99 - all you should know about the Genocide April, 2014 | Page 114

Ruben Safrastyan RA NAS Director of Institute of Oriental Studies, Ph.D. History, Professor, RA NAS correspondent member The recognition of the genocide and an official apology from Turkey are part of the process that we call the elimination of the consequences of the genocide. They will be followed by the process of reparation, which will occur on different levels. Continuous work with various audiences, including also the Turkish audience, will allow us to more comprehensibly state why the elimination of the consequences of the Armenian genocide is important and necessary. Hayk Demoyan Director of Armenian Genocide Museum & Institute The myth that the international community cannot recognize the Armenian Genocide after the 100th anniversary is far from the truth. This recognition is necessary not just for the Armenian people, but for the international community. This recognition means the condemnation of the gravest of crimes committed both against the Armenian people and humanity as a whole. This has great significance, not just because it reinstates justice but also because it helps the prevention of this crime in the future. If a state that intends to perform genocide sees that the previous cases of genocide have been condemned and the perpetrators punished, it will be afraid to act on this intention. So there are two things to consider here – one is that justice is reinstated and the consequences of genocide are reversed. The other is the prevention of new acts of genocide. This is not just about the recognition of genocide, but about its condemnation as a crime. We should strive not only for the crime to be recognized and condemned, but also for the criminal, which is the Turkish state, to be held accountable and the consequences of the act to be reversed. What does that mean? It means that the victims—the Armenian people—should receive reparations. That would be the biggest victory. The number 100 has symbolic significance, nothing else. Researchers do not focus on this number. This work, the struggle for recognition and condemnation by different countries of the world, must continue after the 100th anniversary. Our struggle should gradually move into