On Sept. 11, after years of persistent diplomatic efforts, the
Republic of Armenia succeeded in having the United Nations (U.N.)
General Assembly adopt by consensus a generic resolution on all
genocides.
Introduced by Armenia and co-sponsored by 83 other nations, the
resolution establishes Dec. 9 as the “International Day of Commemoration
and Dignity of the Victims of the Crime of Genocide and of the
Prevention of this Crime.” Dec. 9 was chosen since the U.N. Genocide
Convention was adopted on that day in 1948.
Henceforth, on every Dec. 9, the U.N. will commemorate and honor the
victims of all genocides. Even though the resolution does not mention
any particular genocide, it is up to Armenians to ensure that their
genocide is included in official U.N. commemorations on that date. No
one will be surprised should the Turkish government attempt to block
such Armenian efforts!
Ironically, Turkey was one of the co-sponsors of the genocide
resolution, probably out of a concern that opposing it would have
revealed its deep-seated anxiety on the subject of genocide.
Consequently, Turkish officials acted as if this resolution was
unrelated to their country’s past and present genocidal crimes against
Armenians, Assyrians, Greeks, and Kurds!
Among the 84 countries co-sponsoring the resolution were the United
States, Russia, United Kingdom, France, Germany, India, Japan, and Iran.
Interestingly, Azerbaijan and Rwanda did not co-sponsor it. Azerbaijan
was reluctant to support any resolution proposed by Armenia. Rwanda, on
the other hand, felt the resolution was unnecessary, since the U.N. had
designated April 7 as the “International Day of Reflection on the
Genocide in Rwanda.” In contrast, Israel co-sponsored the resolution,
even though the U.N. had already set Jan. 27 as the “International Day
of Commemoration in Memory of the Victims of the Holocaust.”
The Global Centre for the Responsibility to Protect issued a
statement last Friday commending the adoption of the U.N. resolution,
and listing the “significant anniversaries of the most atrocious crimes
of the last century,” including “the 100th anniversary of the Armenian Genocide, 70th anniversary of the liberation of Auschwitz, 40th anniversary of the Khmer Rouge’s atrocities in Cambodia, and the 20th anniversaries of the genocide in Rwanda and at Srebrenica, Bosnia, and Herzegovina.”
Ambassador Zohrab Mnatsakanyan, Armenia’s representative to the U.N.,
spoke of his “sense of duty” while presenting the proposed resolution
to the General Assembly on Sept. 11. Paying tribute to Raphael Lemkin,
who had coined the term “genocide,” the ambassador stated: “For the
victims of our past inaction, the International Day will render dignity.
The denial to millions of the sanctity of life is ultimate injustice.
Justice denied haunts generations of survivors. We speak from
experience.”
Another genocide milestone forgotten by the international community and Armenians is the 30th anniversary
of the adoption of a report by the U.N. Sub-Commission on Prevention of
Discrimination and Protection of Minorities. The historic document
titled, “Revised and updated report on the question of the prevention
and punishment of the crime of genocide,” was drafted by British
Rapporteur Benjamin Whitaker. It is noteworthy that Mnatsakanyan
referred to this report twice in his speech, while introducing the
genocide resolution to the U.N.
In paragraph 24 of his report, Whitaker cited several cases of
genocide in the 20th century, specifically mentioning the Armenian
Genocide. Moreover, in footnote 13, Whitaker added: “At least 1 million,
and possibly well over half of the Armenian population, are reliably
estimated to have been killed or death marched by independent
authorities and eye-witnesses. This is corroborated by reports in United
States, German, and British archives and of contemporary diplomats in
the Ottoman Empire, including those of its ally Germany. The German
Ambassador, Wangenheim, for example, on 7 July 1915 wrote, ‘the
[Turkish] government is indeed pursuing its goal of exterminating the
Armenian race in the Ottoman Empire’ (Wilhelmstrasse archives).”
Regrettably, Whitaker passed away last year. But, there are three
other former members of the U.N. Sub-Commission—Erica Daes
(Greek), Leandro Despouys (Argentinian), and Louis Joinet (French)—who
staunchly supported the reference to the Armenian Genocide in the
Whitaker report, which the Sub-Commission adopted on Aug. 29, 1985, by a
14-1 vote.
All three human rights experts should be invited to the United
Nations on Dec. 9, 2015, to mark the 30th anniversary of the Whitaker
Report, and recognize his unique contributions to the cause of
prevention and punishment of the crime of genocide!
Amb. Mnatsakanyan, Armenia’s Foreign Ministry, and the Armenian
government should be commended for their effective leadership at the
U.N. on genocide prevention!
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