Iran Starts Construction of its Section of Iran-Armenia Gas Pipeline

IRAN STARTS CONSTRUCTION OF ITS SECTION OF IRAN-ARMENIA GAS PIPELINE

YEREVAN, JULY 21. ARMINFO. Iran starts constructing its 100 km section
of Iran-Armenia gas pipeline. The construction will be completed by
the spring of 2006, Armenian Ambassador to Iran Gegham Gharibjanyan
said in his interview to RFE/RL.

He said that construction is carried out by an Iranian company on
state funds. He said that the Armenian section of the pipeline (45 km
length) will also be constructed by an Iranian company, whose name is
already known and its representative has recently visited Armenia. The
Ambassador refused from naming it, pointing out that it is patronized
by the state, has a big experience in the sphere and its financial and
construction possibilities allow it to complete the construction
before the term fixed.

It should be noted that on May 13, 2004, an agreement on delivery of
Iranian natural gas to Armenia and on construction of the gas pipeline
was signed in Yerevan. The sides intend to construct the gas pipeline
within 2 years and to put it into exploitation by Jan 1, 2007. In
conformity with the document, within 20 years, Iran will deliver at
least 36 bln cubic meters of gas to Armenia. In conformity with the
feasibility study worked out by the specialists of Gazprom OJSC, the
construction of the Armenian section of the pipeline from Meghri to
Kajaran costs $140 mln. The project will be justified within 9 years.
Chairman of Gazprom OJSC Alexander Ryazanov, who has recently been in
Armenia, did not rule out that a Russian company may be a co-financier
of the project.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

BAKU: Until return of IDPS to their homelands, No Settlement

Azer Tag, Azerbaijan State Info Agency
July 21 2004

ELMAR MAMMADYAROV: `UNTIL RETURN OF IDPS TO THEIR HOMELANDS, IT IS
NOT REAL TO SPEAK OF SETTLEMENT OF THE ARMENIA-AZERBAIJAN, NAGORNY
KARABAKH CONFLICT’
[July 21, 2004, 15:53:37]

As was informed, foreign minister of Azerbaijan Elmar Mammadyarov is
on his visit to Washington on the invitation of Secretary of State
Mr. Colin Powell. This is his first visit as foreign minister.

On 20 July, Minister Mammadyarov has met Secretary of State Colin
Powell, minister of energy Spenser Abraham, chairmen of working
groups of Congress-Milli Majlis, congressmen Curt Weldon and Solomon
Ortiz, as well as representatives of the Jewish community, AzerTAj
correspondent reported.

At the meeting with the minister of energy Spenser Abraham, the
foreign minister informed on the achievements in the oil-gas fields
in the Republic. The parties stressed the importance of the
Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan oil and Baku-Tbilisi-Erzurum gas pipelines for
the region. Currently Azerbaijan negotiates with Greece on gas
transportation, Minister Mammadyarov said. There are good
opportunities for transportation of Azerbaijan gas to world markets.
He stressed necessity of US assistance in this question.

The Ministers also focused the question of signing the project
`US-Azerbaijan energy dialogue’ that covers bilateral cooperation in
the energy sector. It was noted that there is an interest to the
restored energy sources in the world. Mr. S. Abraham expressed hope
that the two countries would reach high-level cooperation in this
sphere. Also were touched issues of establishment of links between
scientific-research centers, made suggestions on joint research with
the participation of Azerbaijan scholars in the labs in America with
their American colleagues.

The same day, Mr. Mammadyarov made a report on the topic `Foreign
policy priorities of Azerbaijan at the Center of Strategic and
International Researches in Washington. The Minister highlighted on
the relations of the Republic with US, Iran, Russia, Turkey and NATO,
on the projects being realized in the Caspian basin, on ensuring
safety of the oil-gas pipelines, on the Armenia-Azerbaijan conflict.
Noting that the democratic and economic reforms are going at full
scale, Mr. Mammadyarov said that investing the oil profits to the
non-oil sectors of Country is one of the major tasks of Azerbaijan
government. Deposits of the transparently acting Oil Fund of Republic
will be directed to agriculture, tourism, transport, communications
and other spheres.

