Senate Passes Bill Granting Armenia Permanent Normal Trade

Senate Passes Bill Granting Armenia Permanent Normal Trade Relations

(Bill also includes provisions on Laos, dumping law repeal, tariff
suspensions) (570)

Washington — The Senate has passed a bill that would make normal trade
relations (NTR) — otherwise known as most-favored nation status —
permanent for Armenia

The bill would also extend NTR to Laos and repeal a 1916 law that was
ruled by the World Trade Organization (WTO) as a violation of U.S.
obligations.

President Bush is expected to sign the bill into law.

The 299-page bill, passed by the House of Representatives October 8,
comprises hundreds of tariff suspensions on imports of goods not produced
domestically and traded in small volumes.

A provision of the bill would grant permanent NTR for Armenia, which has
had temporary NTR, approved year-to-year by the president.

“I hope that we will be able to consider similar treatment for Azerbaijan
in the very near future,” said Senator Chuck Grassley, Republican chairman
of the Finance Committee.

During Senate debate on normal trade relations for Laos, Grassley spoke in
favor and argued that it would help alleviate poverty and bring the
country into the global marketplace. Laos is one of only four countries
worldwide and the only least-developed country to which the United States
has not granted NTR.

Senators from Wisconsin, home of about 33,000 Hmong refugees, argued
against NTR because of what they called credible reports of Laotian army
atrocities against the Hmong, a people inhabiting the mountainous regions
of southern China and adjacent areas of Vietnam, Laos and Thailand.

The Bush administration had pressed for passage of the NTR provisions and
for repeal of the 1916 antidumping law.

The WTO had ruled against the 1916 law, which was challenged by the
European Union (EU) and Japan. Under the law — never actually used from
1916 until the 1990s — U.S. companies can sue foreign producers for
triple damages for dumping goods on the U.S. market with the intent of
injuring U.S. industry.

To date no plaintiff has ever collected damages under the 1916 law
although a recent verdict against a Japanese newspaper press manufacturer
remains under appeal.

The bill would repeal the 1916 law, but would not overturn any case
already decided or pending under it. Whether Japan or the EU would accept
such a non-retroactive change is not known.

Miscellaneous tariff bills typically pass each session of Congress
routinely, but this one was held up over a succession of issues for three
years.

Some other provisions of the bill would:

— Extend the Generalized System of Preferences (GSP) to allow duty-free
treatment for hand-woven and hand-knotted carpets, a provision designed
primarily to help Afghanistan and Pakistan;

— Correct a mistake in the Trade Act of 2002 that inadvertently raised
duties on certain Andean goods under the Andean Trade Preferences Act
(ATPA);

— Clarify the African Growth and Opportunity Act (AGOA), extending
retroactively to October 2000 duty-free treatment for collars and cuffs;

— Prohibit U.S. imports of archaeological, cultural and other rare items
from Iraq to prevent illegal shipment of looted antiquities;

— Amend U.S. regulatory law concerning cellar treatment for both domestic
and imported natural wine in line with a 2001 international agreement to
eliminate testing of wine for reasons other than health and safety.

Congressional sources have indicated they intended this provision to
provide leverage in negotiations with the European Union to accept U.S.
wine-making practices.

(Distributed by the Bureau of International Information Programs, U.S.
Department of State. Web site: )

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Newspaper questions consistency of Estonian foreign policy

Postimees web site, Tallinn, in Estonian
18 Nov 04

Newspaper questions consistency of Estonian foreign policy

Vacillating between idealistic and realistic strands is no good for
Estonian foreign policy, the Estonian newspaper Postimees has said,
adding that there should be greater coordination and clarity on this
front. The comments came in the wake of President Arnold Ruutel’s
statement in Yerevan where he called on Turkey to apologize for the
1915 genocide in Armenia. The following is the text of the
newspaper’s editorial published on its web site on 18 November:

The statement of President Arnold Ruutel in Armenia about the fact
that Turkey should apologize for the 1915 Armenian genocide is
evidence of eternal twitching between the Estonian idealistic and
realistic foreign policies.

Having suffered from a Soviet genocide as a small country, Estonia is
under a moral obligation to fight for human rights and against crimes
against humanity. Estonia is expecting that Russia should apologize
for its acts of violence. It is only natural that we should voice our
opinions on other issues as well, for example, on the Turkish
genocide of the Armenians in 1915.

