Brazil, Russia, India And China Form Bloc To Challenge US Dominance

BRAZIL, RUSSIA, INDIA AND CHINA FORM BLOC TO CHALLENGE US DOMINANCE
Tony Halpin in Yekaterinburg

The Times
June 17, 2009
UK

With public hugs and backslaps among its leaders, a new political
bloc was formed yesterday to challenge the global dominance of the
United States.

The first summit of heads of state of the BRIC countries — Brazil,
Russia, India and China — ended with a declaration calling for a
"multipolar world order", diplomatic code for a rejection of America’s
position as the sole global superpower.

President Medvedev of Russia went further in a statement with his
fellow leaders after the summit, saying that the BRIC countries wanted
to "create the conditions for a fairer world order". He described
the meeting with President Lula da Silva of Brazil, the Indian Prime
Minister, Manmohan Singh, and the Chinese President, Hu Jintao, as
"an historic event".

The BRIC bloc brings together four of the world’s largest emerging
economies, representing 40 per cent of the world’s population and
15 per cent of global GDP. The leaders set out plans to co-operate
on policies for tackling the global economic crisis at the next G20
summit in the US in September.

"We are committed to advance the reform of international financial
institutions so as to reflect changes in the world economy. The
emerging and developing economies m ust have a greater voice,"
they said.

The BRIC states also pledged to work together on political and economic
issues such as energy and food security. Co-operation in science and
education would promote "fundamental research and the development of
advanced techologies".

The declaration also satisfied a key Kremlin demand by calling for a
"more diversified international monetary system". President Medvedev is
seeking to break the dominance of the US dollar in financial markets
as the world’s leading reserve currency.

He favours the establishment of more regional reserve currencies,
including the Russian rouble and the Chinese yuan, to prevent economic
shocks. Mr Medvedev said: "The existing set of reserve currencies,
including the US dollar, have failed to perform their functions."

The declaration made no specific mention of the dollar, an indication
of China’s reservations about the Russian idea. Beijing holds almost $2
trillion in foreign currency reserves and a large portion of US debt.

The BRIC summit coincided with a two-day meeting of the Shanghai
Co-operation Organisation (SCO) in Yekaterinburg, which further
underlined the determination of Moscow and Beijing to assert themselves
against the West.

The SCO comprises Russia, China and the Central Asian states of
Kazakhstan, Uzbekistan, Tajikistan and Kyrgyzstan. Iran, Pakistan,
India and Mongolia have observer status and President Karzai of
Afghanistan attended the summit as a guest.

Iran’s embattled President, Mahmoud Amadinejad, defied protests at
home to attend the conference, where he hit out at the US and declared
that the "international capitalist order is retreating". But he beat
a swift retreat from the summit just hours after arriving, cancelling
a planned press conference to return to the crisis in his country.

China pledged $10 billion in loans to Central Asian countries
struggling in the economic crisis, adding financial muscle to its
leading role in the SCO.

Russia and China regard the organisation as a means to restrict US
influence in their Central Asian "back yard".

Mr Medvedev held separate meetings about the situation in Afganistan
with President Karzai and President Zardari of Pakistan, a clear signal
to President Obama not to ignore Russian interests as he presses US
policy in the region in the fight against the Taleban.

Artur Baghdasaryan Welcomes Cooperation With Georgia And Azerbaijan

ARTUR BAGHDASARYAN WELCOMES COOPERATION WITH GEORGIA AND AZERBAIJAN

/PanARMENIAN.Net/
16.06.2009 13:49 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Secretary of the National Security Council Artur
Baghdasaryan received a delegation headed by the Regional coordinator
of the South Caucasus Anti-Drug (SCAD) Programme Gregory Connor.

Presenting the program, Gregory Connor pointed that the purpose of
the program is to establish cooperation between the three countries
of the region – Armenia, Azerbaijan and Georgia.

Emphasizing the importance of fighting drugs, Arthur Baghdasaryan
emphasized that significance of cooperation between the countries of
the region. He informed that a working group had been established under
the program of arrangements for 2009-2011 of the Armenia-EU Action
Plan to work out a national anti-drug program. The sides agreed on
further cooperation in the framework of elaboration of the Armenian
national program.

