BAKU: Azeri journalists will rally in Turkey

Baku Today, Azerbaijan
April 5 2004

Azeri journalists will rally in Turkey

Azeri journalists will protest in Turkey against alleged opening of
the Turkish-Armenian border tomorrow, according to ANS.
The reporters will call the Turkish government to resist outside
pressures into opening the border with Armenia. They will also state
the regional threats that might emerge following the border opening.
The protest rally will start in bordering with Armenia Turkish
territories and then will move to the capital city Ankara.

Local people will join journalists to peacefully express their
objections, ANS said.

New York: Spending talks going to school

Albany Times Union, NY
April 5 2004

Spending talks going to school

The failure by the “three men” to go into a room and come out with an
on-time budget for the 20th year in a row dashed the hopes of an
early summer vacation of not a few legislative staffers (and
lawmakers). Some gloomily predicted the budget battle among Gov.
George Pataki, Assembly Speaker Sheldon Silver and Senate Majority
Leader Joseph Bruno could again drag out until as late as July.

But several sources who ought to know insist it may not. With the
exception of education, they say, the framework of the budget
agreement is essentially done.

One lawmaker joked that saying the budget is all-but-done — minus
education — is like saying you’ve undertaken an enormous spring
cleaning and managed to make everything sparkle with the exception of
a pile of … well, something, in the corner.

With the Legislature on break, staffers continue to discuss the
logjam — how to address a court-ordered reform of the way the state
funds public schools. Reporters trying to get Pataki to answer
questions have always faced obstacles — limited availability,
evasive answers, news conferences cut short. But at a news conference
Monday, a new problem arose: a question limit.

Pataki and Frank Zarb, head of a commission the governor created to
address last year’s court order to improve funding for New York City
schools and provide children a “sound, basic education,” were
fielding dozens of questions on the report by the commission.

Then one wire service reporter had the audacity to ask a follow-up
question.

“You’ve asked a lot of questions already,” said Pataki Communications
Director Lisa Dewald Stoll (who didn’t seem bothered by multiple
questions from any other reporter).

Asked later if there was a new question quota, Pataki spokesman Kevin
Quinn responded: “It’s sad that our press office would need enforce
common courtesies that every child learns at an early age, which is
to share and take turns,” he said. “Our ‘kinder, gentler’ press
office encourages manners.”

Whether Pataki’s press office got that memo, however, wasn’t
immediately apparent the next day. Two aides double-teamed several
reporters whose coverage of the Zarb report, they contended, did
Pataki wrong. In all fairness, they did take turns berating the
reporters on speakerphone.

One Capitol observer last week was astounded at the openness of state
government. OK, he’s from Armenia.

Nver Sargsyan said that in his country, the public must stand
outdoors behind gates when their elected and appointed government
leaders discuss policy and financing.

Sargsyan, 27, a coordinator for International Executive Service Corp.
staying briefly in the area, was outside Pataki’s guarded chambers
when the governor emerged to take a few questions about his
discussions with Silver and Bruno.

“Compared to Armenia, it’s very open, even though he talks and then
he left,” Sargsyan said.

Armenia’s national budget, he added, is usually three or four months
late, and things like worker salaries don’t necessarily get funded.

Contributors: Capitol bureau reporters Elizabeth Benjamin, Erin
Duggan and James M. Odato.

Got a tip? Call 454-5424 or e-mail jjochnowitz@times union.com.

Germany to loan Armenia 4.7 mln euros for power station

Interfax
April 5 2004

Germany to loan Armenia 4.7 mln euros for power station

Yerevan. (Interfax) – The German government is to allocate a 4.7
million euro loan to Armenia for an upgrade of the Alaverdi-2 power
station, from which electricity is delivered to Georgia.

German Ambassador to Armenia Hans Wulf Bartels and Armenian Finance
Minister Vardan Khachatrian signed the loan agreement on Monday.

The loan will be disbursed through KfW of Germany for 12 years at 5%
annually with a two-year grace period, Khachatrian said at a
briefing.

The upgrade will increase the reliability of the power station and
equip it with modern European equipment as well as increasing its
capacity, he said.

