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Phoenix AZ: Despite Extreme Tension, ‘Free Speech’ Protest Outside Phoenix Mosque Remains Peaceful

May 30, 2015 By administrator

Some images included in this story contains strong language.

475191254-620x413A “free speech” protest was held in Phoenix Friday evening, with anti-Islam protesters gathering to demonstrate outside a mosque following a “draw Muhammad” contest.

While tense, the protest appeared to remain peaceful as participants clashed with mosque and Muslim community supporters who came out to hold a counter-demonstration.

A spokesperson for the Phoenix Police department said there were no arrests or reports of injuries.

Police divided anti-Islam protesters from counter-demonstrators. Members of both parties, however, engaged in heated shouting matches across the police line.

Many anti-Islam protesters could be seen wearing “f*** Islam” shirts and holding similar signs. Those counter-demonstrating held “peace” and “f*** ISIS not Islam” signs.

Source: theblaze.com

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Free, mosque, Phoenix, Protest, speech

France, Sorbonne Full speech Najat Vallaud-Belkacem at the inauguration of the conference

March 27, 2015 By administrator

Ladies and gentlemen,

Najat Vallaud-Belkacem at the inauguration of the conference

Najat Vallaud-Belkacem at the inauguration of the conference

Mr. Rector of Paris, Chancellor of the Universities, Distinguished Ambassadors, Distinguished professors,

Ladies and gentlemen,

Hundred years. There was about a hundred years one of the most appalling episodes in the history of Europe and the world. The political project of the Committee “Union and Progress” to the total extermination of the Armenian people, would be implemented triggering a mass crime, unprecedented in its scope and in nature.

Genocide, the first modern genocide – except for the genocide of the Herero people in 1904, sometimes called “colonial genocide” – was about to be committed.

Today, one hundred years after the genocide, what better symbol that the meeting of researchers, historians of the world put together in the service of understanding, knowledge and recognition of what happened ?

What better answer to the barbarism that these intelligences gathered here to relentlessly go further in the pursuit of scientific truth and advance universal knowledge?

What better symbol finally, the desire to transmit to future generations the memory, this prestigious and solemn place, the Grand Amphitheatre of the oldest universities? That one even which welcomed on 9 April 1916, the meeting in “Homage to Armenia” in the presence of Paul Deschanel, President of the Chamber of Deputies, the writer Anatole France and the Minister of Instruction public at the time, Paul Painlevé?

Paul Painlevé then stood with others to denounce loudly the crime being committed. I quote: “The nightmare has become a present reality. The massacres that last year Armenia bloodshed beyond their scope and the most atrocious cruelty legends of all ages and all countries. »

Today, the echo of those voices still ringing in our ears.

I wish to thank the “International Scientific Council for the study of the Armenian Genocide” and all its partners, including the mission in 2015 of the Coordination Council of Armenian Organizations of France and the Regional Council of Ile-de-France, to organizing the biggest event for the 1915 centenary This conference, under the patronage of the President of the Republic, combines high places for French research and knowledge transfer: the Sorbonne, but also the Memorial Shoah, the School of Higher Studies in Social Sciences and the National Library of France.

It attests to the investment in research on the genocide of a large community of scientists worldwide. It will, for the first time, allow to question the balance of one hundred years of research on the Armenian genocide, but also to examine, in a comparative dimension, the specificity of the twentieth century in the history of humanity, as the era of genocide and mass violence.

The role of history is crucial because the historian has the primary role of establishing the truth of the facts to shed light on what has been.

Subject to a commitment to systematic extermination, Armenians were first victims of persecution. They were referred to as Armenians because they were Armenians.

Because they represented the soul and the Armenian culture, artists, intellectuals, men and women, were pursued and arrested.

They paid a heavy price.

On 24 April, the musician Komitas was arrested, as well as 650 other intellectuals. The life of the greatest genius of Armenian music, which was rescued from oblivion the most beautiful Armenian folk songs, was broken at that time by the trials of deportation and torture. He fell definitively into madness.

The poet Daniel Varoulan, one of the greatest poets of Armenian literature, was also arrested on April 24 before being brutally murdered 23 August 1915.

Novelist and poet Zabel Yesayan, was, too, targeted by the raid. She miraculously escaped from it. She later worked tirelessly to collect the testimonies of genocide survivors, until overtaken by another barbarism, that of Stalin’s Gulag, where she disappeared in 1943.

The exterminator will continued relentlessly: the entire Armenian people was intended.

The men were killed and their women and children were massacred or deported in appalling conditions. They died on the way, exhaustion, or locked up in camps. Killing in Syria, Mesopotamia, the cradle of European civilization, occurred when other atrocities are committed today.

Research has estimated that, from 1915 to 1917, two-thirds of the Armenians, at least 1.3 million people lost their lives because of the deportations, concentration camps and mass executions.

