
ArmInfo. The National Bureau of the Coordinating Council of Armenian Organizations in France (CCAF) expresses its strong disapproval of the Armenian government's decision to exclude several prominent figures representing the Armenian community in France from the opening ceremony of the new Armenian Embassy in Paris.
The CCAF statement noted that the following were excluded from the list of participants: CCAF Co-Chairs Ara Toranian and Murad Papazian; Permanent Representative of the Republic of Artsakh to France Hovhannes Gevorgyan; and Primate of the Diocese of the Armenian Apostolic Church in France, Bishop Krikor Khachatryan. "We consider this decision an unfortunate mistake. It must be called such. It should be called precisely that. The embassy represents the Armenian state and, moreover, the entire Armenian people in all their diversity. It is the common home of the entire nation, a place where Armenia presents itself in all its fullness, diversity, and dignity, beyond the confines of momentary disagreements and partisan calculations. By restricting access for recognized representatives of the Armenian diaspora in France, the Armenian government creates the impression of alienation from its mission of unity. These actions have generated a well-founded misunderstanding," the diaspora organization's statement continued.
It is also emphasized that the exclusion of Ara Toranian and Murad Papazian, whose names are inextricably linked with the decades-long struggle for the memory, recognition, and dignity of the Armenian people, demonstrates an approach that, in the CCAF's view, trivializes the importance of the diaspora.
"The CCAF is not a faction: it is one of the main representative bodies of Armenians in France. The removal of democratically elected leaders risks alienating a significant portion of the organized diaspora. The exclusion of Archbishop Krikor Khachatryan from the event is fraught with the grave insult to the Armenian Apostolic Church, a centuries-old institution that has survived massacres, genocide, and dispersal, and which remains an important spiritual beacon for our people today. We remind you that since 1995, the Church has generously provided the embassy with the current building," the CCAF further noted.
At the same time, it is emphasized that the exclusion of the name of Artsakh's Permanent Representative Hovhannes Gevorgyan sends a negative signal regarding the defense of the rights of 120,000 Armenians in the French political arena, expelled from their ancestral land, forced into exile, and deprived of everything. "At a time when the Artsakh issue remains an unhealed wound in Armenian consciousness worldwide, this gesture takes on particularly serious resonance. It demands clarification. History will remember that on the evening of April 27, the day of the opening of its new embassy in Paris, the Armenian government seemed to prioritize the logic of exclusion over the spirit of unity, which can only lead to deep disappointment. This is not how a state is strengthened. We hope that this situation can be clarified through dialogue," the CCAF concluded.
The Armenian Foreign Ministry previously reported that Foreign Minister Ararat Mirzoyan, during his visit to France on April 27-28, will attend the opening ceremony of the Armenian embassy in Paris.