Introduction Of VAT On Agriculture Products Makes Armenian Farming E

INTRODUCTION OF VAT ON AGRICULTURE PRODUCTS MAKES ARMENIAN FARMING ENTERPRISES TRANSIT TO SHADOW REGIME OF TRADE, AN EXPERT THINKS

ArmInfo
2009-06-16 15:01:00

ArmInfo. Introduction of VAT on agriculture products makes Armenian
farming enterprises transit to shadow regime of trade, Advisor
to Speaker of the Armenian Parliament for Economic Issues Tatoul
Manaseryan told journalists, Tuesday. To recall, since January 1,
2009, VAT in Armenia has covered producers of agriculture. "Without
the state support the work of farming enterprises is a fight for
survival. If VAT covers farmers, they will do nothing but work in
the shade",- Manaseryan said.

To recall, since 1 January 2009 producers of agriculture with annual
turnover of over 58,37 mln AMD have been subjected to VAT. In March
2009 the Armenian government launched a program on subsidizing the
interest on banking loans of farming enterprises economies. The state
budget is going to allocate 100 mln AMD for this prupose. Possible
expansion of the program is currently being considered.

Will March 1 Be Forgotten?

WILL MARCH 1 BE FORGOTTEN?

A1+
05:17 pm | June 15, 2009 | Politics

Leader of the New Times Party (NZhK) Aram Karapetyan thinks highly of
an amnesty. But he says it shouldn’t be viewed in a political context.

"From the legal point of view amnesty can be viewed in a political
context but when they say they are going to grant an amnesty upon
the request of the public, they already politicize the issue, which
is too bad," says the NZhK Leader.

Aram Karapetyan thinks that by dissolving the fact-finding group and
declaring an amnesty the authorities want to turn over the page of
the March 1 events.

Purchase And Sale Of Dollars Amounts To 50.7 Million And 47.5 Millio

PURCHASE AND SALE OF DOLLARS AMOUNTS TO 50.7 MILLION AND 47.5 MILLION RESPECTIVELY IN INTRABANK FOREIGN CURRENCY MARKET OF ARMENIA ON JUNE 8-12

Noyan Tapan
June 15, 2009

YEREVAN, JUNE 15, NOYAN TAPAN. 50 million 700 thousand 774 US dollars
were purchased by the banks at the average exchange rate of 369.48
drams per dollar and 47 million 483 thousand 870 dollars were sold
by the banks at the average exchange rate of 371.03 drams per dollar
in Armenia’s intrabank foreign currency market on June 8-12.

According to the PR Service of the Central Bank of Armenia, a sale
and purchase of 150 thousand dollars at the average exchange rate
of 317 drams per dollar were made in the intrabank market in the
indicated period.

Armenia/Azerbaijan: Lives frozen by conflict

ReliefWeb (press release)
June 14 2009

Armenia/Azerbaijan: Lives frozen by conflict

Source: Institute for War and Peace Reporting (IWPR)
Date: 12 Jun 2009
Special Report: Karabakh Refugees

With no sign of Karabakh stand-off being resolved, refugees will
remain in legal and economic limbo, their lives frozen by the frozen
conflict.

By Karine Ohanian in Stepanakert, Seymur Kyazimov in Baku and Gegham
Vardanian in Yerevan (CRS No. 497, 12-June-09)

Some 15 years have passed since a ceasefire was signed in the Nagorny
Karabakh conflict, yet the people forced out of their homes by the
fighting have still not found peace. They still suffer from
homesickness, poverty, discomfort and legal difficulties.

Refugees in Armenia, Azerbaijan, and Karabakh ` a majority-Armenian
territory that broke free of Azeri control with the collapse of the
Soviet Union, and unilaterally declared independence ` have told IWPR
how they feel abandoned in the student hostels, old hotels, schools
and offices they now call home.

"Refugees today would like to forget that they are refugees, but this
does not happen. What we lived through is unforgettable," Sarasar
Sarian, an Armenian from Baku now living in Karabakh, told IWPR.

Ethnic tensions between Armenians and Azeris boiled over in the late
1980s, when the Karabakh Armenians petitioned Moscow to detach their
region from Azerbaijan and cede it to Armenia. Reciprocal
demonstrations in Baku turned violent, leading to violence in Karabakh
and Armenia. Riots between the two communities forced hundreds of
thousands of civilians to flee each others’ countries, although at
that time they were all citizens of the Soviet Union.

With independence in 1991 came war. At the ceasefire in May 1994,
Armenian forces were occupying 14 per cent of Azerbaijan proper. At
least 800,000 Azeris had fled to Azerbaijan from Armenia and parts of
their own country seeking safety.