Impeding regional development in the South Caucasus, the
Armenia-Azerbaijan, Nagorny Karabakh conflict was in the focus of the
meeting at the Center of Strategic and International Researches in
Washington. In reply to numerous questions of the participants,
Minister Mammadyarov stated that despite 20 percents of the Country’s
territories have been occupied and there are over million refugees
and IDPs, Azerbaijan still adheres peaceful settlement of the
conflict in the frame of international laws. He reminded that
Presidents of both countries have met two times and foreign ministers
– three times in this year. Touching the recent visit of Minsk Group
co-chairs to the region, foreign minister of Azerbaijan said he is
hopeful for their mediation in the conflict settlement. At his words,
international support for Azerbaijan’s position gives reason to say
that. He reminded that the Council of Europe has reaffirmed in its
recent document the territorial intensity of Azerbaijan.

One of the items focused in the meeting was allocation by the
Congress Committee of equal military assistance for Azerbaijan and
Armenia. Mr. Mammadyarov gave high assessment to the links between
Azerbaijan and Pentagon, recalled the earlier successfully realized
military programs. He, at the same time, underlined that he is
surprised at equal assistance to Azerbaijan who is in the anti-terror
coalition with the United States in the hot spots, and Armenia, who
simply expresses its support for the Alley’s military operations. If
the United States wants to continue cooperation with Azerbaijan it
should appropriately regard and military assistance to Azerbaijan.

***

On 20 July, Mr. Elmar Mammadyarov has met at the Department of State
with Secretary of State Mr. Colin Powell. In the course of talks, Mr.
Powell expressed gratitude for Azerbaijan’s participation at the
anti-terror campaign and in particular, for service in staff of the
peacemaking forces in Kosovo, Afghanistan and Iraq. The United States
attentively watches the democratic and economic reforms in
Azerbaijan, Secretary of State said. Noting that since George Bush
Administration assumed power, the US pays constant attention to
settlement of the Nagorny Karabakh conflict, Mr. Colin Powell said
that as the OSCE Minsk Group co-chair the United States would closely
watch the developments in the region and continue to effectively take
part at the process of negotiations. He noted that it should be taken
into account how the society is ready to discuss the settlement of
conflict.

Minister E. Mammadyarov stated: `Until return of IDPs to their
homelands, the society will remain sensitive to settlement of
conflict and in this case, it is not real to speak of settlement of
the Armenia Azerbaijan, Nagorny Karabakh conflict’. He called on the
United States as a super state and OSCE Minsk Group co-chair to
increase its efforts for just settlement of the conflict in the frame
of international laws.

During the talk, the parties also focused the energy projects being
realized in the Caspian basin. Also were discussed other questions of
mutual interest.

Ms. Elizabeth Jones, Assistant Secretary, Bureau of European and
Eurasian Affairs, American co-chair of the OSCE Minsk Group Steven
Mann, ambassador of Azerbaijan in Washington Hafiz Pashayev,
Azerbaijan’s permanent representative in UN Yashar Aliyev took part
in the meeting.

Mr. E. Mammadyarov is expected to have a number of meetings and
discussions till 24 July.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Worried About Yukos

Moscow Times
July 22 2004

Worried About Yukos

By Alexei Bayer

I recently approached a number of Jewish businessmen in Russia about
contributing money to an American charity, the Hebrew Immigrant Aid
Society.

HIAS was founded by Russian Jews in New York in the 1880s to assist
those fleeing the pogroms in the Pale of Settlement. Over the years,
it helped generations of Jewish refugees, including thousands of
Holocaust survivors, to resettle in a safer diaspora. Half a million
Soviet Jews have come to the United States under its auspices since
1967. But now, the flow of refugees has slowed to a trickle, and HIAS
is facing an uncertain future.

