
ArmInfo. Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan's message on the 111th anniversary of the Armenian Genocide in the Ottoman Empire is full of lies, manipulation, and, of course, betrayal. Lawyer Ruben Melikyan wrote about this on his Facebook page.
It should be noted that the Armenian prime minister, in his address to the nation, stated that the Armenian Genocide is a consequence of "the practice of involving the Armenian people in international intrigues, and therefore it should not become an instrument of international actors' struggle against each other." Furthermore, Pashinyan stated that the Armenian people must "stop looking for a homeland outside the internationally recognized 29,743 square kilometers of the state, otherwise the country could lose its statehood."
According to Melikyan, Pashinyan is essentially calling on the Armenian people to abandon their own justice in favor of someone else's. "In this way, he is trying to 'brainwash' with relativism. That is, to convince them that truth and falsehood are supposedly relative, and therefore, neither exists. And if there is neither truth nor falsehood, then there is no absolute value. If there is no absolute value, then it is pointless to give one's life and be a martyr for absolute values-for the Motherland and for the Faith," the lawyer explained.
Secondly, as Melikyan noted, Pashinyan, following Turkish propaganda, is essentially blaming the Armenians themselves for the Genocide. "Finally, he remains silent about the de-Armenianization of Artsakh and the open cultural genocide, which are a continuation of the events of 1915. And this raises the question: why don't others abandon their 'justice' if it's right?" the lawyer concluded.
It's worth noting that in early 2025, the Armenian Prime Minister, at a meeting with representatives of the Armenian community in Switzerland, questioned the fact of the Armenian Genocide in the Ottoman Empire. Independent experts are inclined to believe that he is either unaware that the term "genocide" was only coined by genocide scholar Raphael Lemkin in 1944, or that he is deliberately trying to create a narrative that "this issue was artificially raised by the Soviet Union to put pressure on Turkey."
On April 24, 1915, in Constantinople, the capital of the Ottoman Empire, the extermination of Armenian subjects began. It began with the arrests of representatives of the Armenian intelligentsia-writers and poets, architects and parliamentarians-and then escalated into the complete extermination of Armenians. As a result of these actions by the Turkish authorities, more than 1.5 million Armenians were deported, starved, and tortured to death.
The Armenian Genocide has been recognized by the Council of Europe (1998, 2001), the European Parliament (1987, 2000, 2002, 2005), the UN Sub-Commission on Prevention of Discrimination and Protection of Minorities[7], the World Council of Churches, the Parliamentary Coalition of South American Countries (Mercosur), and the Parliament of Latin America (2015).
The Armenian Genocide has been recognized and condemned by many countries and influential international organizations. The first to officially recognize and condemn the mass killings of Armenians was the Parliament of Uruguay (1965). The extermination of Armenians has been officially recognized as genocide (under international law) and condemned by: Austria (joint statement of the chairmen of parliamentary factions, 2015), Argentina (2 laws, 5 resolutions; 2004, 2007), Armenia (1964 as part of the USSR, 1988, 1990), Belgium (1998, 2015), Bulgaria (2007, 2015), Bolivia (2014), Brazil (2015), Vatican City (2015), Venezuela (2005), Germany (2016), Greece (1996), Italy (2000, 2019), Canada (1996, 2002, 2004), Cyprus (1975, 1982), Latvia (2021), Lebanon (1997), Libya (2019); On April 18, 2019, the Interim Government of Libya adopted a resolution recognizing the Armenian Genocide. Lithuania (2005), Luxembourg (2015), Netherlands (2004, 2018), Paraguay (2015), Poland (2005), Portugal (2019), Russia (1995), Syria (2020), Slovakia (2004), USA (2019, 2021); On April 24, 2021, US President Joe Biden officially recognized the Armenian Genocide. Uruguay (1965), France (1998, 2000, 2001, 2006), Czech Republic (2015, 2017, 2020), Chile (2007), Switzerland (2003), Sweden (2010). Turkey continues its policy of denial of this crime against humanity.