RFE/RL Armenian Report – 03/04/2019

                                        Monday, 

Armenian Minister Looks Forward To Impact Of Trade Deal With Iran

        • Ruzanna Stepanian

Armenia - Economic Development Minister Tigran Khachatrian speaks at a meeting 
in Yerevan, March 4, 2019.

Economic Development Minister Tigran Khachatrian touted on Monday a 
preferential trade agreement signed by Iran and the Eurasian Economic Union 
(EEU) last year, saying that it could greatly benefit Armenian exporters.

The agreement signed in Kazakhstan’s capital Astana will be valid for the next 
three years. It will abolish or lower import duties for around 300 types of 
products traded between Iran and Russia, Armenia and three other ex-Soviet 
states making up the trade bloc. The signatories pledged to work out a 
permanent free-trade arrangement during the three-year period.

The deal has since been ratified by the parliaments of Russia, Belarus and 
Kyrgyzstan. Armenia’s National Assembly is expected to follow suit soon.

Khachatrian said he is looking forward to the deal’s entry into force. “Iran’s 
simplified trade agreement with the EEU will give major opportunities to 
companies operating in the EEU -- and Armenia in the first instance -- in terms 
of better access to the Iranian market,” he told reporters.

“It will also create opportunities for Iranian manufacturers for whom the 
Russian, Armenian, Belarusian and Kazakh markets are not insignificant at all, 
especially given the current state of the Iranian economy,” he said.

The minister argued that many of the 300 items covered by the deal are exported 
by Armenia to Iran. Armenian manufacturers will also be in a much better 
position to sell other products such as beef and mineral water in the vast 
Iranian market, he said.

According to official Armenian statistics, Armenia’s trade with Iran soared by 
over 40 percent, to almost $364 million, in 2018. However, Armenian exports to 
the Islamic Republic accounted for only one-quarter of that turnover. Armenian 
companies have long complained that Tehran’s protectionist policies seriously 
limit their access to the Iranian market.

Khachatrian admitted that U.S. economic sanctions re-imposed on Tehran last 
year could hamper greater trade between Iran and the EEU member states. But he 
also said: “The sanctions are temporary, while the agreement is long-term.”

Economic issues were high on the agenda of Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian’s 
talks with Iran’s leaders held in Tehran last week. The two sides pledged to 
deepen bilateral commercial ties despite the U.S. sanctions.



Attack On Armenian Blogger Investigated

        • Naira Bulghadarian

Armenia - Office of the Prosecutor-General, Undated

Law-enforcement authorities on Monday pledged to investigate an overnight 
attack on a video blogger highly critical of Armenia’s government, which was 
reportedly carried out by a youth group at loggerheads with him.

The blogger, Narek Malian, was confronted outside his home in downtown Yerevan 
by members of the group called Restart shortly after midnight. A YouTube video 
of the incident showed the Restart leader, Davit Petrosian, and several other 
men forcibly carrying Malian along an adjacent street before being stopped by 
police officers.

Petrosian posted the video on his Facebook page, writing: “There are moments in 
life when you can’t choose between the good and the bad and just have to listen 
to your conscience.”

In a statement, Restart said it wanted to throw Malian into a trash container. 
Petrosian likewise explained that he and his comrades tried “put the garbage in 
its place” in response to what he called Malian’s offensive and slanderous 
statements about their activities.

Malian, Petrosian, and four other men were detained on the spot but set free a 
few hours later. The Armenian police said afterwards that they are “preparing 
materials” for an inquiry.

The Office of the Prosecutor-General reported later on Monday that it has 
opened a formal criminal case in connection with the incident. It said the 
investigation will be conducted under an article of the Criminal Code dealing 
with “hooliganism.”

Malian, who worked until last year as an adviser to former police chief 
Vladimir Gasparian, described the assault as a “kidnapping attempt” and blamed 
the Armenian branch of U.S. philanthropist George Soros’s Open Society 
Foundations (OSF) for it. He said that Restart is financed by the OSF. The 
latter did not immediately react to the accusation.

Malian linked the incident to his vocal efforts to prevent the sacking of the 
long-serving rector of Yerevan State University (YSU), Aram Simonian, which is 
sought by the government. The former police official last week staged a lone 
protest at a meeting of YSU’s supervisory board that narrowly failed to fire 
Simonian.

Restart has on the contrary been campaigning for the controversial rector’s 
ouster since last year’s “velvet revolution” in Armenia. The youth group 
comprising current and former YSU students actively participated in the 
revolution.

By contrast, Malian has been very scathing about the dramatic regime change in 
the country. He regularly attacks Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian and other 
government officials and pours scorn on their supporters on his Facebook page.

Incidentally, Pashinian was quick to condemn the assault. “Any attempt to solve 
issues in Armenia through violence must meet with a tough legal reaction,” he 
said in a statement. “In the New Armenia all those who follow the logic of 
violence, deceit and spread of lies act against Armenia, against democracy and 
against the people.”



Funding Secured For New Armenian Power Plant


Armenia - A thermal power plant in Yerevan.

A German-Italian consortium planning to build a new thermal power plant in 
Armenia has secured over $200 million in funding from the World Bank Group and 
other multilateral lenders.

The ArmPower consortium consists of a subsidiary of Germany’s Siemens group and 
two Italian companies. One of them, Renco, will also act as the engineering, 
procurement and construction contractor for the new Yerevan-based plant that 
will further diversify foreign ownership in the Armenian energy sector.

Renco had supposedly launched the project with a ground-breaking ceremony in 
March 2017 attended by then President Serzh Sarkisian. The start of the 
construction was delayed, however.

Armenia’s current government froze Renco’s contract with the Sarkisian 
administration shortly after taking office in May 2018. It said the deal is not 
beneficial for the Armenian side and must be renegotiated.

The two sides signed a revised deal in November. Energy Minister Garegin 
Baghramian said concessions made by the Italian firm will allow Armenia to save 
$160 million in energy expenses over the next 25 years.

Baghramian also said that electricity to be generated by the new plant will be 
cheaper than power supplies coming from two other gas-powered facilities that 
currently meet roughly one-third of the country’s energy needs.


Armenia - Armenian Energy Minister Garegin Baghramian (R) and Giovanni Rubini, 
chief executive of the Italian company Renco, at a news conference in Yerevan, 
13 November 2018.

The Washington-based International Finance Corporation (IFC), a member of the 
World Bank Group, also stressed the project’s economic importance for Armenia 
on Monday. “A modern 250-megawatt combined-cycle gas turbine power plant in the 
south of Yerevan will help increase efficiency for gas-fired electricity 
generation,” it said in a statement.

The statement said the funding for the project includes a “$42 million loan for 
IFC’s own account” as well as “$121 million from IFC’s innovative syndications 
platform … plus parallel loans from the Asian Development Bank, the OPEC Fund 
for International Development, and the German development finance institution 
DEG.”

In addition, it said, the Multilateral Investment Guarantee Agency (MIGA), 
which is also part of the World Bank Group, will provide up to $39 million in 
loan guarantees to “help Renco manage non-commercial risks.”

“We are committed to starting the work as soon as possible to complete the 
commissioning of the plant within schedule,” Renco’s chief executive, Giovanni 
Rubini, was quoted as saying.

Rubini said in November that the construction will take just over two years.

Renco has done business in Armenia since the early 2000s. It has not been 
involved in the local energy sector until now, investing instead in luxury 
housing, hotels and office buildings. But the company has built, installed or 
operated power generation and distribution facilities in other parts of the 
world.


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