I was initially skeptical about discussing HIAS with successful
Russian Jews. I had interviewed some of them for an article in 2002
and found them uninterested, even hostile, to the idea of leaving
Russia. They were putting their money and effort into strengthening
the Jewish community in Russia, and they supported local charities
and organizations that helped Russian Jews stay put, not emigrate.

Most of them still say they do not want to leave. But all of a sudden
they feel that a Jewish refugee organization is worth preserving, and
are willing to fund it. This response will no doubt hearten HIAS, but
it left me extremely uneasy. What has happened over the past two
years to change their minds?

Although many of the disgraced oligarchs running afoul of President
Vladimir Putin — notably Boris Berezovsky, Vladimir Gusinsky and
Mikhail Khodorkovsky — are either wholly or partially Jewish, even
the president’s harshest critics have not accused him of singling out
Jews in his attack on private business. Many things in Putin’s Russia
are reverting to the Soviet model, but official anti-Semitism is not
one of them. The bad old days when Jews were barred from prestigious
universities, denied employment and promotion and vilified for
wanting to go to Israel are no more. Anti-Semitism may be more in the
open in post-Soviet Russia, and some prominent members of the State
Duma are given to making nasty, bigoted statements, but it is
definitely not the policy of the Russian government.

Nevertheless, the state’s campaign against Yukos is the main reason
why Russian Jews, especially those in business, are starting to feel
nervous. Since time immemorial, Jews have been blamed for economic
failures. The Russian government may not currently pursue
anti-Semitic policies, but Russian society remains intolerant of
foreigners. For now, its prejudice is directed predominately against
immigrants from Central Asia and the Caucasus. Persecution of such
“blacks” has a semi-official flavor: the government often closes its
eyes when they are harassed by the police and government officials.

At the height of the anti-Jewish campaign in the Soviet Union, the
following joke used to make the rounds in Moscow. An old Armenian is
dying. His family is waiting for some parting words of wisdom, but
all he keeps telling them instead is that they will have to protect
the Jews.

“Why should we bother with the Jews, grandpa?” they ask him. “Because
once they’re done with the Jews, they’ll start on the Armenians.”

Now this joke has been turned on its head. The hardships of everyday
life, such as rising consumer prices, are being blamed on “blacks,”
who are seen as street vendors and petty merchants. But the Jews may
once more become scapegoats if Russia suffers another economic
crisis. Because the Jews, as is well known, control big business and
the financial markets.

With its attack on Yukos, and the systematic return of large-scale
private enterprise to bureaucratic control, the Putin administration
is making sure that Russia’s economy will eventually go down the
drain. The Kremlin has been determined to squander the opportunities
that high oil prices and the weak ruble have thrown its way in the
early years of the millennium. Instead of promoting foreign
investment, strengthening market mechanisms and modernizing the legal
and physical infrastructure of the country, it is steadily
re-Sovietizing the economy.

The era of high oil prices will not last forever. But even if Russia
continues to derive strong earnings from oil, gas and other commodity
exports, the money is certain to be wasted. Places like Nigeria and
Venezuela have shown how a rapacious, incompetent bureaucracy can
make hundreds of billions of dollars disappear without a trace. The
Soviet-Russian bureaucracy, still very much in charge of the country,
has a remarkable track record of turning a fabulously resource-rich
country into an economic, environmental and social basket case.

The post-Yukos Russian economy will be a precarious construct. It
will combine inefficiency, rigidity and corruption characteristic of
a state-run system with half-baked financial markets and a
rudimentary banking system. It will be an environment ripe for a
major economic crisis and, ultimately, for another surge of
anti-Semitism. It will be tempting, of course, for the government to
blame an economic debacle on the rapaciousness of the Jews, rather
than admit its own ineptitude.

It would be a good thing for HIAS if wealthy Russian Jews came to its
support. But this might also presage another wave of Jewish
immigration. Russian Jews are the last significant Jewish community
in Eastern Europe. Moscow, with its extensive and varied Jewish
cultural and religious life, its Jews prominent in the arts,
sciences, commerce and the white-collar professions, is the heir to
such brilliant early 20th-century cities as Vienna, Prague, Budapest,
Berlin and Warsaw. It would be a tragedy for Jews, Russia and,
ultimately, Europe, if this community were to follow the others into
oblivion.