Since the war is not technically over, these people are still
desperately hoping one day they can return to their homes.

"The problems of the forced migrants will be resolved when they return
to their homes. The government of Azerbaijan is already drawing up a
‘Plan of Return’," said Sanan Huseynov, head spokesman for
Azerbaijan’s State Committee for the Affairs of Refuges and Forced
Migrants, in an interview with IWPR.

He said the government was building accommodation for the refugees,
and had set up whole villages in the Beylagan, Khajavend and Goranboy
regions.

"Forced migrants live in some military bases. There are around 11,000
middle schools, half of which are occupied by forced migrants. We also
plan to resettle {them] by 2011. In Baku, there are also some places
where forced migrants continue to live in terrible conditions. We are
building new houses," he said.

Before 1991, Baku was a city with a very large Armenian population,
many of whom spoke only Russian between themselves , a legacy of the
Russian language’s role as the lingua franca of the former Soviet
Union. As a rich city, with a booming oil industry, it had attracted
immigrants from all across the South Caucasus and beyond.

Fleeing Azerbaijan, these 500,000 Armenians primarily moved to Armenia
proper, which is to the west of Azerbaijan. Many of them settled in
Karabakh, however, where they took the place of Azeri refugees fleeing
eastwards.

Since Karabakh’s independence has not been recognised by other
countries, they are technically not refugees, but internally displaced
people, IDPs ` a source of considerable bitterness, since that cuts
them off from much international aid.

"In this question, the international community is guilty of double
standards. Because we live in an unrecognised republic, international
organisations ` like the Danish Refugee Council or the United Nations
High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR), do not recognised us as
refugees, and we do not have the right to receive international
humanitarian aid, which goes to refugees in Azerbaijan," said Sarian,
the Armenian refugee from Baku, who heads the Social Organisation of
Refugees of Karabakh.

"We are not opposed to them receiving help, but we have also lost our
homes and property. Can you really politicise this humanitarian aid?"

UNHCR, which has to help refugees while negotiating the complex legal
tangle of the South Caucasus’ frozen conflict, told IWPR that such
IDPs were the responsibility of the Azerbaijan government.

"For the IDPs from Nagorny Karabakh, it is clear that they have the
right to return to their places of origin with safety and dignity,"
said Arun Sala-Ngarm, UNHCR’s newly-appointed representative in
Azerbaijan, in an interview with IWPR.

Victoria Taliskhanova, UNHCR assistant programme officer, said the
agency was now focussed on trying to help refugees raise their
standard of living and access to services available to ordinary
citizens.

"The main aim of our donors is an improvement in forced migrants’
social conditions, the creation of conditions for education and work,
the prevention of sexual or gender-based violence, the support of
sport and education and so on," she said.

And on the Armenian side, the concerns are similar. Armenia and
Azerbaijan still lack diplomatic ties. Since Azerbaijan has been
supported by its ally Turkey, that has left Armenia in an almost total
blockade, effectively only with access through Georgia to the outside
world.

Some 360,000 of the half-million Armenians who fled Azerbaijan ended
up in Armenia, and most of them are poor even by the standards of
their impoverished country. A survey in 2007 showed that less than ten
per cent of them managed to take their wealth or property out of
Azerbaijan with them, most having fled just with what they were
carrying.

"The social problems of refugees are extremely urgent. The housing
problem is still not resolved, and added to that refugees can only
find work with great difficulty," said Nikolai Babajanian, himself a
Baku Armenian who lived in a hut for 14 years until he managed to
obtain a one-room flat.

The Yerevan government is steadily trying to build housing for
refugees, but the process is slow, and refugees are often forced to
find housing by themselves. In the first years of the influx, Armenian
arrivals were able to exchange their houses with Azeris going in the
opposite direction, and most of them are now relatively well-off.

"We have our own land, we farm livestock, we sow and we reap, and we
live okay," said Albert Dalakian, who fled Baku and has lived for 20
years now in an Azeri’s house in the village of Ranchpar.

"We don’t live badly," said his wife Sveta, "our children help
us. Just every year we have to spend 150,000 dram (around 400 dollars)
on fuel. If they solve the problem with gas, than life will be a lot
easier."

But they were the lucky ones. There are 1,000 refugees in the village,
and many of them did not manage to exchange their houses before they
left Baku. Larisa Astsaturova, for example, lives in very cramped
accommodation.