However, this is where doubt creeps in. The Armenians think that 1.5m
people died as a result of the Turkish policy of genocide. Turkey
thinks that the number is perhaps up to 0.5m and there were dead on
both sides. It seems, however, that, in the eyes of the world, Turkey
is to blame.

But if we say so of Turkey, where is the Estonian position, for
example, on the occupation of Tibet or the independence of Taiwan?
Would Ruutel issue a statement in China to say that China needs to
end its occupation of Tibet? Once Estonia has accepted that
idealistic foreign policy is its aim we would have to go the whole
way.

The issue of Turkey, however, brings in the issue of realistic
foreign policy. Turkey has been one of the biggest supporters of
Estonia in NATO and Estonia has voiced support for the start of
accession talks between Turkey and the EU. Undoubtedly, Ruutel’s
statement on the Armenian genocide will result in a negative reaction
from Turkey and our diplomats will have to explain what it was the
president wanted to say. Let us recall the statement from Justice
Minister Ken-Marti Vaher on the subject of the Kurds.

The problem is even broader, since the consensus over the
implementation of Estonian foreign policy that existed to a degree
quickly started to crumble once we joined the EU. Different
individuals say different things on foreign policy. The most recent
example was the public debate between Prime Minister Juhan Parts and
Foreign Minister Kristiina Ojuland as to when Estonia should be the
country holding EU presidency. It ended with the prime minister’s
victory.

The Ministry of Foreign Affairs has refrained from statements on the
subject of the Armenian genocide. Now a presidential statement has
come. Arnold Ruutel has had his say on the Armenian genocide; it is
the diplomats’ turn next. One would still like to hope that Estonia
should be more coordinated and unambiguous in pursuing its foreign
policy (whatever its content).

Tales of the unexpected from beyond the grave

Racing Post
November 16, 2004, Tuesday
TALES OF THE UNEXPECTED FROM BEYOND THE GRAVE

by ALASTAIR DOWN

DAVID ASHFORTH was most kind in last Saturday’s column when reviewing
my recent obituary in The Times, and having now been dead for three
weeks – I hope Martin Clunes did okay when standing in for me on
Channel 4 at Cheltenham – it is only fair to clear up a few points.

You could call this a message from beyond the grave to an old friend,
whose greying locks and penchant for buying his clothes from the
Distressed Gentlefolk’s Association suggest that he may already have
one be-sandalled foot in his own.

David mentioned that I had never referred to the occasion that I lost
an eye fighting at Sidi Barrani and was subsequently awarded the
Military Cross. Well, all I can say was that it was a thoroughly bad
business. No quarter was asked or given in the desert and Rommel’s
Afrika Corps were no pushover, but I would just like to say that in
fact I lost my eye in a separate incident while staying at the famed
Gezira Sporting Club in Cairo.

As for the MC, I never spoke about it but used the thing for many
years as it looked uncannily like the old members’ badge at Ludlow
and over several decades it saved me a packet.

During the war, the Gezira Sporting Club was one of the best in the
world with polo, golf, tennis, squash, swimming pool, bowls, croquet,
cricket and football; although in those days we called it soccer, of
course.

Above all, the Gezira had a very fine racecourse and there was
nothing better after weeks on patrol near Mersa Matruh than to get
back to the club, have a cold beer, a shower and then head off to the
course for lunch and a punt.

Cairo was a ruinously expensive city in the war, but luckily a few of
us had befriended a very astute and rather civilised trainer called
Mustapha Plott, who knew the time of day.

Young Mustapha had an insatiable appetite for Wrens, though he was no
bird watcher, and after we introduced him to a particularly obliging
and well-upholstered one called Joy, who hailed from Leamington Spa –
and could have heated all the waters therein – life was a bowl of
cherries.

The sight of Joy unconfined must have been spectacular and Ahmed
certainly thought so. He marked our card most accurately and in May
’42 we had it off big time at Gezira when he trained the winners of
the six-furlong sprint and mile handicap on the same afternoon.

I backed both and had a greedy double with the result that we made an
absolute killing, and so it was off to The Golden Horn, a very
exclusive establishment run by an ancient and overweight Armenian
lady called Grizelda who, as luck would have it, always seemed to
have at least 20 stunning female cousins staying with her.

IT WAS as I came downstairs next morning that I slipped on an empty
Bollinger bottle, took a shocking tumble and put out my right eye on
a bronze statue of Aphrodite at the base of the stairs. Such is life,
I suppose.

For some years I affected a black eyepatch but eventually, in the
early Fifties, opted for a glass one as it was much more fun to whip
out at dinner parties, in much the same way as Fergie Sutherland used
to take his false leg off at dances. It never failed.

