
ArmInfo. Lilit Galstyan, a member of the Armenian parliament from the opposition "Armenia" faction, has accused Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan of lying regarding the restoration of the Tsitsernakaberd memorial complex to the victims of the Armenian Genocide.
The MP noted that on April 18, Pashinyan, who visited the Armenian Genocide Memorial in the presence of Minister of Education, Science, Culture, and Sports Zhanna Andreasyan, confidently and assertively stated on camera that "no one" had restored the Genocide Memorial for 60 years. "It's sad that the monument's co-author, Sashur Kalashyan, who was present at the meeting, swallows this lie and makes no attempt to correct it. It's sad that Minister Andreasyan, who by virtue of her position should have known the history of the restoration of a monument of national significance, confirms this lie. But silence is more profitable... Moreover, lies are a competitive advantage for this administration: to lie, to deny without shame, to mislead and demonize the former... And the Tsitsernakaberd Memorial Complex, which commemorates the innocent victims of the Armenian Genocide, has been repeatedly restored and improved over its 60-year history," the MP wrote on her Facebook page.
The opposition member recalled that the Memorial Complex was restored in 2003 as part of the 90th anniversary of the Genocide, with funds from the LINCY Foundation. The stones were replaced, the bunker was thoroughly modernized, the monument was completely sandblasted, the irrigation network was completely replaced, new lighting was installed, curbs were replaced, extensive tree planting was carried out, a sound system was installed, the stairs were repaired, and the pedestrian path was redesigned.
According to her, 22 years ago, unlike today's shameful restoration process, during the reconstruction of the memorial complex, supported by the LINCY Foundation, everything, including the urban planning, architectural, and historical-cultural aspects, was preserved. "The memorial was also restored during the 100th anniversary of the Genocide, when recognition and condemnation of the Genocide became part of the foreign policy agenda, and representatives from more than 80 countries were expected to visit the Memorial to honor the memory of the victims and condemn the unforgivable crime of Genocide.
On April 24, 1995, during the 80th anniversary of the Genocide, the Armenian Genocide Museum-Institute was opened, becoming the fourth component of the memorial dedicated to the memory of the victims of the Armenian Genocide. And unlike your administration, no previous administration has been afraid of programs to perpetuate the memory of the Armenian Genocide and internationalize this issue, and has not succumbed to Turkish pressure to deny our past and memory, even during Soviet times," Galstyan wrote, backing up her words with photographic evidence.