Research has helped to support and analyze these facts, and name the genocide name. The rigorous study of sources, testimonies of survivors, documents, has established this truth, that no longer debate in the scientific community.

There is no more appropriate term in our language as coined by the jurist Raphael Lemkin in 1943 to name the unnameable, to qualify the will of systematic destruction of a people for what it is.

But if the work of historians is to know, it is also essential because it sustains recognition.

The French Republic has taken note of the progress of historical research and has registered in the single article of the law of 29 January 2001 “France publicly recognizes the Armenian genocide of 1915”.

This is essential because it is the recognition due to the 500 000 French of Armenian origin, descendants of survivors; to all of them, refugees in France, as Missak Manouchian, fought for France and died for her hero.

This recognition is, universally, due recognition to individuals persecuted, oppressed minorities and peoples threatened their existence.

This is also what led France to assert that denial is intolerable because the law is what protects against all forms of manipulation. And this is the position of France to the European Court of Human Rights.

The Armenian diaspora living in free countries have beautifully illustrated how scientific knowledge is an essential weapon for recognition and against Holocaust denial. Just like Archag Tchobanian, arrived in Paris in 1895 in defense of his people rushed into the Hamidian massacres, the Armenian intellectuals have the book and writing a fight for the truth.

In the area of ​​research, we owe much to Armenian historians, whether the great French historians Anahide Ter Minassian, Raymond Kervokian and many others, or American historians such as Vahakn Dadrian and Richard Hovannisian.

In Turkey, the Armenians are working hand in hand with Turkish intellectuals and historians, some of whom have paid with their lives this fight for truth: I think in particular of Hrant Dink, murdered on 19 January 2007. I also want to acknowledge the political scientist Bursa Ersanli and publisher Ragip Zarakolu, and thank them for being here today.

But researchers of Armenian identity n’œuvrent not alone. And Event centenary installs Armenian historians in the heart of the global history of social sciences genocide; it occasionally, and this conference is the event of the passage of the Armenian Genocide to the status of global history object. In France, the opening up of the object of study, Ternon Yves and Pierre Vidal-Naquet, were the precursors, continued with the contribution of the First World War specialists: historians of the Great War ‘now fully include the study and understanding of the extremes of war violence.

The contribution of turcologie was also crucial, experts of the Turkish-Ottoman world who knew uncompromising approach the event.

Finally, in France, the comparative study of genocide has informed the event in light of research on the Holocaust, but also for research, booming, the Tutsi genocide in Rwanda.

Today is strengthened by the sum of these searches we can collectively remember and honor the victims. Research, the book of creation, are also a calming pain of the memories. These are all bridges between the past and the future.

Yes, the work of historians is finally allowing a nation to look further into the future, and to prevent the killing of reproducing.

The story, as the science of the past of nations, by teaching us where we came from, also allows us to inform our future. Because, thanks to her, we can project ourselves collectively, it helps us build our citizenship.

Because republican citizenship is based on knowledge, understanding, denial of fate, the school has a central role to play in this transmission. It is she who can make real the promise of the Republic his children to grow them in equality and tolerance. It is she who can sow the seeds of a shared memory.

I want to pay tribute to all the history and geography teachers from France who contribute everyday. The genocide of the Armenians in the Ottoman Empire, which is part of our memory to all, is studied by all during the compulsory school in 3rd grade.

At school, we transmit the awakening of citizenship, culture debate of ideas, the struggle against prejudice and against all forms of persecution. We learn the difference between the controversy, dialogue, which is the source of knowledge, and manipulation or falsification.

At school, students must learn to understand the world, but also learn to want to change it, to fully take their place as citizens. This is the meaning of the reforms we adopt, with the introduction next September moral and civic education throughout compulsory education. Also with the reform of the college, which allows students to be more involved in their learning.

But this transmission can not be done only at school, without the support of research.

It must continue in higher education and research, where studies on genocide should be able to better find their way, as “genocide studies” could find their overseas particular.

The magnitude of the issues they cover, they concern numerous scientific disciplines in the humanities and social sciences and beyond. As we enter the second century of research on the Armenian genocide, I would launch a mission study drawing up an inventory of research on genocide to allow it to grow. Confronting perspectives, understand what led to the tragic events of the past, this is what will allow us to prevent the possibility of their repetition in the future. This is what will allow us to continue the fight against oblivion.

This is the sense I think the President of the Republic wished to give this symposium, held under the high patronage.

Meanwhile on April 24, where I will go to Yerevan with President of the Republic for outstanding international commemoration, I like to see in the holding of this major international conference at the Sorbonne sustainable Registration promise this story in the present and in the future: the very definition of history according to Thucydides, who called him “a treasure for eternity. »

Thank you.