David referred to my chairmanship of BP and discovery of oil in
Alaska, both of which I am rather proud of.

I had gone to Alaska having fallen in love with an Inuit princess,
who I had met when she was serving behind the bar at the George Inn
at Stamford in Lincolnshire.

One day, when dynamiting out a new latrine outside her wooden hut
hundreds of miles north of Anchorage, I pressed the plunger and when
the ice and snow had settled, there was this huge puddle of black
stuff – and the rest is history, profit and Wild Bean Cafes.

You mentioned, in passing, my marriage to Bunny Mellon, who certainly
lived up to her surname and didn’t get her nickname as a result of
having long ears. A marvellous woman and I am proud to have served
under her.

You will be pleased to hear, David, that being up here is very
pleasant. There is no virtual racing or prunes, the two things I
could not abide down on Earth.

All the stewards’ inquiries go your way and nothing gets beaten in a
photo. I have never been happier and have even managed to track down
some of Grizelda’s cousins, who haven’t aged a bit.

Grizelda herself has, sadly, been relegated to the other place. Life
is great. Heavenly, in fact.

New Arrangements for Import of Russian Diamonds to Armenia

New Arrangements for Import of Russian Diamonds to Armenia

RusData Dialine – BizEkon News
November 12, 2004 Friday

REGNUM

The government of Armenia approved a proposal with regard to
thesigning of a protocol on the supply of rough natural diamonds
toArmenia from Russia for a period from 2002 to 2006.

The government of Armenia approved a proposal with regard to the
signing of a protocol on the supply of rough natural diamonds to
Armenia from Russia for a period from 2002 to 2006.

Prices for the Russian diamonds became higher than those in the world
market following the liberalization of the Russian diamond industry.
As a result, Armenian companies were incapable of meeting the quota
on diamond imports. In 2003, Armenians imported only 130 thousand
carats of diamonds out of the total quota for 400 thousand carats of
diamonds set by the Russian party. Consequently, the Russian diamond
imports accounted for 35% of all diamond raw materials processed in
Armenia in the year 2003. A shortage of rough diamonds was corrected
by shipments from Israel and Belgium. In the meantime, in accordance
with the 2002 agreement, Armenia would import from Russia 2.1 million
carats of natural gem-quality diamonds and 3 million carats of
technical quality diamonds up to 2006.

The intergovernmental Armenian-Russian commission convened recently
in Moscow. The relations between Armenia and ALROSA were the focus of
negotiations. The Armenian party put forth a request for the right to
re- export a part of diamonds found unfit for further processing due
to technical specifications.

Armenian Industry To Be Represented In Georgia

ARMENIAN INDUSTRY TO BE REPRESENTED IN GEORGIA

A1 Plus | 15:03:38 | 12-11-2004 | Economy |

On November 16-18 the first exhibition of Armenian goods and services
on “Armenia Now EXPO-2005” will be held in Tbilisi, Georgia.

The product of various branches of Armenia’s industry – foodstuffs,
drinks, paints, lacquer etc will be introduced to the exposition.

The aim of the exhibition of the Armenian goods and services is to
expand the opportunities for export of the output of the Armenian
enterprises, establish the mutually beneficial cooperation with the
Georgian businessmen, consolidate the relations with the Armenian
Commune in Georgia etc.

38 organizations will partake in the exposition.

Leaders of Georgian huge companies, state officials, representatives
of the Armenian Commune etc will visit the exhibition.

Tajikistan, Armenia owe RUR266 mln to RF for keeping border guards

Tajikistan, Armenia owe RUR266 mln to RF for keeping border guards
By Sergei Ovsiyenko

ITAR-TASS News Agency
November 9, 2004 Tuesday

MOSCOW, November 9 — The collegium of the Russian Audit Chamber
considered the results of the audit on using federal property and
funds allocated to the Border Service of the Federal Security Service
for keeping its units in Tajikistan and Armenia.

In particular, the audit showed that “questions of co-financing
border services by countries where they are located still exist,” the
information department of the Audit Chamber told Itar-Tass on Tuesday.

“In the first half of the year Tajikistan not sufficiently financed
Russian border guards by more than 263 million roubles, and Armenia –
by about 3.2 million roubles,” the information department emphasized.

Partakers of the meeting of the collegium also noted that as border
services are not registered as juridical persons in Russia, Tajikistan
and Armenia social and property problems arise, for instance,
concerning the working record of civilian personnel among Russian
citizens who moved for permanent residence in Russia.

