking about the denial of the Turkish state
today. As Elie Wiesel said, the denial of genocide is the continuation
of genocide.

At the end of his speech Vartan Oskanian turned to future of
Armenian-Turkish relations and regional cooperation. "Today, as
the Foreign Minister of the Republic of Armenia, as the grandson
of genocide survivors, I can only say that Armenia and Turkey are
neighbors who will remain neighbors. We share a border. We can only
move forward together."