Photos of Claire Barbuti

Source: Friday, March 27, 2015,
Claire © armenews.com

Filed Under: Genocide, News Tagged With: inauguration, najat-vallaud-belkacem, speech

Regardless of Azerbaijan’s threats and provocations, the wheel of history is impossible to roll back – Serzh Sargsyan

March 18, 2015 By administrator

Below is a speech by Armenian President Serzh Sargsyan at the 5th media forum “At the foot of Mount Ararat.”
Distinguished journalists,

Ladies and gentlemen,

f55099389288da_5509938928911.thumbI greet you in the Republic of Armenia, and welcome your participation in the framework of this important and large-scale event. The presence of 150 well-recognized journalists from the different corners of the world itself speaks for the international community’s attention to this forum, as well as of its interest towards Armenia. I hope that, besides your work, you, the participants of the forum bearing the beautiful heading “At the Foot of Mount Ararat,” will have the opportunity to familiarize with the Armenian culture and cuisine, and admire the wonderful view of biblical Mount Ararat.

It is obvious that in our days, media outlets have huge potential to disseminate universal values, fight against their encroachment and consolidate the international community. Today, a highly representative group of international media outlets has gathered under the same roof. You have already built an effective media platform for the discussions pertaining to the Armenian Genocide with the objective to once again uncover the realities regarding one of the most serious crimes committed in the 20th century. This forum, why not, is also a unique platform to thoroughly and comprehensively present the achievements of the Republic of Armenia in various areas, and challenges faced by our country.

In 2015, Armenia, Armenians all over the world and the international community remember and commemorate the Armenian Genocide committed in the Ottoman Empire one century ago. The genocide took lives of one and a half million Armenians, hundreds of thousands of people became refugees or were forcefully converted into other religion. Each Armenian from any corner of the world continues to feel the consequences of the Mets Yeghern psychologically, culturally, linguistically and politically.

We wish we could have also commemorated the Centennial of the Armenian Genocide together with the Turkish people, thereby heralding a new haven of the rapprochement of the two nations and normalization of their relations. This was the goal pursued by the protocols between Armenia and Turkey signed back in 2009 and of my invitation to the President Erdoğan of Turkey to join us on April 24 in honoring the memory of the Armenian Genocide victims. Unfortunately, once more we encountered denial, one that acquired a particular manifestation this year.

I believe you are well aware that this year Turkish authorities decided to celebrate the 100th anniversary of the Battle of Gallipoli on the very day of April 24. The only motive for that was the simple-minded goal to distract the attention of the international community from the events dedicated to the Centennial of the Armenian Genocide. By the way, in this context your Norwegian colleague Bård Larsen published in February an article titled “Useless Diplomacy,” in which he very aptly put that “this would be tantamount to Germany celebrating heroic victories of Wehrmacht in the Eastern Front during World War II.”

I regret that the Turkish authorities instead of availing themselves of this Centennial to confront their own history and reconcile, put themselves in an awkward position by obviously distorting the well-known chronology the Battle of Gallipoli, and thereby embellishing their policy of denial with new manifestations.

The Turkish policy of denial pursued not only vindicates the crime committed by the Ottoman authorities – the dispossession of Armenians – but also sets a dangerous precedent for the recurrence of new genocides. The Holocaust, the Rwandan and Cambodian genocides, the ethnic cleansing and destruction of cultural heritage carried out by the Islamic State in recent years have all been striking examples of this. Their efforts to avoid responsibility or consign the Armenian Genocide to oblivion can be characterized as continuation of the crime and encouragement of new genocides.

Nevertheless, I must note that larger and larger segments of the Turkish intelligentsia and progressive youth are demonstrating courage to confront their historical past, desiring to live a dignified life and relieving themselves of such a heavy burden of sin.

It is a matter of plain fact that the policy pursued by the current Turkish government rules out the possibility of bringing the famous Protocols into life at which official Ankara looked from the perspective of the absurd preconditions perpetually set forth by it. For that very reason I decided to recall them from our parliament. Thus, the process did not reach its logical conclusion, and everybody knows which party is to blame for its failure. This does not mean that we are closing the window for rapprochement with Turkey. Nevertheless, we are not going to get involved in a process, which may fall victim to the third country’s unconstructive whims and, most importantly, without hope of restoring mutual trust.

Initially, we thought that the policy “Zero Problems with Neighbors” proclaimed by the Turkish authorities enshrined Turkey’s sincere intentions to normalize relations with neighboring countries, including Armenia. I do not want to comment on the nature of current relations between Turkey and other states, but as the subsequent developments demonstrated, Turkey had to face the reality of “Zero Neighbor and Numerous Problems.” In fact, Turkey’s real intention was not to have zero problems with neighbors, but to impose its own perception of those relations on the neighbors, which was nothing else than a manifestation of Neo-Ottoman policy.