AGBU SCDC Raises $38K for Karabakh Repopulation Centennial Project

AGBU PRESS OFFICE
55 East 59th Street, New York, NY 10022-1112
Phone (212) 319-6383
Fax (212) 319-6507
Email [email protected]
Webpage

PRESS RELEASE
Monday, April 5, 2004

The AGBU Southern California District Committee (SCDC), led by its
Chairman, Dr. Simon Simonian, organized many events and activities
during the past three years to serve the local Armenian community. As
a result of these many efforts, the Committee raised funds to support
both local and global AGBU programs. Before recently handing over the
reigns to the new Chairperson and Committee, Dr. Simonian took on one
more activity that raised a total of $38,000, all of which will be
allocated to the construction of a new, 120-student school in the
Norashen region of the Nagorno-Karabakh Republic. This endeavor is
part of AGBU’s Karabakh Repopulation Centennial Project.

AGBU established this project in recognition of the need to repopulate
the Armenian villages in Karabakh and to provide humanitarian and
agricultural relief to the Armenians already living there. Looking
back to one of the earliest goals of the organization, namely reaching
out to the rural Armenian populations in Ottoman provinces, the
current project mirrors the very endeavor that took place almost a
century ago. Today, many worldwide Chapters of the organization have
enthusiastically adopted the Karabakh Repopulation program by taking
on the construction of a school, community center or home.

The war between Armenian and Azeri forces that took place between 1991
and 1994 destroyed many villages and hundreds of homes, significantly
diminishing the Armenian population in the Karabakh region. Through
the efforts of AGBU’s District Committee of France, a pilot program
was initiated in the Norashen region of Karabakh to provide
much-needed assistance to disadvantaged children, farmers and
villages. To date, AGBU France has restored the utility infrastructure
of the electricity and water supply, as well as the sewage system. In
addition to building 20 residential homes and a school, the District
Committee has also extended agricultural assistance to villagers,
primarily through enhanced methods of generating dairy products and
maintaining livestock.

Due to the positive effects and outcomes of this pilot project, AGBU
added several other villages to a list of those to receive aid,
including Aygestan, Akn and Tumasar in the Hadrut region, with plans
to expand into the Martakert region, as well. These efforts in the
Nagorno-Karabakh Republic are an extension of the major programs
maintained by AGBU in Armenia, including the six Soup Kitchens, the
three Children’s Centers, medical centers and the American University
of Armenia.

SCDC is just one of the AGBU Districts/Chapters that has pledged
assistance to AGBU’s Karabakh Repopulation Centennial Project. For
more information on AGBU SCDC please visit their website:

www.agbu.org
www.agbuca.org.

Dubai: DCCI holds UAE-Armenia business forum

AME Info, United Arab Emirates
April 5 2004

DCCI holds UAE-Armenia business forum

The Dubai Chamber of Commerce and Industry held a business forum on
investment opportunities in the Republic of Armenia earlier today.

Within the framework of the Forum, DCCI received a large delegation
of Armenian businessmen headed by Mr. Vahag Movsisyan, Managing
Director of the Armenian Development Agency.

‘We are delighted to participate in the ‘Investment Opportunities in
Armenia Forum’ which aims to attract sufficient investments with the
aim to activate the economic role of the Republic of Armenia’, said
Mr. Abdul Rahman Ghanim Al Mutaiwee, the Director General of the DCCI
in his welcoming speech, adding ‘Non-oil trade between Dubai and
Armenia reached around 124 million AED in 2002, about US$ 34
million’.

The forum is organized by the Embassy of the Republic of Armenia in
the UAE, in cooperation with the Federation of Chambers of Commerce
and Industry in the UAE and the Armenian Development Agency (ADA).

The aim of this forum is to aid the Armenian government to create and
develop a cordial system of mutually beneficial industrial relations
with foreign countries. It also aims to highlight Armenia’s potential
industrial capacities and investment opportunities, provide the basic
information on the foreign investment protection laws, thus
consolidating and developing trade relations between Armenia and the
UAE.

The main sectors represented in this forum include information
Technology, technology transfer, pharmaceutical, food processing,
jewllery manufacturing, chemical, electronic and light industries,
health business and tourism.

Putin highly assesses UN int’l role

RIA Novosti, Russia
April 5 2004

PUTIN HIGHLY ASSESSES UN INTERNATIONAL ROLE

MOSCOW, April 5, 2004. (RIA Novosti) – Russian President Vladimir
Putin highly assesses the UN’s role in the modern world.

The world has no other effective instrument to solve international
problems, Vladimir Putin told UN Secretary General Kofi Annan on
Monday.

“You know our attitude to the UN and the development of this
organization. The fact that the Russian ambassador to the UN was
appointed Foreign Minister confirms our attitude to the development
of relations with the UN,” the Russian leader said.

The President also thanked Kofi Annan for his congratulation on
Vladimir Putin’s reelection to his post on March 14.

Kofi Annan pointed out the recent easing of tensions in international
relations. The countries are united and are solving international
problems together, the Secretary General said.

He expressed hope that this tendency will preserve in the future
because only joint efforts can help solve complicated problems.

Mr. Annan is satisfied with Moscow’s support for the formation of a
top-level group to combat new threats and challenges. This group
should assess the current situation in the world and find solutions
to adapt to it, he said.

Russian Security Council Secretary Igor Ivanov, Foreign Minister
Sergei Lavrov, President’s Aide Sergei Prikhodko, Deputy Foreign
Minister Yuri Fedotov, UN Under-Secretary-General, director general
of the UN mission in Europe Sergei Ordzhonikidze, Special
Representative of the UN Secretary General in Georgia Heidi
Tagliavini, and the UN Secretary General’s deputy chief of staff,
Elizabeth Lindmeier took part in the meeting between Vladimir Putin
and Kofi Annan.

Kofi Annan arrived in Moscow on Sunday on a three-day official visit.
On Monday Mr. Annan and Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov took
part in the opening ceremony of the Moscow International Model UN
conference-2004. This is a student game imitating the activities of
this international organization.

In addition, Kofi Annan met with Russian Prime Minister Mikhail
Fradkov.

Kofi Annan is to discuss with the Russian leadership the
implementation of the Russian initiative on the formation of a global
system to counter modern threats and challenges under the UN aegis,
official spokesman for the Russian Foreign Ministry Alexander
Yakovenko told RIA Novosti.

“At issue will be the structural consolidation and reinforcement of
coordinating possibilities of the Counter Terrorist Committee of the
UN Security Council, its cooperation with international and regional
anti-terrorist structures including relevant mechanisms of the CIS,
the Collective Security Treaty Organization [Armenia, Belarus,
Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Russia and Tajikistan] and the Shanghai
Cooperation Organization [Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Russia, China,
Tajikistan and Uzbekistan],” Mr. Yakovenko said.

According to him, Russia backs efforts taken by the UN Secretary
General to settle the situation in Iraq.

“The organization is playing the central role in the post-conflict
settlement, in particular, in the elections. Moscow will support the
UN stabilizing role in the Middle East and strive for the
implementation of the UN Mideastern resolutions in the full volume to
provide favorable conditions for peaceful developments,” Alexander
Yakovenko noted.

Russia, as well as the UN Secretary General, is much concerned about
the sharp aggravation of the situation in Kosovo, the diplomat
stressed. “The large-scale outburst of violence provoked by
extremists has shown that Resolution 1244 of the UN Security Council
is not fulfilled in the full volume yet. Attempts to indulge Kosovo
Albanians caused serious risks of the destabilization in the region,”
Mr. Yakovenko noted.

Why We Must Never Forget the Rwanda Genocide

Pambazuka 150
April 5 2004

Why We Must Never Forget the Rwanda Genocide

Fahamu (Oxford)

by Gerald Caplan

Pambuzuka News 150: A Weekly Electronic Newsletter For Social Justice
In Africa

This editorial was produced as part of a special issue of Pambazuka
News on the 10th anniversary of the Rwanda Genocide. The full issue
is also available on allAfrica.com Pambazuka News 150.

Those of us who are preoccupied, even obsessed, with commemorating in
2004 the 10th anniversary of the Rwanda genocide are often taken
aback when we’re asked what all the fuss is about. After all, just
today I received from the Holocaust Centre of Toronto an invitation
to join in commemorating the 60th anniversary of the Holocaust in
Hungary. Not the entire Holocaust, just the terrible Hungarian
chapter. Yet memorializing the genocide in Rwanda is never taken for
granted in the same way.

Isn’t it already ancient history? Aren’t there all kinds of human
catastrophes that no one much bothers with? Didn’t it take place in
faraway Africa, in an obscure country few people could find on a map.
Wasn’t it just another case of Africans killing Africans? What does
it have to do with us, anyway?

These questions deserve answers, not least because some are entirely
legitimate. Above all, it is fundamentally true that there would have
been no genocide had some Rwandans not decided for their own selfish
reasons to exterminate many other Rwandans. But once this truth is
acknowledged, a powerful case for remembering Rwanda remains, and
needs to be made.

