ArmInfo. is essentially an attempt to the scale of the political agenda by excluding a topic that is not only of historical but also strategic importance for the Armenian people>. A similar point of view was expressed by the former chairman of the State Revenue Committee of Armenia, David Ananyan.
According to Ananyan, these and similar statements are aimed at artificially marginalizing the public-civil movement initiated by the .
Ananyan is convinced that the emphasis on the opposition of , which is observed in the rhetoric of the ruling circles, is dangerous and at the same time conscious and deliberate behavior aimed at undermining national unity. In this way, the government is trying to present the struggle of the Artsakh people as some kind of local or even narrowly targeted protest, deliberately ignoring the fact that the demands put forward by the Council are of pan-Armenian and national significance. These demands concern the fundamental rights of each of us and are equally important for all our people, regardless of their geographical location, he emphasized.
According to him, from a political point of view, the Council's actions can be seen as an important initiative that forms a nationally oriented agenda. This is not just a response to existing problems, but an attempt to systematically understand and present national interests in the form of a political and legal demand to the authorities.
A logical question arises: why is such a clear national agenda, so focused on fundamental human rights, rationalized or discredited by the authorities? There is only one answer: the state and political thinking of the authorities has long been transformed into a pragmatic one, placing their own and/or third-party interests and goals above national interests.
Forming a clear, structured and legally sound agenda for the Council is a significant problem for the current government, since it is forced to either accept this agenda and implement it, or demonstrate a refusal, which in fact means evading the performance of its main function. In this context, the government is faced not only with a dilemma of political action, but also with a real danger of finally losing the last vestiges of the legitimacy of its power in the eyes of society.
This is where we all have to work. We are obliged to make the TWELVE points put forward by the Council a public call-demand for each of us at the same time>, - wrote David Ananyan.
Earlier the demanded that the Government of the Republic of Armenia, represented by the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, take a number of specific measures to protect the rights of the people of Artsakh. Among numerous other international mechanisms and opportunities, they identified the following measures: 1. To appeal to the UN High Commissioner for Refugees and the Council of Europe with a request to initiate the development and implementation of international mechanisms aimed at ensuring the collective, safe, dignified, sustainable and self-determined return of the people of Artsakh. 2. To appeal to the OSCE Minsk Group within the framework of its international mandate with a request to initiate an international process aimed at a peaceful and fair settlement of the Karabakh conflict and ensuring the return of the people of Artsakh to their homeland on the above-mentioned conditions. 3. To appeal to specialized structures of the UN, OSCE, Council of Europe and countries with embassies in Baku with a request to ensure the presence of international observers at the fabricated of Armenians. 4. Call on any neutral and willing country (e.g. Switzerland) to establish an in their embassy in Baku and to ensure access to consular services for Armenian prisoners. 5. Activate the OSCE Moscow Mechanism for the urgent protection of the rights of Armenians held hostage and tortured in Azerbaijan. 6. Make the full and safe release of Armenian prisoners of war a non-negotiable precondition for signing any possible interstate agreement with Azerbaijan. 7. Update interstate complaints filed with the ECHR and the International Court of Justice, presenting new facts of torture of prisoners, destruction and appropriation of cultural heritage, private and public property in occupied Artsakh. 8. Call on UNESCO and the Council of Europe to send a monitoring mission to Artsakh to study and document the criminal actions of the Azerbaijani authorities against cultural heritage, state and private property. 9. Call on relevant international organizations and individual states to impose sanctions against Azerbaijan based on the international crimes committed against Armenians. 10. Ensure that Armenia and/or partner states submit state applications to the International Criminal Court demanding an investigation and punishment of those responsible for the forced displacement of the people of Artsakh and other international crimes. 11. Call on relevant states to apply the principle of universal jurisdiction and initiate criminal prosecution of Azerbaijani officials and military personnel based on the international crimes they have committed.