The State Commission for coordination of the events for commemoration of the Armenian Genocide Centenary was established. Its members encompassed heads of all the largest Armenian institutions. The Commission adopted All-Armenian Declaration, which determined the united will of the Armenian people; by that Armenia and the Armenian people reiterated their commitment to continuing the international struggle for the prevention of genocides, restoration of the rights and establishment of historical justice for the nations subjected to genocide. In that perspective, the Armenian Genocide Centennial events are not solely of all-Armenian nature; they are a unique appeal to prevent any encroachment upon universal values. For that very reason I have invited the leaders and high-level officials of various countries to visit Armenia on April 24 and, thus, send a powerful message of the inadmissibility of the crime of genocide to the world.

Dear friends,

The Republic of Armenia will also continue its fight against the crime of genocide within the framework of international organizations. In 2013, at its 22th session, the UN Human Rights Council unanimously adopted the resolution on the prevention of genocide initiated by Armenia. This year we are going to table another draft resolution.

It is inspiring that the representatives of the international community are also engaged in Armenian-led initiatives. Moreover, its members continue to bring their weighty contribution towards the recognition and condemnation of the Armenian Genocide.

We are forever grateful to all those states and peoples who both in times of the calamity and during the subsequent years, have granted asylum to thousands of Armenians, giving them an opportunity to survive and preserve their identity and become full-fledged members of society in the given countries.

While attaching importance to the recognition and condemnation of genocides as a means of preventing their recurrence, we also extend our gratitude to all those states and organizations who continue to reflect upon the crime committed against our nation. This bears witness to the civilized world’s sincere commitment to the protection of universal values, which inspires nations subjected to genocide to believe in the restoration of justice and violated rights, just condemnation of the crimes and inadmissibility of impunity.

The resolution titled “The Armenian Genocide and European Values” adopted recently by the EPP Political Assembly on March 3, 2015 was a striking example of such a commitment. It contained serious political messages on the recognition of the Armenian Genocide, its condemnation and denial, and called upon Turkey to confront its past. Such a position on the Armenian Genocide adopted by Europe’s largest and most influential political force should indeed play a guiding role for European institutions and EU member states.

It is clear that in today’s world the guarantee of stability and normal development is peaceful co-existence and tolerance. This is the very principle guiding us through the Nagorno-Karabakh peace process, thereby not allowing Azerbaijan to ruin peace negotiations with its bellicose statements and provocative actions. In contrast to Azerbaijani authorities, whose provocative actions endanger the stability of not only their state but also of the region, Armenia is fully aware of the grave consequences of such adventurism. Therefore, by containing Azerbaijan’s military provocations, we try to avoid a new spark of the conflict, which will seriously deteriorate the already unstable situation in our entire region.

We do not incite hostility and hatred among our people, which has been an inseparable component of the policy carried out by the Azerbaijani authorities for years. In contrast to the Azerbaijani President who declared that the Armenian people are the number one enemies of Azerbaijanis, I would like to highlight once again that the Armenians do not have enemy nations.

It was Azerbaijan’s decades-long anti-Armenian policy and the determination to restore historical justice that ultimately drove the people of Nagorno-Karabakh to exercise their inviolable right to self-determination – to build their own homeland on their own land. Regardless of Azerbaijan’s threats and provocations, the wheel of history is impossible to roll back: the Nagorno-Karabakh Republic is already a well-established reality and it is not feasible to break the freedom-loving spirit of its people. To ascertain it, I am calling upon you to visit Nagorno-Karabakh to get acquainted with the Artsakh state-building on the ground and represent the objective reality to your public.

The Armenian position on the settlement of the conflict remains the same: it must be settled within the framework of the OSCE Minsk Group, through peaceful negotiations on the basis of the three famous principles of the Helsinki Final Act put forth by the Co-Chairs. Azerbaijan’s efforts to alter the format provided by the Minsk Group, talk to the Republic of Armenia and Nagorno-Karabakh from a position of force, provocations and blackmail will not yield a lasting solution. This is an unequivocal truth.

On January 27, 2015 the Co-Chairs of the OSCE Minsk Group issued a statement in Krakow on Azerbaijan’s destructive policy, in which they called upon Azerbaijan to live up to its commitments to the peaceful resolution of the conflict. I strongly believe that continued sending of targeted messages calling to exercise restraint will incite certain degree of vigilance with their true addressee.

Distinguished participants,

Although the recognition of the Genocide and settlement of the NK conflict are of vital importance to us, our agenda is, of course, much broader.

For centuries, our people have gone through hardships, which have not been able to ruin Armenians’ resolute determination to preserve their own identity, master their own destiny and, ultimately, build an independent state. And we have managed to achieve our cherished goals, which sometimes could have even looked like a dream.

In spite of the hardships that have fallen to our lot during the years of our statehood, we have managed to build a democratic state with a liberal economic model. We have not been alone in carrying out the difficult task of state-building; we have always enjoyed the support of friendly countries and their readiness to stand beside us in tough times.

Among our country’s important political achievements is certainly the establishment and development of civil society, which has actively engaged itself with the government’s various initiatives, especially in the recent years. In terms of indicators in the areas of human rights, rule of law, economic policy and development Armenia leads in the region, and considerably excels many countries of the region in a number of indicators.

With its accomplishments and limitations, the free press that comprehensively covers and introduces the public to the country’s domestic and foreign affairs, is also a top achievement since we gained our independence. According to the World Press Freedom Index 2015 annual report released by the Reporters Without Borders, Armenia was ranked the 78th out of 180 countries, occupying a leading position among the CIS countries, and even surpassing some EU member states such as Greece (91) and Bulgaria (106). It is obvious that we are not satisfied with that indicator, but we try to assess it from a comparative perspective, and if we see a real difference in a five-year or three-year period, yes, we more or less appreciate it.

We have got actively working political opposition. I myself attach great value to the establishment of constructive opposition and perfectly understand that it is a key component of a democratic consolidation.

Armenia has been actively engaged in the initiatives of the Open Government Partnership, which pursues the objective of promoting effectiveness, accountability and transparency in governance.

In this context, we also place great weight on the constitutional reform that we have initiated i Armenia. It is aimed at improving the constitutional mechanisms for realization of the rule of law and protection of human rights and fundamental freedoms, ensuring steady balance between the branches of government and promoting good governance. Right now we have reached the stage of finalizing the revised text of the constitution; a process which hinges on the principle of utmost transparency and engages all interested parties.

We are fully aware that building a democratic society and country is an ongoing process, and we are ready to make consistent efforts to reach our goal.

Distinguished journalists,

Armenia’s foreign policy has always been based on the principle of complementarity of different systems and accommodation of the interests of great powers involved in the region. Joining the CSTO, the Republic of Armenia has simultaneously enhanced its cooperation with NATO, by contributing to the strengthening of international peace and security through its participation in the peace-keeping missions. Our country has developed and continues to develop allied strategic partnership with Russia. The Armenian-Russian allied inter-State relations are anchored in the close historical ties that existed between the two nations. The close collaboration with the RF is a key component of our security, economic development and stability. The RF is Armenia’s largest trade partner: in 2014, our trade accounted for more than 1.4 billion dollars, there are 1.3 thousand enterprises with Russian capital in Armenia and the amount of Russian investments in our economy have exceeded three billion dollars. I am confident that for very many persons sitting in the hall these numbers seem small and ridiculous, but believe me that for a small state and a small economy such as Armenia these numbers are extremely important. We cooperate with Russia in different sectors – energy, infrastructure, industry etc. According to non-official data, there are around 2 million Armenians living in the RF. We also continue to deepen our collaboration with the RF within the framework of international organizations – the Eurasian Economic Union, CIS and CSTO. We attach great importance to the Russia’s efforts aimed at a peaceful settlement of the NK conflict within the framework of the OSCE Minsk Group.

Our foreign policy is also aimed at reinforcement of our friendly partnership with the US and of the special relationship with France.

Since independence, Armenian-American relations have continued to develop dynamically. Currently our bilateral agenda includes various sectors – political, economic, human, security and other dimensions – in which we have been making further progress year to year.

I must express my content with the fact that owing to mutual efforts our partnership has now reached its highest level in the history of Armenian-American relations. The reciprocal visits at various levels conducted in the recent years bear testimony to this.

We highly appreciate long-standing US support for the RA’s economic development, multi-sectoral reforms, consolidation of democracy and civil society, which pursue the objective to strengthen our statehood.

We also place great value on the US role in the maintenance of security and stability in the region, especially on its active involvement in the peaceful settlement of the NK problem.

Armenia is very keen on continuing interstate relations based on shared values and the age-old friendship between the Armenian and French peoples. We value the achievements embellishing our interstate relations during the last two decades, which involve regular promotion of political, economic, cultural, scientific and educational cooperation, and effective implementation of the assistance programs.

The consistent and concerted efforts in the relations between Armenia and France have resulted in a crucial haven, special relations we enjoy. France’s role is invaluable both in the condemnation and international recognition of the Armenian Genocide at the highest level, and in the peaceful resolution of the NK conflict within the framework of the OSCE Minsk Group Co-Chairmanship.

Of course, deepening and broadening of our traditionally friendly partnerships with neighboring countries, particularly, with the Islamic Republic of Iran and Georgia are top priorities for our country.

We highly appreciate our mutually beneficial and multifaceted cooperation with Iran, which is rooted in historical and cultural similarities, reciprocal economic interests and in common approaches to a number of regional issues.

The multifaceted relationship between Armenia and Iran is maintained at the high level. This is testified by our active and high-level political contacts, and agreements reached therein pertaining to the effective implementation of joint political, economic and humanitarian projects.

We are closely following the negotiations between the Islamic Republic of Iran and the P5+1 over Iran’s nuclear program. We wish the issue to be resolved as soon as possible, and the settlement to be acceptable to all the parties. We are hopeful that the agreements that have already been achieved will result in a comprehensive settlement of this issue.

I must express my content with the fact that in recent years the high-level contacts between Armenia and Georgia have tangibly intensified. Our active interstate dialogue rooted in the traditional, historical and good-neighborly friendship and mutual understanding between our peoples establishes serious prerequisites to outline new dimensions in our partnership. As a result, we are building effective mechanisms to swiftly address any issue on our current bilateral agenda.

We have always attached great importance to Georgia’s role not only in the development of our bilateral relations, but also in strengthening and maintaining security in the South Caucasus.

The level of our political cooperation has provided favorable conditions for promotion of bilateral economic cooperation. In this regard, we have made considerable progress in the development of a relevant legal framework.

From January of 2015 onwards we have been a full-fledged member of the Eurasian Economic Union.

Since independence active involvement in regional integration processes has been and continues to be a priority for the Armenian foreign policy. In the 21st century regional integration unions play a major role in helping small states follow ongoing trends in the global economy and fully integrate into it. In this regard taking into account the present structure of our country’s economy, the geography of export and our economic ties with EEU member states, the accession to the EEU opens up new prospects for our country to develop. Free movement of goods, capital, services and labor give our businessmen substantial opportunities to penetrate new markets and reinforce their positions there. All this will naturally stimulate employment opportunities in Armenia, increase of foreign direct investments and development of our economy.

Distinguished journalists,

Being a full-fledged member of the European family and civilization and building our development on the European principles and values, we continue to make vigorous efforts to enhance our relations both with individual European countries, and with the EU and our Western partners. The cooperation between Armenia and EU has been marked by major achievements, which is a result of our concerted efforts, political will and mutual commitment. Throughout these years, the large-scale reforms in Armenia have been at the forefront of our dialogue. To raise the effectiveness of those reforms, we have transformed the executive structure, establishing the Ministry of International Economic Integration and Reforms, which will coordinate those processes.

We intend to maintain these achievements and, moreover, to deepen and buttress them with further initiatives. This is proved by the Armenia-EU Joint Statement adopted in Vilnius in November of 2013, in which the parties reaffirmed their mutual commitment to further enhancing and strengthening multi-sectoral cooperation. We are taking active steps both towards development of a new legal framework for our relations with the EU and pushing forward our agenda with NATO.

Meanwhile, I have to note that under conditions of the boisterous pace at which globalization has proceeded in the 21st century, when the world is moving towards formation of a single common area, when it seems that the economic borders between the states are losing their importance, it is meaningless to speak about conflicting integration models. In this respect, as I have said on numerous occasions before by joining the EEU, Armenia could serve as a connecting link between the business communities of EEU states and Western countries.

Our country’s foreign policy agenda has been expanding with every passing day through embracing new partners. Our relations with the countries of the Latin American and Asian countries have intensified, and we continue to maintain traditionally good relations with the Arab world. Among the countries of the Asia-Pacific region, we have kept on promoting close cooperation with China, Japan and with a host of other states. In a few days, I am going to pay a State Visit to China, which I am sure will give a new impetus to the development of our bilateral relations in various fields.

Of course, our foreign policy and security cannot remain unaffected by events unfolding in neighboring regions and, in general, in the international arena. By this I refer to the alarming developments in Ukraine and the Middle East. Today, the so called Islamic State based in the territories of Syria and Iraq poses a real threat to both regional and international security. In the Middle East, the cradle of ancient civilizations, those very civilizations risk being destroyed. Armenian communities in Syria and Iraq are also affected by that situation. The Armenian Genocide survivors, who had found shelter in Syria and Iraq, now have to face the mentioned challenges. Armenia has already accepted more than ten thousand refugees from Syria.

Armenia condemns the crimes and atrocities committed by the Islamic State, the Al Nusra Front and by other terrorist groups, and calls on the international community to take decisive steps against this newly-emerged calamity. In this context, Armenia expresses its full support to the complete implementation of the relevant resolutions of the UN Security Council.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Armenian, Karabakh, president, regardless, speech

France: Hollande urges Turkey to “break taboos” over Armenian Genocide

January 29, 2015 By administrator

Holand of FranceWednesday, January 28, before an audience of 450 guests gathered at the Hotel du Collector, at the annual dinner organized by the Coordination Council of Armenian Organizations in France, it’s Franz-Olivier Giesbert who had donned the costume emcee to announce the speeches of the two co-chairs of the CCAF, Mourad Papazian and Ara Toranian before the speech of President Hollande and the delivery of the Medal of Courage from the CFC to Charles Aznavour, very moved by Alexis Govciyan. (See speech of the two lowest co-chairs).

Numerous personalities from the political, artistic and media world had moved for this special dinner marking the centenary commemoration of the Armenian genocide, thus affirming their full support for the Armenian cause.

Paris (AFP) – President Francois Hollande called Wednesday on Turkey to continue its “truth force” about the Armenian genocide a century earlier, saying that “it is time to break taboos.”

“The truth of effort must continue and I am convinced that this centenary year will see new gestures, new steps on the road to recognition,” said he was at the annual dinner of the Coordinating Council of Organizations Armenian of France met in a Paris hotel.

Recalling that the Turkish authorities had wanted a year ago “to join in the commemoration and the suffering of the Armenian people,” the head of the French state, however, felt that it was only “a first movement “who” can not stop there. “

Hollande also recalled that he had “welcomed this sign” a year ago during a trip to Yerevan but he had “stressed (during this movement) that it could not be enough.”

“It is time to break the taboos and the two nations, Armenia and Turkey, invent a new start,” he said.

Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan, Prime Minister, had last year an unexpected gesture, with the condolences of his country “to the grandchildren of Armenians killed in 1915”. But Armenia rejected these condolences, demanding recognition of the genocide and “repent”.

Turkey has always refused to admit any planned disposal, evoking the death of about 500,000 Armenians (against 1.5 million according to Armenia).

Disours Ara Toranian

Let me, first of all, thank you for honoring your presence this second dinner CCAF. I would also like to thank Honourable Ministers, Madam Mayor of Paris, Anne Hidalgo, and all the ambassadors and personalities – Charles Aznavour Bernard-Henri Levy) who are with us this year so symbolic since for the first time in history, we will commemorate the centenary of genocide.

This is an exceptional event – the next of these will take place in three decades to a hundred years of the Holocaust – and your presence tonight shows that France is already the appointment of History at a height worthy of his rank.

To commemorate, it is characteristic of humanity, said the philosopher Alain. Especially when it comes to deaths that were as grave as our collective memory. On the land where they were exterminated, there is indeed no monument for Armenians, not even the slightest plate. There mausoleums for their executioners. And the only memorial dedicated to the victims of genocide in the land where they were murdered in the desert of Der Zor, Syria, the final destination of the deportation convoys, was blasted on September 18 by a jihadist organization whose ties with Ankara posed question.

This determination to pursue their dead into ossuaries reflects a criminal madness that is the most absolute savagery. A barbarity that has transcended time, to disfigure again this region from persecuting it remains Armenians, Yazidis, free Kurds, Assyrian-Chaldeans of our brothers in misfortune also targeted by the 1915 genocide.

But alas this barbarism also crossed the room to come knocking at the heart our capital, Paris, our press, Charlie Hebdo, our Jewish community, Porte de Vincennes, and on the eve of the 70th anniversary of the liberation of Auschwitz which has become the day to commemorate the Holocaust, the deadliest genocide of the twentieth century.

Mr. Chairman, as we well know, the more the world becomes more global, the more questions are globalized and we need solidarity. We live in the time that was given birth yesterday and what we will or we will not give birth today of tomorrow.

As your presence announced on 24 April in Yerevan, is an early response to all diversions operations aimed at creating an international event that same competitor in Turkey on April 24. Coarse maneuvers do not hesitate to change the historical dates for the purposes of the revisionist cause, the Battle of Gallipoli, the subject of this gathering which Erdogan has invited 101 heads of state, has always been celebrated on April 25th Day Allied landings and not April 24, which is worldwide the traditional day of commemoration of the Armenian Genocide.

Mr. Chairman, The Armenian communities this year under the sign of memory and justice. But due to time constraints, I will not dwell this evening on the issue of property grabbing Armenians, their concealment, the issue refunds, repairs and status denial, we are still waiting to be protected by law. I will speak no serious threats to Armenia and Nagorno Karabakh, still face pan-Turkism, Azerbaijan and jihadists who went to Baku service since 1992.

For we are here too, beyond the evocation of the 1915 genocide and the dramatic events of 2015, to celebrate life, brotherhood and the spirit of resistance. This spirit, which vibrates in us the mere mention of our elders, those supporters Mavericks Manouchian group, the Jews, the Spaniards, the Armenians, the Italians and the Poles who gave their lives for the cause of freedom and France, which in reality are one and. This spirit of resistance that is at the heart of the values ​​of the republic, which we have seen the historical reminiscence on January 11 throughout the country. A movement which we were naturally involved, and that makes me say today that our greatest glory at all, is not in never falling, but to pick ourselves up, every time. Sets and solidarity.

Speech Mourad Papazian

There are 100 years … 100 years! A century! In 1915, the Turkish government launched the plan to exterminate the Armenian people. The elimination of a people of a territory. Men, women, children, the elderly have suffered the horror, atrocity, inhumanity, with death as perspective and survival as the slimmest of hopes. But hope nonetheless. Suffering is absolute, paroxysmal pain, pervasive trauma. For if in 1915, the government of Talaat, the Turkish Hitler, defined and executed the first genocide of the twentieth century, in 2015, 100 years later, a century later, the Erdogan government and organizes Davutoghlu denial of the Armenian Genocide . Here we are in 2015. This time we all dreaded. Now that in itself is a sad moment. This moment in history which leads us to the conclusion that successive Turkish governments have not done their working memory. 100 years have passed! 1 century! An eternity! Without the Turkish authorities, whatever they are, have expressed any sign towards recognition of the genocide committed in 1915, under a scheme Empire. Worse, they established a state lying on the Armenian Genocide by writing the story in reverse of reality. Worse, they still celebrate today Talaat memory, the Turkish Hitler, since Istanbul erected a mausoleum Talaat on the hill of Liberty, as the largest artery in Ankara is the Talaat avenue, since large cities Turkey have Talaat streets. Imagine now a street Hitler would fall under impossible! The unthinkable! Even the unimaginable! Turkey is unfortunately possible! And no voice is raised to condemn this unacceptable reality! Worse, Taner AgCam As written, the Turkish government has industrialized denial of the Armenian genocide. The Turkish communities throughout the world and in France too, are organized, politicized funded. Paramilitary militias are present in the territory.

Today we were in Strasbourg at the hearing of the ECHR which must rule on the case against Perinçek Switzerland. This hearing sadly convinced us that the Turkish authorities are in a radicalization of attitude. The radicalization of the lie, the radicalization of denial, the radicalization of their anti-Armenian posture. This morning in Strasbourg, the French government was, as the CFC, third party next to Switzerland in the Perincek case against Switzerland. A comforting support and confirming your will, Mr. President, penalizing denial of the Armenian genocide by a government bill. The judgment of the ECHR will depend the future of laws criminalizing denial of the Armenian genocide.

Justice is at the heart of the struggle of the Armenian people for decades.

2015 must be the year of truth and justice. The reconciliation process must be based on the repairs. 2015 must be the year of the great voices. Great Voices must manifest clearly and powerfully, with authority. As Jaurès, we celebrated in Yerevan in September, which had risen several times to the National Assembly to denounce the massacres of Armenians in the Ottoman Empire, as Mitterrand, who was the first head of state to have recognized the Armenian genocide in 1984, as you Mr. President, that you have demonstrated your commitment to the Armenian cause on many occasions, both in the National Assembly with the launch of penalization process of denial of the Armenian genocide, that by participating in the commemorations of the Armenian Genocide in Paris yesterday and tomorrow in Yerevan. And finally, on your initiative, the presence of France in support of Switzerland in the Perinçek trial is a major commitment that we measure at fair value. Hopefully it will be decisive.

You should know cause history. And the dream we all do together is to write this page of history with the ink of reconciliation. Reconciliation is possible only if it is backed by the truth, if it is based on justice and if it is the result of a process of repair. And forgiveness is the result of repairs. Forgiveness does not forget the past, but it widens the future! With Ghandi, we might remember that “the weak can not forgive. Forgiveness belongs to the strong. »

So yes, everything is still possible. And 2015 may be the year in which forgiveness can become a future perspective for Turkey, Armenia and the Armenian nation worldwide. And you, Mr. President of the Republic, one of the few people in the world that can build a bridge between us and accelerate during the year 2015, the reconciliation process on the basis of the triptych truth-justice-repairs.

#armeniangenocide

Souce: http://www.armenews.com

Filed Under: Genocide, News Tagged With: armenian genocide, CCAF, Hollande, Paris, speech, Turkey

Video: Judge Robertson speech call Talat, Ottoman Hitler at European Court of Human Rights (ECHR) Armenian Genocide Case

January 28, 2015 By administrator

AMAL-Robertson

#JusticevsDenial Amal Clooney has accused Turkey of having double standards over freedom of expression for defending a man accused of denying the Armenian genocide.

At the request of Switzerland, Strasbourg judges are reviewing the case between Bern Dogu Perinçek. The Turkish nationalist had called the Armenian Genocide “international lie”. It was in Strasbourg that the Grand Chamber of the European Court of Human Rights (ECHR) must reconsider Wednesday at the request of the case between Bern Switzerland Dogu Perinçek

Filed Under: Genocide, News, Videos Tagged With: #JusticevsDenial, amal clooney, armenian genocide, ECHR, Geoffrey-Robertson’s, speech

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