The responsibility to remember:

First, Rwanda was not just another ugly event in human history.
Virtually all students of the subject agree that what happened over
100 days from April to July 1994 constituted one of the purest
manifestations of genocide in our time, meeting all the criteria set
down in the 1948 Geneva Convention on the Prevention and Punishment
of Genocide. Genocide experts debate whether Cambodia or Srebrenica
or Burundi were “authentic” genocides; like the Holocaust and (except
for the Turkish government and its apologists) the Armenian genocide
of 1915, no one disagrees about Rwanda. And since genocide is
universally seen as the crime of crimes, an attack not just on the
actual victims but on all humanity, by definition it needs to be
remembered and memorialized.

Second, it wasn’t just another case of Africans killing Africans, or,
as some clueless reporters enjoyed writing, of Hutu killing Tutsi and
Tutsi killing Hutu (or Hutsi and Tutu, for all they knew or cared).
The Rwandan genocide was a deliberate conspiratorial operation
planned, organized and executed by a small, sophisticated, highly
organized group of greedy Hutu extremists who believed their
self-interest would be enhanced if every one of Rwanda’s 1 million
Tutsi were annihilated. They came frighteningly close to total
success.

Third, the west has played a central role in Rwanda over the past
century. Just as no person is an island and there’s no such thing as
a self-made man, so every nation is the synthesis of internal and
external influences. This is particularly true of nations that have
been colonies, where imperial forces have played a defining role. To
its everlasting misfortune, Rwanda is the quintessential example of
this reality. The central dynamic of Rwandan history for the past 80
years, the characteristic that allowed the genocide to be carried
out, was the bitter division between Hutu and Tutsi. Yet this
division was largely an artifact created by the Roman Catholic Church
and the Belgian colonizers.

Instead of trying to unite all the people they found in Rwanda 100
years ago, Catholic missionaries invented an entire phony pedigree
that irreconcilably divided Rwandans into superior Tutsi and inferior
Hutu. When the Belgians were given control of the country following
World War 1, this contrived hierarchy served their interests well,
and they proceeded to institutionalize what amounted to a racist
ideology. At independence in the early 1960s, this pyramid was turned
on its head, and for the next 40 years Rwanda was run as a racist
Hutu dictatorship. None of this would have happened without the
Church and the Belgians.

The Culprits:

Last, but hardly least, the 1994 genocide could have been prevented
in whole or in part by some of the same external forces that shaped
the country’s tragic destiny. But without exception, every outside
agency with the capacity to intervene failed to do so. My own list of
culprits, in order of responsibility, is as follows:

-the government of France

-the Roman Catholic Church

-the government of the United States

-the government of Belgium

-the government of Britain

-the UN Secretariat.

I name the French and the Church first since they both had the
influence to deter the genocide plotters from launching the genocide
in the first place. Rwanda was the most Christianized country in
Africa and the Roman Catholics were far and away the largest
Christian denomination. Catholicism was virtually the official state
religion. Catholic officials had enormous influence at both the elite
and the grassroots level, which they consistently failed to use to
protest against the government’s overtly racist policies and
practices. Indeed, the Church gave the government moral authority.
Once the genocide began, Catholic leaders in the main refused to
condemn the government, never used the word genocide, and many
individual priests and nuns actually aided the genocidaires.

Rwanda was a French-speaking country, and France replaced Belgium as
the key foreign presence. When the Rwandan Patriotic Front (RPF), a
rebel group of English-speaking Tutsi refugees from Uganda, invaded
Rwanda in 1990, the French military flew in to save the day for the
Hutu government. For the following several years, right to the very
moment the genocide began, French officials had enormous influence
with both the Rwandan government and army. They failed completely to
use that leverage to insist that the government curtail its racist
policies and propaganda, stop the increasing massacres, end the
widespread human rights abuses, and disband the death squads and
death lists.

Two months after the genocide began, a French intervention force
created a safe haven in the south-west of the country through which
they allowed genocidaires leaders and killers, fleeing from the
advancing RPF, to escape across the border into Zaire. From Zaire
they began an insurgency back into Rwanda with the purpose of
“finishing the job”. Eventually this led to the Rwandans invading
Zaire/Congo to suppress the insurgency, which in turn soon led to the
vicious wars in the Congo and the subsequent appalling cost in human
lives throughout eastern Congo.