Alexei Bayer, a New York-based economist, writes the Globalist column
for Vedomosti on alternate weeks. He contributed this comment to The
Moscow Times.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Game of Life: Kasparov on Fischer – in full

Game of Life: Kasparov on Fischer – in full

20.07.2004 The news of Fischer’s arrest in Japan came as a shock to Garry
Kasparov, who was in a holiday camp working intensely on the games of his
greatest American predecessor. In today’s issue of The Wall Street Journal
Kasparov assesses Fischer’s chess career – for a public that was being exposed to
his current situation. We now bring you Kasparov’s full article.
In the prestigious Wall Street Journal Kasparov has paused to assess
Fischer’s chess career – for a public that is exposed only to his current
unfortunate situation. The article is a must-read for Fischer fans and foes- a
succinctly argued summary of the fate of the great chess hero. It also bodes well
for the fourth of his six-volume series on the game’s great players, a volume
that, as Kasparov tells us, will contain 55 Fischer games discussed on 250
pages.
() Our thanks to _The Wall Street Journal_
() for giving us permission to reprint this article in
full.

Fischer’s Price

By Garry Kasparov – The Wall Street Journal
July 19, 2004; Page A10

The stunning news of Bobby Fischer’s detention in Japan came at a
moment in which the American former world chess champion was already
very much on my mind. I am currently finishing the fourth of my
six-volume series on the game’s great players and it is precisely this
volume of which Robert James Fischer, forever known as Bobby, is the
star.

This project has involved going over hundreds of Fischer’s chess games
in minute detail. It also means trying to understand the man behind
the moves and the era in which he made them.

Despite his short stay at the top there is little to debate about the
chess of Bobby Fischer. He changed the game in a way that hadn’t been
seen since the late 19th century. The gap between Mr. Fischer and his
contemporaries was the largest ever. He singlehandedly revitalized a
game that had been stagnating under the control of the Communists of
the Soviet sports hierarchy. When Bobby Fischer rocketed to the top
of the chess world in the early 1970s he was a fine wine in a flawed
vessel. His contributions to the game, both at the board and from a
commercial perspective, were nothing short of a revolution in the
chess world. At the same time, his brittle and abusive character
showed cracks that deepened with his every step toward the highest
title. Today, it is hard to imagine the sensation of Mr. Fischer’s
success when he wrested the world championship away from Boris Spassky
in Reykjavik, Iceland, in 1972. In the middle of the Cold War, the
Brooklyn-raised iconoclast took the crown from the well-oiled Soviet
machine that had dominated the chess world for decades. And this after
he barely showed up for the match at all, and then lost the first game
and forfeited the second!

Partially due to Mr. Fischer’s outrageous behavior leading up to and
during the “match of the century,” the international media coverage
was incredible. The games were shown live around the world. I was
nine years old and already a strong club player when the
Fischer-Spassky match took place, and I followed the games
avidly. Fischer, who had crushed two other Soviet grandmasters on his
march to the title match, nonetheless had many fans in the Soviet
Union. They respected his chess, of course, but many quietly enjoyed
his individuality and independence.

After the match ended in a convincing victory for the American, the
world was at his feet. Chess was on the cusp of becoming a
commercially successful sport for the first time. Mr. Fischer’s play,
nationality and natural charisma created a unique opportunity. He was
a national hero whose popularity rivaled that of Muhammad Ali. (Would
the secretary of state have called Ali beforea fight the way Henry
Kissinger called Mr. Fischer?) Sales of chess sets and books boomed,
and tournament prize funds soared. With Bobby Fischer in the lead,
chess was headed for the popularity of golf and tennis.

With glory, however, comes responsibility and tremendous pressure. Mr.
Fischer couldn’t bring himself to play again. He spent three years
away from the board before the precious title he had worked his entire
life for was forfeited without the push of a pawn in 1975.

