Karabakh and Iran Are Not Related

KARABAKH AND IRAN ARE NOT RELATED
Lragir.am
07 April 06

For the United States, the conflict over Karabakh is an important
issue, and it is not realistic to say that the United States is eager
to resolve the conflict soon in the context of a possible campaign
against Iran. Thus Mher Shahgeldyan, Chair of the Committee of
Defense, Internal Affairs and National Security, explained the
activity and interest of the U.S. in the settlement of the conflict.
In his opinion, the settlement of the Karabakh conflict is important
for the United States in the context of regional policies, and is
viewed separately from the Iranian issue.
Mher Shahgeldyan says it is absolutely clear that the United States
seeks for a rapid settlement of the issue. In this regard the member
of parliament believes that Armenia should commend the efforts of
international organizations, the world, centers of power for the
settlement of the Karabakh conflict.
Mher Shahgeldyan particularly emphasized that the authors of these
efforts exclude application of force, which favors the stance of
Armenia.

Better Conditions For Doctors in Regions

BETTER CONDITIONS FOR DOCTORS IN REGIONS
Lragir.am
07 April 06
During the presentation of the World Health Organization Report on
Human Resources on April 7 in Yerevan Minister of Health Norayr
Davidyan announced that alumni of the state medical universities will
be seconded to work in the regions. `This refers to students studying
on state scholarship. It will increase the flow of doctors to the
regions of the country.’ Norayr Davidyan said the shortage of doctors
is especially felt in border and mountainous areas. He said the
Ministry of Health of Armenia has worked out a program of sending
specialists to work in the regions. The program is implemented
currently and involves providing better conditions for doctors working
in far regions: high salary, allowances, accommodation.
From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

USA wants to see defence minister next Armenian leader – agency

USA wants to see defence minister next Armenian leader – agency
Iravunk, Yerevan
7 Apr 06
Text of report by Armenian newspaper Iravunk on 7 April According to
our source, efforts are under way to bolster the positions of Defence
Minister Serzh Sarkisyan and the American authorities are behind this
plan. The White House sees him as a politician who is capable of
resolving the issues that worry the USA, in particular the Nagornyy
Karabakh conflict. But, as the source says, Serzh Sarkisyan is
nowadays more concerned about the deterioration of his relations with
Russia and with his former patron [Russian Defence Minister] Sergey
Ivanov.
It cannot be ruled out that the USA will assume the role of a mediator
and try to strengthen and deepen Sarkisyan’s relations with Moscow.
Incidentally, a reduction in the price of the Russian gas may become a
way to boost Serzh Sarkisyan’s authority.
From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Russia’s gas giant denies buying Iran-Armenia gas pipeline

Russia’s gas giant denies buying Iran-Armenia gas pipeline
Arminfo
7 Apr 06

Yerevan, 7 April: Gazprom has refused to take the Iran-Armenia gas
pipeline. The Gazprom open-type joint-stock company has corrected the
report on the 25-year agreement signed by the Armenian government
which the company’s public relations department published earlier. The
agreement defines strategic principles of cooperation in gas and
energy projects in Armenia.
The provisions regarding to the Iran-Armenia gas pipeline have been
fully omitted from the new version of the press release which has been
posted on Gazprom’s official website. The initial version of the press
release, sent to the mass media on 6 April, said that Gazprom will
take the ArmRosgazprom closed-type joint stock company from the
Armenian government, including a 40-kilometer section of the Iran
-Armenia gas pipeline and the fifth energy unit of the Razdan power
plant, under the agreement. It also said that the Armenian government
will give ArmRosgazprom the functions of the project owner of the
construction of the second section of the Iran-Armenia gas pipeline,
which is 197 km long.
The new version of the document only mentioned taking the fifth energy
unit of the Razdan power plant from the Armenian government.
From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Millennium Challenge Co Signs Five Year, $235 Mil Compact w/Armenia

Millennium Challenge Corporation Signs Five Year, $235
Million Compact with Armenia
PRESS RELEASE
Contact: 202-521-3850
eMail: [email protected]
For Immediate Release
March 27, 2006
Washington, D.C. – Today, in a signing ceremony at the State
Department’s Benjamin Franklin room, Chief Executive Officer of the
Millennium Challenge Corporation, Ambassador John Danilovich and
Armenia’s Minister of Finance and Economy, Vardan Khachatryan signed a
$235.65 million Compact between MCC and the Republic of Armenia. MCC
Chair Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice officiated and witnessed the
signing. She was joined by Armenia’s Foreign Minister Vartan
Oskanian.
Over one million Armenians, about 35 percent of the population, live
in rural areas and are dependent on semi-subsistence
agriculture. Farmers operate on small plots of land and are
constrained by poor roads, inadequate irrigation and an
under-developed market economy. To overcome these constraints,
Armenia’s Millennium Challenge Compact aims to reduce rural poverty
through a sustainable increase in the economic performance of the
agricultural sector. The Compact consists of two investments: a Rural
Road Rehabilitation Project and an Irrigated Agriculture Project. The
program will directly impact 75% of the rural population and is
expected to significantly increase the annual incomes of rural poor.
`I congratulate the people of Armenia for developing a results-focused
and transformational program that will improve the lives of the poor,’
said MCC CEO John Danilovich. `MCC assistance will be used to
rehabilitate roads needed for Armenians living in rural areas to
access social services such as healthcare and markets to sell their
products. The Compact also includes funding for projects that will
increase the productivity of farm households through improved water
supply, higher yields, higher-value crops, and a more competitive
agricultural sector. Armenia is a valued partner and we look forward
to supporting their efforts to build a better life for all Armenians.’
Ambassador Danilovich added, `Continued eligibility for Millennium
Challenge Account funds depends on adherence to our indicators
measuring performance in ruling justly, investing in people, and
encouraging economic freedom. MCC will continue to monitor Armenia’s
policy performance in these three categories throughout the life of
the Compact.’
Since its establishment in 2004, MCC has signed Compacts totaling more
than $1.5 billion with eight nations: Madagascar, Honduras, Cape
Verde, Nicaragua, Georgia, Benin, Vanuatu, and Armenia. MCC is also
actively engaging with other eligible countries in Compact
negotiations.
Launched by President Bush in 2004, the MCA is an innovative approach
to development assistance that recognizes sound policies and good
governance are critical to poverty reduction and economic growth in
developing countries.
###
Millennium Challenge Corporation (MCC), a U.S. government corporation
designed to work with some of the poorest countries in the world, is
based on the principle that aid is most effective when it reinforces
good governance, economic freedom, and investments in people

EU new neighborhood program plan to be launched in Armenia in 2007

ARKA News Agency, Armenia
April 7 2006
PLAN OF ACTION UNDER EU NEW NEIGHBORHOOD PROGRAM TO BE LAUNCHED IN
ARMENIA IN 2007
Yerevan, April 7. /ARKA/. A plan of action under the EU New
Neighborhood Program is to be launched in Armenia early in 2007, RA
Deputy Minister of Trade and Economic Development Tigran Davtyan told
reporters. This is a real step toward Armenia’s integration into the
EU.
According to him, the document includes the plan of action in various
fields of economic, political and social life of Armenia.
Davtyan pointed out that the negotiations over the plan of action for
Armenia under the EU New Neighborhood Program are nearing completion,
and about 90% of urgent issues have been settled.
According to Davtyan, the final text of the document will be prepared
before the end of 2006. The 1st round of negotiations was held in
Yerevan in November 2005, the 2nd round in Brussels on March 6, 2006,
when the final draft program of actions was elaborated. This draft is
expected to be made public late in April 2006. P.T. -0–
From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

BAKU: Evidence on phone talks between Azerbaijan, Armenia

Assa-Irada, Azerbaijan
April 7 2006
Evidence on phone talks between Azerbaijan, Armenia
Baku, April 6, AssA-Irada
The Ministry of Communications and Information Technologies has
enough information on phone talks between Azerbaijan and Armenia,
Minister Ali Abbasov has said.
Abbasov said the Ministry of National Security is monitoring the
conversations. He also confirmed that Internet users from both
countries are communicating via e-mails and electronic chat.
`It is extremely difficult to exercise control over this. However,
the needed facts have been submitted to the National Security
Ministry,’ Abbasov said.*
From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Strategic relations with Russia of much importance to Armenia

ITAR-TASS News Agency
TASS
April 6, 2006 Thursday 03:54 PM EST
Strategic relations with Russia of much importance to Armenia
by Yelena Protopopova
Strategic relations with Russia are now of special importance to
Armenia, holds Vartan Oskanyan, the Armenian foreign minister. “The
question of security is now the main question for Armenia, so it is
very important that we have strategic relations with Russia,” the
minister said. “We treasure good relations with Russia,” he said.
During a conversation with students of Moscow State University of
International Relations, (University – MGIMO), the minister also
touched upon railway transport communication with Russia. He said the
opening of the Abkhazian stretch of the Russian-Georgian railway to
traffic would be of positive importance for Armenia and Russia.
“With the opening of the Abkhazian stretch of the railway to
traffic, trade turnover between Armenia and Russia will increase,”
the minister said.
From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Yerevan exchanges a pipeline for gas

Agency WPS
What the Papers Say Part B (Russia)
April 7, 2006 Friday
YEREVAN EXCHANGES A PIPELINE FOR GAS
by Alexei Krashakov
Gazprom succeeded in ousting dangerous rivals from Armenia; Armenia
reached agreement with Gazprom yesterday on an acceptable gas price
for the next three years. Yerevan will buy gas from Russia at $110
per thousand cubic meters until January 1, 2009. The Razdan
Thermoelectric Power Plant and the Iran-Armenia pipeline became
bargaining chips in the deal.
Armenia reached agreement with Gazprom yesterday on an acceptable gas
price for the next three years. Yerevan will buy gas from Russia at
$110 per thousand cubic meters until January 1, 2009. As we
predicted, the Razdan Thermoelectric Power Plant and the Iran-Armenia
pipeline became bargaining chips in the deal. Gazprom’s subsidiary
Armgazprom will buy before the end of the year the fifth bloc of the
Razdan Plant and the initial part of the 40-kilometer Iran-Armenia
gas pipeline. It will build the second part of the gas pipeline (197
kilometers long) afterwards.
Gazprom and RAO Unified Energy Systems have finally got what they
wanted all along. In 2005, the Russian companies decided to form a
consortium to participate in the project but were ousted from it as
soon as Gazprom announced that gas tariffs might be raised. The
Armenian leadership chose Iranian companies Sanir and MAR then.
According to Energy Minister Armen Movsisjan, in late 2005 these
companies were told to go ahead with completion of construction of
the power plant and the Armenian part of the gas pipeline. The
Iranian companies were supposed to invest $150 million in the
projects and have them completed within two years.
Needless to say, this turn of events was not what the Russian gas
monopoly wanted. The Iran-Armenia gas pipeline poses a direct threat
to Gazprom, because it could eventually become the principal pipeline
for gas export from Iran to Europe via Armenia, Georgia, and Ukraine.
“That’s theory of course, but Russia could not afford to dismiss it
out of hand,” said Valery Nesterov of Troika Dialog. “Iranian gas
fields constitute a latent threat to Gazprom.” Gazprom made it move
and scored a major victory.
Nesterov maintains that the terms of the deal benefit both Russia and
Armenia.
Source: Nezavisimaya Gazeta, April 7, 2006, p. 3
Translated by A. Ignatkin
From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Armenia to Get a Discount On Russian Natural Gas

The New York Times
April 7, 2006 Friday
Late Edition – Final
Armenia to Get a Discount On Russian Natural Gas
By ANDREW E. KRAMER
In a settlement of the latest natural gas dispute in the former
Soviet Union, Armenia will receive natural gas supplies from Russia
at prices well below European averages until 2009. In exchange, it
will surrender a small but crucial section of gas pipeline to Russia.
Armenia will pay $110 for each 1,000 cubic meters of gas, about half
the European average but twice what the country pays now, the Russian
monopoly Gazprom said in a statement on Thursday.
Gazprom in turn will buy a 24-mile section of pipe connecting Armenia
to Iran, which other than Russia is the only plausible source of
energy supplies in the region. Also under the deal Gazprom, through a
joint venture, was granted a concession to build a larger second
pipeline along this route.
In financial terms, the deal is considered small by the usual
standards of the huge Gazprom, but it could have strategic importance
as the company seeks to maintain its dominance in Eurasian natural
gas trading. The gas sales are expected to bring some $187 million
annually.
The pipeline route from Iran through Armenia that Gazprom now
controls with its 24-mile section has been discussed by energy
analysts as a possible export corridor for Iranian gas to Europe.
”Gazprom is strengthening its competitive advantages in the
republics,” Roman G. Elagin, an oil and gas analyst at Renaissance
Capital, a brokerage firm in Moscow brokerage, said.
Armenia, he said, effectively bargained away its future prospects for
energy sources in return for cheaper prices now. ”Gazprom is the
only supplier of gas to Armenia,” he said. ”Armenia could try to
diversify its supply. But with control of this pipeline, Gazprom now
controls the competitors’ supply.”
A spokesman for the Armenian Embassy in Moscow declined to comment on
Thursday.
With the deal, Gazprom, the world’s largest producer of natural gas,
is operating at the intersection of corporate interest and
geopolitics, as it has in demanding price increases from other former
Soviet republics.
Armenia has been a traditional ally of Russia in the Caucasus. Moscow
was seen as favoring Armenia during its war with neighboring
Azerbaijan in the late 1980’s and early 90’s over the independence of
the ethnic Armenian enclave of Nagorno-Karabakh. The war ended in a
cease-fire but no peace agreement; the lingering animosity prevents
Armenia from receiving energy exports of Azerbaijan, an oil-producing
country.
With February’s talks on Nagorno-Karabakh unavailing and diplomatic
efforts in fits and starts, Russia’s support is considered crucial
for Armenia.
That leaves Iran, with the world’s second-largest natural gas
reserves after Russia, as a source of energy for Armenia in addition
to the Russians.
A Gazprom spokesman declined to explain why the company had
negotiated to purchase the pipe section leading from Iran. Gazprom’s
stated policy is to control gas pipelines for the distribution of its
own products. The spokesman, though, said that Gazprom did not intend
to block possible Iranian gas exports.
”Why would we buy a pipe and turn it off?” the spokesman said.
Still, Gazprom’s attempts to control the export pipes of potential
competitors have precedent in earlier deals.
In Ukraine, Belarus and Georgia, Gazprom has leveraged gas prices in
attempts to buy pipelines for its own gas, with partial success only
in Belarus. To the east, in Turkmenistan, Uzbekistan and Kazakhstan,
Gazprom has gained operational control of the main Central
Asia-Center pipeline, and it controls lines crossing Russia, thus
holding blocking power over these potential competitors for exports
to Europe.
From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress