There is no need to pity Artsakh children and take hypocritical steps by inviting them to some camps — Lusine Gharakhanyan

September 20 2024, 10:59

Politics

 
Hungary is trying to make humane gestures towards the Artsakh children, but in vain, because we know that this is hypocrisy, Lusine Gharakhanyan, the former Minister of Education, Science and Culture of the Republic of Artsakh, told Alpha News.

“During the 10 months of the blockade, Artsakh children heroically overcame all challenges, from malnutrition to lack of school supplies. And now they are trying to play on the emotions of these children, which is very dangerous. All those institutions that have been closely watching the depletion of Artsakh are now trying to play on the feelings of the children. All these children have problems, they constantly say that they want to return home and to their schools.

Representatives of the education sector of Artsakh, each on their own territory, should inform their fellow citizens and warn people that they should not go to the pro-Turkish countries that support Turkey and participated in conferences in occupied Shushi and where our glorious officer Gurgen Margaryan was killed with an axe,” Gharakhanyan noted. 

The former minister stressed that at the appropriate age, it is necessary to develop value orientations in children, it is necessary to talk about the inhumane treatment of the Armenian officer. 

“National dignity is developed from an early age. There is an age, for example, the age of 12, when value orientations begin to form and parents should tell their children how inhumanely our officer was treated. There is no need to pity the children of Artsakh, no need to take some compensating, deceitful, hypocritical steps by inviting them to some camps.

These children have overcome many difficulties, they have learned restraint. There is no need to go to the camp of another country, they may not go anywhere and at the same time not make any demands. Hungary is trying to make a humane gesture towards the Artsakh children, but in vain, because we know that this is hypocrisy. I cannot call it otherwise,” Gharakhanyan concluded.