Astronomical amounts of money were offered to lure him back. He could
have played a match against the new champion, Anatoly Karpov, for an
unheard of $5 million. Opportunities abounded, but Mr. Fischer’s was a
purely destructive force. He demolished the Soviet chess machine but
could build nothing in its place. He was the ideal challenger — but a
disastrous champion.

The conventional wisdom says that Bobby Fischer was a guileless and
petulant child who just wanted his own way. I believe he was conscious
of all his actions and the psychological effect his behavior had on
his opponents. The gentlemanly Mr. Spassky was ill-prepared to deal
with the belligerent American in Reykjavik. In 1975, Mr. Fischer’s
challenger was the young Mr. Karpov, whom I would later meet in five
consecutive world championship matches.

Unable to even contemplate defeat, Mr. Fischer left chess. Bereft of
the only thing he had ever wanted to do in his life, he turned his
destructive energies inward, espousing a virulent anti-Semitism —
despite his own Jewish heritage.

The Fischer drama had a final act in 1992, when, almost 50 years old,
he was brought out of seclusion by the lure of millions to play a
rematch against Mr. Spassky in war-torn Yugoslavia in violation of
international sanctions. The chess was predictably rusty, although
there were a few flashes of the old Bobby brilliance. His mental
stability, however, had atrophied even more during the 20 years of
solitude. Later, Mr. Fischer’s profane remarks would span from
accusations of Jewish conspiracies to a welcoming of the events of
9/11.

Despite the ugliness of his decline, Bobby Fischer deserves to be
remembered for the great things he did for chess and for his immortal
games. I would prefer to focus on not letting his personal tragedy
become a tragedy for chess.

An entire generation of top American players learned the game as kids
thanks to Mr. Fischer. Today’s flourishing scholastic chess movement
could be harmed as his woes and beliefs make headlines around the
world. People may believe that this is what happens when a genius
plays chess — instead of what happens when a fragile mind leaves his
life’s work behind.

Mr. Kasparov, the world’s top-ranked chess player, is a contributing
editor at the Journal.

* _Kasparov on Fischer in the Wall Street Journal_
()
(free registration required)

http://online.wsj.com/
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Pyunik’s unique talent

Edgar Manucharyan scored twice against Pobeda in F.Y.R. Macedonia
Wednesday, 21 July 2004
By Khachik Chakhoyan

His hero is Ronaldo and he has been compared to Romanian legend
Gheorghe Hagi, but after scoring two UEFA Champions League goals for
FC Pyunik, and topping the goalscoring charts back at home,
17-year-old striker Edgar Manucharyan is becoming a phenomenon in his
own right.

Ten goals

Last season, the striker’s 12 goals helped Pyunik win the Armenian
title, and his winning run has stretched into 2004. Aside from the two
he scored in last week’s 3-1 win against FK Pobeda in F.Y.R.
Macedonia, he has already scored ten goals in seven league starts and
three substitute appearances at home.

Meteoric rise

Manucharyan has been recognised as a player of significant talent ever
since he first kicked a ball in earnest at the age of nine. Former
USSR international and FC Ararat Yerevan midfield player Khoren
Hovhannisyan, who was named as the country’s Golden Player in the
Armenian Football Federation’s UEFA Jubilee poll, said: “I know
Manucharyan from his first steps in football.

‘Bright future’

“He played in the youth teams together with my son,” added
Hovhannisyan. “It was clear that he was very gifted from the very
first day. He is fast, and he is very determined to work to
improve. He has a bright future if he keeps on training hard and
thinks only about football.” Terrific pace Few in Armenia would
disagree with that assessment. Manucharyan’s skills are exceptional in
a player of his age and he boasts terrific pace and a great eye for
goal, as Pobeda found to their cost. He has also starred for Armenia
at Under-17, U19 and U21 levels, with a senior team call-up on the
horizon.

Leading figure

One of the top Armenian journalists, Football Plus editor-in-chief
Suren Bagdasaryan, has followed his progress closely, and said: “Edgar
is an event in Armenian football on his own. It is not often that
players like this come along. He has all a striker needs, and it is no
accident that he is a leader at Pyunik and with the national teams. If
Manucharyan maintains his professional attitude, he will become a top
class player. However, for that he will need to switch clubs.”

