ArmInfo. The statements made by the Prime Minister of Armenia Nikol Pashinyan in Zurich at a meeting with representatives of the Armenian community contradict the Constitution and the Criminal Code of the Republic of Armenia, as well as the laws of Switzerland, distort historical facts, and are another manifestation of the malicious policy of the Armenian authorities towards the Diaspora and the history of our people. This is stated in the statement of the Union of Armenians of Russia (UAR), in connection with the statements of the Prime Minister of Armenia during his meeting with representatives of the Armenian community of Switzerland.
"The Prime Minister of Armenia, who is obliged, in accordance with the laws of his country, to seek comprehensive recognition of the Armenian Genocide in the Ottoman Empire, questioned the historically proven and condemned by dozens of countries and international organizations fact of the Armenian Genocide, calling for "re-examining this issue and understanding what happened and why" and why in 1939, in his opinion, "there was no agenda of genocide, but already in 1950 it appeared on the agenda."
"Pashinyan chose Switzerland as a platform for promoting Turkish narratives, thereby demonstrating his disdain for a state where the denial of the Armenian Genocide, like the Holocaust, is a criminal offense," the SAR said. "It is obvious that even Pashinyan, who received a higher education diploma through revolutionary blackmail after coming to power, like any Armenian schoolchild, is well aware of what happened more than a century ago in Ottoman Turkey. And now he is throwing in this discourse with the aim of drawing the public into a shameful discussion imposed on him, leading to the devaluation of our values and achievements, desecration of the memory of one and a half million victims of the Armenian Genocide, canonized by the Armenian Apostolic Church," the SAR added.
In this vein, the Union of Armenians of Russia drew attention to the fact that Pashinyan's statements are assessed in the Constitution and the Criminal Code of Armenia, laws and statements of dozens of countries around the world, including Russia and other great powers that condemned the Armenian Genocide, in the United Nations resolution adopted at the initiative of Armenia, according to which December 9 is annually celebrated as "Day of Remembrance of the Victims of the Crime of Genocide", in the Joint Statement of the Governments of Great Britain, France and Russia of May 2, 1915, as well as in the decision of the Special Military Tribunal of Constantinople, which in 1919-1920 sentenced the leaders of the Young Turks for organizing the massacre and deportation of Armenians, as well as in many other facts, testimonies and statements that until today have been questioned only by the Turkish authorities - the successors of the organizers of the Genocide. "Regarding other offensive statements made by Pashinyan towards the diaspora during the aforementioned meeting, the Union of Armenians of Russia will soon publish a special statement," the statement continues.
The Prime Minister of Armenia, at a meeting with representatives of the Armenian community in Switzerland, questioned the fact of the Armenian Genocide in the Ottoman Empire. "We must understand what happened and why it happened. And how we perceived it, through whom we perceived it: how did it happen that in 1939 there was no agenda for the Armenian Genocide, but in 1950 it appeared? How this happened, we should understand or should not understand," the Armenian Prime Minister noted.
Independent experts are inclined to believe that he is apparently either unaware that the term Genocide was introduced into circulation by genocide scholar Raphael Lemkin only in 1944, or he is deliberately trying to create a narrative that "this issue was artificially raised by the Soviet Union to put pressure on Turkey."
The Armenian Genocide in the Ottoman Empire was the first genocide in the 20th century. Armenians remember the victims of the tragedy every year on April 24. Turkey traditionally denies accusations of mass extermination of more than 1.5 million Armenians. The fact of the Armenian Genocide is recognized by many states and a number of authoritative international organizations. The first country to recognize the Genocide in 1965 was Uruguay. Then this fact was recognized by Cyprus, Russia, Greece, Canada, Lebanon, Belgium, France, Paraguay, Argentina, Sweden, Bolivia, Great Britain, Holland, Slovakia, Germany, Lithuania, Venezuela, Poland, Chile, Switzerland, Brazil, Luxembourg, Austria, Vatican, Czech Republic, Denmark, Portugal, as well as the provisional government of Libya, the USA, Syria, the European Parliament, the World Council of Churches.