YEREVAN (A.W.)—On March 24, Armenia’s National Assembly passed a
resolution recognizing the Assyrian and Greek Genocides committed by the
Ottoman Empire of 1915-23. The Republican Party-sponsored bill,
entitled “On the Genocide of the Greeks and Assyrians Perpetrated by
Ottoman Turkey between 1915 and 1923,” passed unanimously, with 117
votes in favor.
The bill was authored by the deputy speaker of the National
Assembly, Eduard Sharmazanov; the leader of the Armenian Revolutionary
Federation (ARF) parliamentary faction Armen Rustamyan; as well as
Parliament members Hovhannes Sahakyan, Edmon Marukyan, Arpine
Hovhannisyan, Tevan Poghosyan, Gurgen Arsenyan, Heghine Bisharyan,
Alexander Arzumanyan, Vahram Baghdasaryan, Hermine Naghdalyan, Margarit
Yesayan, and Lyudmila Sargsyan.
Speaking to reporters on March 23, Sharmazanov explained that by
condemning the Assyrian and Greek Genocides, Armenia was standing in
solidarity with the two nations. “By submitting the draft as a
declaration on condemnation, we want to show society and our Greek and
and Assyrian brothers and sisters and the international community that
the National Assembly of the Republic of Armenia and all the political
forces attach importance to [the] condemnation of the genocide
perpetrated against the Greeks and Assyrians,” said Sharmazanov.
Sabri Atman, the director of the Assyrian Genocide Research Center,
commended the National Assembly of Armenia in a statement published by
the Assyrian International News Agency. “We salute the Republic of
Armenia for its decision to recognize the Assyrian and Greek Genocide.
This encourages us and gives us strength to be recognized
internationally,” said Atman.
In a 2014 interview
with the Armenian Weekly, Atman stressed the importance of recognition
and criticized the Armenian government for not taking a strong stance on
the issue. “Denial is a form of continuation of the genocide. It is to
be killed twice. Failure to recognize the genocide has led to even more
genocides against Assyrians in their homeland. We Assyrians also don’t
understand the fact that the Republic of Armenia has not recognized the
Assyrian Genocide yet,” Atman said in the interview.
The resolution comes a little over a month after the government of Armenia approved a motion
declaring Dec. 9 as a “Day of Remembrance of Victims of All Genocides.”
The resolution, which passed on Feb. 12, was introduced “to remedy
historical injustices, protect human rights, and struggle against
Turkey’s genocide denial policy,” according to Heritage Party member and
motion co-author Zaruhi Postanjyan.
From 1915-23, an estimated 300,000 Assyrians and 500,000 Greeks were systematically killed by the Ottoman-Turkish government.
Wednesday, March 25, 2015
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