Going west

Certainly, that looks like the most likely option for the player. He
may harbour ambitions to play for Manchester United FC, but having had
trials with French clubs FC Girondins de Bordeaux and Olympique de
Marseille, as well as piquing the interest of United’s rivals
Manchester City FC, his future maylie elsewhere.

Level head

Pyunik president Karen Harutyunyan is convinced that a number of other
clubs are watching Manucharyan – something that the striker himself
must also have noticed. Nonetheless he remains patient. “Right now I
am Pyunik’s forward, so I hope to help my team,” he told uefa.com back
in November 2003.

Next challenge

His next chance to do so will come in the home leg of the tie against
Pobeda as Pyunik aim to earn a second qualifying round tie against
Ukrainian giants FC Shakhtar Donetsk. And Pyunik coach Vardan Minasyan
is certainly not ruling out the prospect of more goals for Manucharyan
in Yerevan.

‘Top form’

“He is on top of his form and rarely leaves a pitch without scoring a
goal,” said the coach. “He helped us to beat Pobeda in the first leg
by scoring twice and making an assist. There are very few players of
such talent in Armenia, and you can already call this lad the finished
item.” If he continues to develop at his current rate, the world will
soon be forced to agree.

©uefa.com 1998-2004.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

=?UNKNOWN?Q?L=27Arm=E9nie_=E0?= Chauvigny

La Nouvelle République du Centre Ouest
21 juillet 2004

L’Arménie à Chauvigny ;
Seul spectacle programmé dans le cadre du festival d’été
communautaire, l’ensemble folklorique ” Bert ” d’Erevan originaire
d’Arménie se produira ce soir, devant l’hôtel de ville de Chauvigny.

Contrairement aux années précédentes, la ville de Chauvigny n’est pas
submergée par les spectacles folkloriques. Et pour cause. Cette
année, restriction budgétaire oblige, tout le monde a fait des choix.

Priorité a été donnée aux petites communes du Pays chauvinois qui
ont, chacune, leur spectacle folklorique. De son côté, Chauvigny a
décidé de s’occuper elle-même de ses animations à travers des marchés
de nuit (le prochain aura lieu le mercredi 28 juillet en ville haute
avec le troubadour « Boubou Croq’bisous ») et des séries de concerts
comme celui du groupe « Kolargol Brother », vendredi 23 juillet
prochain, sur la scène du chteau d’Harcourt (gratuit).

Les inconditionnels du folklore étranger ne devront donc surtout pas
manquer le spectacle proposé ce soir, mercredi 21 juillet à 21 h
devant l’hôtel de ville de Chauvigny (gratuit) par l’ensemble
folklorique « Bert » originaire d’Erevan, capitale de l’Arménie.
C’est dans cette région montagneuse de l’Asie occidentale, à la
frontière entre l’Orient et l’Occident que se situe l’Arménie, pays
coincé entre la Turquie, l’Iran et la Russie. Au fil de son histoire,
souvent mouvementée, le pays a conservé intactes ses traditions
folkloriques. Danses fougueuses des montagnards ou gestes gracieux
des paysannes, la beauté des costumes rivalisera avec les sons des
instruments traditionnels, kanoun, duduk, srink, zurna…

– Prochains rendez-vous du festival d’été de la communauté de
communes en Pays Chauvinois : « La Nuit de l’étang » samedi 24
juillet à 21 h, étang du Mouchet, La Chapelle-Viviers (gratuit) ; «
Ensemble d’état de danses et chants tchouvaches », jeudi 29 juillet,
21 h à Fleix (gratuit).

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Armenian foreign minister welcomes CIS leaders’ criticism of OSCE

Armenian foreign minister welcomes CIS leaders’ criticism of OSCE

Arminfo
20 Jul 04

YEREVAN

The statement by the heads of CIS countries regarding the activities
of the OSCE has been issued in time, Armenian Foreign Minister Vardan
Oskanyan has told Armenian Public Television.

He said although the statement contains criticism, it would be wrong
to describe it as criticism. Analysts who believe that Armenia’s
support for the statement will produce negative consequences are
probably not keeping abreast of the current processes inside the OSCE,
the Armenian foreign minister thinks.

He said that the timeliness of the CIS leaders’ statement is explained
by the fact that serious debates are under way in the OSCE. “The task
is to make this organization transparent, effective and successful.
The aim of the statement is to help reforms,” the minister said.

The minister also expressed discontent with the opinion that the
criticism of the OSCE could reflect on the negotiations on the
Nagornyy Karabakh settlement. “There is no link here,” the Armenian
foreign minister stressed.

In conclusion, the minister said that it was also necessary for
Armenia to contribute to the reformation of the organization. At the
same time, the minister pointed out that the biggest task is to
reconsider the well-established tradition of taking decisions behind
the scenes on some issues which are not put on the agenda of plenary
sessions and for all to hear. The voices of small countries get lost
during this process.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Armenian leader, Filipino envoy discuss ways of developing ties

Armenian leader, Filipino envoy discuss ways of developing ties

Arminfo
20 Jul 04

YEREVAN

The Filipino ambassador to Armenia, Ernesto V. Llamas, (headquarters
in Moscow) presented his credentials to Armenian President Robert
Kocharyan today.

At the meeting, the president congratulated the Filipino diplomat on
his appointment, the presidential press service told Arminfo news
agency.

Speaking about the future development of bilateral relations, the
sides noted that despite big potential for cooperation, it is still
not being used effectively. The sides expressed their readiness to
make the necessary efforts for the implementation of
mutually-beneficial economic programmes.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Armenian foreign minister upbeat about relations with Georgia

Armenian foreign minister upbeat about relations with Georgia

Arminfo
20 Jul 04

YEREVAN

Relations between Armenia and Georgia are becoming more interesting
with every passing day and the agenda is deepening, Armenian Foreign
Minister Vardan Oskanyan has told Armenian Public Television,
commenting on the upcoming visit of Georgian Foreign Minister Salome
Zourabichvili to Armenia.

At the same time, the minister said that serious conceptual tasks were
added to the issues to be discussed. “The expansion of NATO is taking
place around us, and Georgia clearly wants to join this organization,”
the minister said.

He added that they also need to discuss such conceptual issues as the
expansion of the European Union, a gas pipeline and railway
communication. It is necessary to coordinate our work to avoid the
emergence of any dividing lines in the Caucasus, the Armenian foreign
minister said.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Armenia-Iran gas pipeline requires 140m dollars – Russian company

Armenia-Iran gas pipeline requires 140m dollars – Russian company official

Noyan Tapan news agency
19 Jul 04

YEREVAN

The Russian company Gazprom has completed a feasibility study for a
gas pipeline from Iran to Armenia, Aleksandr Ryazanov, deputy chairman
of the company’s board, told journalists on 19 July. Prior to that,
Ryazanov held a meeting with Armenian President Robert Kocharyan to
discuss future cooperation between Gazprom and Armenia.

Ryazanov said that under their proposal it will take about nine years
for any pay off from the gas pipeline to be felt. “Some sources of
financing have now emerged and once we decide on them, we will have no
problems with the construction,” he said. About 140m dollars are
needed to build it. He said that the construction could either be
funded from interstate credits or at the expense of Russia. It is
possible of course that the pipeline will be constructed at the
expense of Gazprom, but the company sets “tough conditions”. The
construction of the Armenia-Iran pipeline is of strategic importance
as the gas pipeline going through Georgia is in a bad technical
condition and is in need of repairs,” Ryazanov said.

He said that an agreement had been reached with Armenian President
Robert Kocharyan to continue working on the document about the gas
pipeline. A Gazprom delegation is expected to arrive in Armenia soon
to discuss specific issues regarding the project.

An Armenian-Russian intergovernmental agreement on cooperation in the
gas industry will be probably drawn up soon.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress