ArmInfo. The Armenian Genocide is an indisputable fact that is not up for debate. Moreover, denying the Genocide in the Republic of Armenia is considered a criminal offense. This is how Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan responded at a press conference on January 31, when was asked how an official of his stature in Israel would be treated if he questioned the fact of the Holocaust.
"In general, it is surprising how anyone can be accused of denying the Genocide, when, speaking about the phenomenon, he uses the term "Genocide" to describe this phenomenon instead of other words," he said. Meanwhile, he believes, the question at hand is whether the Genocide should prompt Armenians to reevaluate their perception of the world. and encouragement, or failing to accurately assess our reactions to these signals. This issue remains relevant today, just as it was at the beginning of the century. Personally, I don't have an answer to this question. I am simply stating that reflection is the right thing to do,> he said.
Let us recall that earlier, 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, and through whom we perceived it: how did it happen that there was no mention of the Armenian Genocide in 1939, but it emerged in 1950? How this happened, we must understand or choose not to understand," the Armenian Prime Minister noted. Independent experts tend to believe that he is either unaware that the term Genocide was coined by genocide scholar Raphael Lemkin only in 1944, or he may be intentionally trying to create a narrative that suggests that " the Soviet Union artificially raised this issue to pressure Turkey."