Politicians who promise to recognize Armenian Genocide, are acting purely for their own interests

PanARMENIAN.Net - "Armenians themselves must tell the world about the Genocide, nobody else will do it instead of them. In this issue there is no one that Armenia may rely on. Those politicians who promise to recognize the Armenian Genocide, are acting proceeding purely from their own interests, and we do not have to look for examples very long -the latest three US presidents," The Independent's journalist Robert Fisk stated in his lecture at the American University in Yerevan. He reminded the auditorium that first Winston Churchill called massacres of Armenians in the Ottoman Empire 'genocide' in 1930ies of the 20th century. "True, he was not prime minister then and even a politician, he was a journalist in the Middle East," Fisk underlined.



Speaking on Great Britain's stance in the recognition process of the Armenian Genocide, Fisk stated that the best example of it is the fact that former Premier Tony Blair proclaimed January 27 as the Remembrance Day for Holocaust, completely "forgetting" the Armenian Genocide. "The British government thinks it does not have enough information on the events of 1915, instead it has enough information that Iraq possesses weapons of mass destruction," The Independence's correspondent said.



At the same time he underlined recognition of the Armenian Genocide must become a compulsory precondition for Turkey in his EU bid.



Robert Fisk is a well-known journalist and writer, author of a book on the Middle East and correspondent at The Independent. He has received severel prestigious awards in journalism, lives and works in Beirut.
 Top stories
The Cabinet of Ministers decided on Thursday, November 9 to allocated AMD 120 million to arrange the gathering.
Michael Roth believes sanctions must be put on the table after Baku‘s ethnic cleansing in Nagorno-Karabakh.
The Yerevan City Council has elected Tigran Avniyan from the ruling Civil Contract as the mayor of the Armenian capital.
The Armenian Parliament on Tuesday, October 3 voted to ratify the Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court.
Partner news
---