Once the genocide was launched after April 6, 1994, the American
government, steadfastly backed by the British government, were
primarily responsible for the failure of the UN Security Council to
reinforce its puny mission to Rwanda. Under no circumstances were
these governments prepared to budge. The Commander of the UN force –
UNAMIR – repeatedly pleaded for reinforcements, and was repeatedly
turned down.

Two weeks into the genocide, the Security Council voted to reduce
UNAMIR from 2500 to 270 men – an act almost impossible to believe 10
years later. Six weeks into the genocide, as credible reports of
hundreds of thousands of deaths became commonplace and the reality of
a full-blown genocide became undeniable, the Security Council voted
finally to send some 4500 troops to Rwanda. Several contingents of
African troops were put on standby, but deliberate stalling tactics
by the USA and Britain meant that by the end of the genocide, when
the Tutsi-led rebels were sworn in as the new government on July 19,
not a single reinforcement of soldiers or material ever reached
Rwanda. This was one of the darkest moments in the history of the
United Nations.

As for Belgium, notwithstanding the racist attitudes and colonial
behaviour of its soldiers, their contingent was the backbone of
UNAMIR. When 10 Belgian soldiers were murdered by Rwandan government
troops on the very first morning of the genocide, the Brussels
government immediately decided to withdraw the remainder of its
forces and to lobby the Security Council to suspend the entire
Rwandan mission. Its motive was simple: They did not want to be seen
as the sole party undermining UNAMIR. At the Security Council, of
course, it found eager allies.

The role of the UN Secretariat is somewhat ambiguous. To a large
extent, its failure to support the pleas of its own UNAMIR Force
Commander reflected its lack of capacity to cope with yet another
crisis combined with its understanding that the US and Britain would
not alter their intransigent positions. Still, there were many
occasions when the Secretariat failed to convey to the full Security
Council the dire situation in Rwanda, and many opportunities when it
failed to speak up publicly in the hope of influencing world opinion.

A multitude of betrayals:

It is not far-fetched to say that the world has betrayed Rwanda
countless times since its first confrontation with Europeans in the
mid-1890s. This previous account has presented several of these
betrayals before and during the genocide: by the Catholic Church, by
the Belgian colonial power, by the French neo-colonial power, by the
international community.

To exacerbate further this shameful record, we need to look at the
past decade. First, the concept that the world owed serious
reparations to a devastated Rwanda for its failure to prevent the
genocide has been a total non-starter.

Second, there has been precious little accountability by the
international community for its failure to prevent. The French
government and the Roman Catholic Church have to this moment refused
to acknowledge the slightest responsibility for their roles or to
apologize for any of their gross errors of commission or omission.
President Bill Clinton and Secretary-General Koki Annan have both
apologized for their failure to offer protection, but have both
falsely blamed insufficient information; in fact what was lacking was
not knowledge – the situation was universally understood – but
political will and sufficient national interest. No one has ever quit
their jobs in protest against their government’s or their
organisation’s failure to intervene to save close to one million
innocent civilian lives.

Those we must not forget:

Finally, the very existence of the genocide has largely disappeared
from the public and media’s consciousness. This is the latest
betrayal. Marginalized during the genocide, Rwanda’s calamity is now
largely forgotten except for Rwandans themselves and small clusters
of non-Rwandans who have had some connection with the country or
specialize in genocide prevention. That’s why I founded the
Remembering Rwanda movement in July of 2001. I had four targets for
remembering: the innocent victims; the survivors, many of whom live
in deplorable conditions with few resources to tend to their physical
or psychological needs; the perpetrators, most of whom remain free
and unrepentant scattered around Africa, Europe and parts of North
America; and the so-called “bystanders”, the unholy sextet named
earlier. Rather than being passive witnesses, as the word “bystander”
implies, all were active in their failure to intervene to stop the
massacres, and all remain unaccountable to this day. It is time the
Rwandan genocide is treated with the concern and attention it so
grievously earned.

* Gerald Caplan is the author of Rwanda: The Preventable Genocide
(2000), the report of the International Panel of Eminent
Personalities appointed by the Organization of African Unity to
investigate the 1994 genocide in Rwanda, and the founder of
“Remembering Rwanda: The Rwanda Genocide 10th Anniversary Memorial
Project”.

* NOTE FOR EDITORS: Please note that this editorial was commissioned
from the author for Pambazuka News. If you would like to use this
article for your publication, please do so with the following credit:
“This article first appeared in Pambazuka News, an electronic
newsletter for social justice in Africa, “. Editors
are also encouraged to make a donation.

Further details:

http://www.pambazuka.org/index.php?id=21165
www.pambazuka.org

ARF makes final proposal for dialogue with opposition

ArmenPress
April 5 2004

ARF MAKES FINAL PROPOSAL FOR DIALOGUE WITH OPPOSITION

YEREVAN, APRIL 5, ARMENPRESS: Senior members of the Armenian
Revolutionary Federation (ARF) have once again called on the
opposition today, which is bracing up for, as its says, “the final
battle,” to give up their “unconstitutional demands and display
tolerance,” in order to start seeking ways for reconciliation.
ARF representatives also issued a statement calling on the
country’s political forces to fit their actions into the limits set
by the Constitution and laws, to start a dialogue to diffuse the
escalating tension. The ARF statement says that the accord between
the warring parties can be reached in what is related to creating a
new electoral system, carrying out constitutional changes and in the
fight against corruption. The statement also says that the dialogue
and accord must be guaranteed by the ruling coalition, of which ARF
is a member.
ARF top official, Armen Rustamian, said that compromises are
required from both sides to avert the confrontation. He also argued
that a shattered domestic stability will harm the efforts to resolve
the Karabagh conflict. “Before taking a step we shall have to
calculate all possible consequences,” he said.
Rustamian also ruled out the role of foreign powers in the
escalated domestic tension. According to him, unlike the neighboring
Georgia, Armenia’s president has its support base in the person of
the coalition government, adding that the government has all
necessary levers and resources to counter the opposition’s efforts to
make a revolution at whatever the cost.
According to another senior ARF member, Levon Mkrtchian, judging
from the opposition’s radical announcements there is no room left for
a dialogue. “Under such conditions the authorities have to take all
steps to ensure stability,” he concluded.

KFW Bank to give 4.7m euros to reconstruct of Alaverdi substation

ArmenPress
April 5 2004

KFW BANK TO GIVE 4.7 MILLION EUROS FOR RECONSTRUCTION OF ALAVERDI
SUB-STATION

YEREVAN, APRIL 5, ARMENPRESS: Armenian finance and economy
minister Vartan Khachatrian and Germany’s ambassador Hans
Wulf-Bartels signed today an agreement by which the German KFW bank
will allocate a 4.7 million euro credit for reconstruction of a major
power sub-station in the northern Armenian town of Alaverdi to ensure
a better transmission of Armenia-generated electricity to neighboring
Georgia.
A KFW representative in Armenia, Karapet Gevorkian, recalled that
KFW had already released loans for major reconstruction of two other
major sub-stations in Vanadzor and Kamo.
The reconstruction of Alaverdi sub-station will increase its
reliability and capacities to allow an uninterrupted transmission of
electricity to Georgia and through it to also other countries.
The project is part of a major program aimed to reform the power
grid. Unlike other previous two loans this one is given not to the
government, but to High Voltage Electricity Lines company with the
government assuming to guarantee its return. The loan is given with
two year grace period, for five years at 2 percent of annual interest
rate.
The amount of German loans to Armenia since 1995 has amounted to
110 million euros.

Switzerland provides Armenia with 6.5m Swiss aid

ArmenPress
April 5 2004

SWITZERLAND PROVIDES ARMENIA WITH 6.5 MILLION SWISS AID

YEREVAN, APRIL 5, ARMENPRESS: The governments of Armenia and the
Swiss Confederation signed on April 3 an agreement on technical,
financial and humanitarian cooperation as part of the regional
cooperation in the framework of which Armenia will receive 3.5
million Swiss Frank as a technical aid and 3 million Franks as a
humanitarian assistance. The agreement was signed by Armenian Finance
and Economy minister Vartan Khachatrian and Head of Policy Department
at the Swiss Foreign Ministry Blez Goden.
The focus of the cooperation program, which will be implemented in
Georgia and Azerbaijan as well, will be on promoting quality of
governance, effective exploitation of natural resources and the
disaster consequences. The program also aims at promoting the economy
and integrating Armenia into the world economy.
Switzerland has assisted Armenia since 1988 earthquake, mainly in
the form of humanitarian assistance. Starting 1991, major focus was
on long-term development programs. During 1993-2001, the government
of Switzerland provided Armenia with 23-25 million dollars of
humanitarian assistance within the framework of regional programs.