The collegium of the Audit Chamber decided to send a representation
on these issues to the Finance Ministry and the Border Service of the
Federal Security Service, an information letter to the government
and reports on audit results to chambers of the Federal Assembly,
the information department of the Audit Chamber pointed out.

Estonia paves way to closer links with Armenia

Estonia paves way to closer links with Armenia

Eesti Paevaleht web site, Tallinn
8 Nov 04

Even though Armenia is strictly following Moscow in its foreign policy,
President Arnold Ruutel’s team does not think this is a reason for
avoiding a relationship. In a brief interview with Eesti Paevaleht,
Ruutel said that his official visit to Armenia from 13 to 16 November
was “part of the European policy on near neighbours”. He said that
the pro-Russian moods in Armenia had come as a result of the country’s
complicated economic and political situation.

Ruutel emphasized that the subject of Transcaucasus was important
to him. Alongside an invitation for a visit from Armenian President
Robert Kocharyan, he is yet to take up an invitation for a visit from
Mikheil Saakashvili, the Georgian head of state.

Tiit Matsulevits, member of the Foreign Affairs Commission in the
Riigikogu [Estonian parliament] and former ambassador, said in comment
that the presidential visit was “new, surprising, interesting and
groundbreaking against the background of Estonian foreign-policy
priorities so far”. When asked whether visits to Armenia would be
expedient, Matsulevits replied by recommending that one should think,
among other things, about the shortage of resources when it came to
Estonian foreign-policy relations. Ruutel’s visits have recently been
to exotic places; the most recent one was to Japan.

A Ministry of Foreign Affairs source said unofficially that there were
problems with Armenia because Russia was the only Armenian ally in the
region and for this reason Yerevan was always oriented on Moscow. For
this reason, Armenia has been aiming to join the declarations initiated
by Russia in the OSCE and elsewhere, and these can often be hostile
to Estonia.

Foreign Minister Kristiina Ojuland also took up a clearly supportive
position on involvement with Armenia. “This is a country where there
are forces that would like more attention from EU countries,” Ojuland
noted. “I cannot say that we are not interested in Armenia’s future.”

The president will meet the Armenian head of state, the parliament
speaker and the prime minister. He will also be accompanied by a
business delegation. “There have been long-term cultural relations
between Estonia and Armenia,” the president added. [Passage omitted]

BAKU: Aliyev: UN debates on Karabakh won’t replace OSCE mediation

Azeri leader says UN debates on Karabakh won’t replace OSCE mediation

Turan news agency
3 Nov 04

BAKU

Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev has confirmed that Baku adheres to
the settlement of the Armenian-Azerbaijani conflict within the
framework of the OSCE Minsk Group.

Discussions of the situation on the occupied territories at the UN
General Assembly will not inflict “damage” on the Minsk process, he
said, commenting on Azerbaijan’s initiative to include the issue on
the agenda of the 59th session of the UN General Assembly.

Ilham Aliyev is confident that this would have a positive impact on
the negotiations. “Everyone should realize that Armenia has occupied
Azerbaijani territories and this injustice and violation of
international legal norms should be eliminated,” Aliyev stressed.

Discussions on the Karabakh settlement should be as extensive as
possible and should be held at different international organizations –
in the UN, the European Union, the Council of Europe etc., he
said. Aliyev noted that the UN is “the most influential” and the
largest international organization which had already adopted four
resolutions on the Armenian-Azerbaijani conflict.

“Although Armenia ignores the UN resolutions, the discussions of the
problem in the UN is a positive fact. I do not think that this
initiative is aimed at replacing the OSCE Minsk Group with another
body,” Aliyev said.

Norayr Bakhtamian Places Second in Air Pistol Competition in Bangkok

ArmenPress
Nov. 2, 2004

NORAYR BAKHTAMIAN PLACES SECOND IN AIR PISTOL COMPETITION IN BANGKOK

YEREVAN, NOVEMBER 2, ARMENPRESS: Norayr Bakhtamyan of Armenia placed
2nd in the 10m Air Pistol competition at the International Shooting
Sport (ISSF) World Cup that took place in Bangkok, Thailand, October
25-31.
Bakhtamyan was ranked 8th in the sport. First ranked Mikhail
Nestruev took the championships. The 34 year-old Bakhtamyan
participated in the Men’s 50m Pistol and 10m Air Pistol competitions at
the 2004 Summer Olympics, and has been a scholarship holder with the
Olympic Solidarity program since August 2002.