
ArmInfo. In his message to participants in the commemorative events dedicated to the 111th anniversary of the Armenian Genocide, Russian President Vladimir Putin stated that Russia's position on this issue remains unchanged.
"Today, we bow our heads in memory of the hundreds of thousands of victims of the Armenian Genocide - one of the most terrible tragedies of the 20th century. The brutal massacre of defenseless, innocent people who were killed, wounded, and expelled from their hometowns and villages shocked the entire civilized world, and its catastrophic consequences convincingly demonstrated the consequences of inciting religious hatred, nationalism, and xenophobia," the Russian leader's message reads.
In this vein, he noted that the country's position on this issue has always been unchanged. According to him, as early as May 1915, it was reflected in the joint Declaration of Russia, Great Britain, and France condemning the violence against the Armenian people as a crime against humanity and civilization, and in a more recent era of history-in the Statement of the State Duma of April 14, 1995. "We are confident that the policy of mass extermination and deportation of people based on ethnicity cannot and will never be justified, and the international community must join forces to ensure that such barbarity never happens again.
The persecution and repression of those years have left an unhealed wound for many generations of Armenians, but the tragedy they endured united people who demonstrated a strong commitment to tradition, wisdom, and courage. I am confident that the sons and daughters of Armenia will continue to cherish their national identity, millennia-old culture, language, freedom, and spiritual values. I wish the friendly Armenian people well-being, prosperity, and all the best," Putin stated.
On April 14, 1995, the State Duma of the Federal Assembly of the Russian Federation adopted a statement "On Condemnation of the Genocide of the Armenian People in 1915-1922." It stated that it was adopted based on irrefutable historical facts testifying to the extermination of Armenians in Western Armenia from 1915 to 1922. It also noted that the physical annihilation of the fraternal Armenian people in their historical homeland was committed with the aim of creating conditions for the destruction of Russia. The State Duma condemned the organizers of the extermination of Armenians, expressed sympathy for the Armenian people, and recognized April 24 as Genocide Remembrance Day.
Furthermore, on April 24, 2015, Russian President Vladimir Putin participated in a commemoration ceremony for the victims of the Armenian Genocide, which took place at the Tsitsernakaberd Memorial Complex. In his speech, the Russian head of state stated that the events of 1915 shocked the entire world, and in Russia they were perceived as their own grief, noting that hundreds of thousands of defenseless and homeless Armenians had received refuge in Russia and were saved. The President also recalled that it was Russian diplomacy that achieved international condemnation of the violence against the Armenian people. At the initiative of Foreign Minister Sergei Sazonov, back in 1915, Russia, France, and Great Britain issued a joint statement explicitly calling the incident a crime against humanity and civilization.