ArmInfo. The end comes when a nation pronounces its own sentence of death. This viewpoint was expressed by Larisa Alaverdyan, Armenia's first ombudsman and advocate for human rights, while commenting to an ArmInfo correspondent on the statement made by the Prime Minister's Office regarding the potential request to the OSCE to dissolve the Minsk Group (the only international structure with a mandate to resolve the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict).
Alaverdyan confirmed that the dissolution of the OSCE Minsk Group could cause serious harm. However, she emphasized that the future of Artsakh depends solely on the will of the Armenian people. The human rights advocate also emphasized the importance of framing the issue of the return of the Artsakh population correctly. She explained that this issue has two aspects: the first is political, which necessitates active discussion at all levels, and the second is practical, involving the implementation of the tasks set. "Few people today can offer a specific action plan. Until a Nuremberg Trials like event (the first and key trial in a series of trials of a number of war criminals of Nazi Germany - ed.) is held against Azerbaijan for their crimes against the Armenian people, it is premature to consider a return to obscurity, or, more precisely, to a tragic reality," Alaverdyan noted.
However, Alaverdyan argues that possibility of return hinges on the pursue of moral goals, such as justice, through moral methods and a high level of intelligence. "The strength of the national liberation movement was in the desire for an indisputably moral goal - the restoration of justice based on the rule of law. Armenia is not a weak and powerless state; rather the country and its people have been captured by an intellectually bankrupt and intentionally destructive government. Therefore, I will never agree with the statements about the impossibility of return: I firmly believe that return is possible and worth fighting for," Alaverdyan concluded.