"I live with my mother and two children. I am waiting for the
government to provide some separate accommodation, but I already don’t
have much hope for this," she said.

She may be right not to hope. Analysts see no signs that the Karabakh
stand-off could be resolved any time soon, meaning that the refugees
in both countries ` and in the territory itself ` will remain in legal
and economic limbo, their lives frozen by the frozen conflict.

"Even if it does come to some kind of regulation, Armenians will never
believe that Azerbaijan will secure their security, independent of
whatever is written in the document," said David Petrosian, the
political commentator of the news agency Noyan Tapan.

"Most refugees are now citizens of Armenia, and I have not noticed
that they want to go back to Baku or Gyanja."

Many of the refugees recognise that their children have now grown up
in a different country to their own, meaning they would be unlikely to
feel comfortable even if they did go back.

"But us Baku people, we live in our own groups and we talk in Russian,
but my children speak Armenian, they study in Armenian schools and
universities, and talk amongst themselves in Armenian," said Gayane
Martirosian, who said she is now getting used to life in the village.

"If they did not remind us that we should speak in Armenian, we would
not even remember that we are refugees."

It would appear, therefore, that despite the insistence on all sides
that refugees have the legal right to return to their homes, the
people themselves are already getting used to the fact that they will
not now do so. Baku Armenians are gradually adapting to life in
Karabakh and in Armenia, while rural Azeris forced to live in Baku are
learning city ways.

"I still cook this cake we call ‘Baku’. A lot of people come and ask
for the recipe, but I don’t give it to them. I tell them that I am
always happy to cook this cake, but only a Baku woman can cook it
properly," said Svetlana Gharibian, who has lived in Karabakh since
1993 but who still gives her home address in Baku if you ask her where
she is from.

Karine Ohanian is a freelance journalist in Stepanakert and a
participant in IWPR’s Cross Caucasus Journalism Network. Seymur
Kyazimov is a freelance journalist in Baku. Gegham is the editor of
the website of Internews and a CCJN participant.

The terminology used in the article is chosen by the editors, not the
reporters

/db900SID/MUMA-7SZ8MG?OpenDocument

http://www.reliefweb.int/rw/rwb.nsf
www.echannel.am

Considerable resources for development of alternative tourism

Armenia has considerable resources for development of alternative
tourism

YEREVAN, JUNE 12, NOYAN TAPAN. Armenia has considerable resources for
the development of alternative tourism, and it is envisaged developing
spa, winter, scientific tourism and adventure travel in the next few
years, Head of the Tourism and Territorial Economic Development
Department of Ministry of Economy Mekhak Apresian said at the June 12
press conference.

In his words, the program of development of the city of Jermuk, which
is related to promotion of winter and spa tourism, has been submitted
to the government for discussion. Such programs are being prepared for
other cities as well.

He said that steps are being taken to form networks of hotels in marzes
(provinces), for which purpose money has been allocated from the Small
and Medium Entrepreneurship Development Fund. There are more than 40
hotels in Armenian marzes, 4 of which (in the city of Dilijan) received
a qualification category.

According to M. Apresian, with tha aim of developing tourism in rural
communities, seminars are organized for local residents, during which
they are informed how to turn part of their houses into hotels, what
business to do, etc.

Noting that Armenia has potential for scientific tourism, M. Apresian
said that it is necessary to restore this kind of tourism, while
Byurakan Observatory should be made its center.

The Georgian State Vs. Vahagn Chakhalyan: They Wish To Silence An Ar

THE GEORGIAN STATE VS. VAHAGN CHAKHALYAN: THEY WISH TO SILENCE AN ARMENIAN VOICE
Kristine Aghalaryan

2009/06/08 | 19:08

An interview with Patrick Arapian, member of the Paris Bar Association

Mr. Arapian, why do you wish to assume the defense of Vahagn
Chakhalyan, head of the United Javakhk Democratic Alliance? Aren’t
there capable lawyers from Armenia or Georgian attorneys? What will
be your role in the matter?

I’ve been handling the defense of minorities in the Caucasus for twenty
years. It’s only natural that I also defend Vahagn Chakhalyan. This is
the main reason. I’ve defended Kurdish, Yezidi and Georgian opposition
activists and the interests of Armenian opposition figures. I also
performed this activity up until the time of perestroika in the former
Soviet Union since I was well familiar with the region.

The defense of such rights is a relatively new field for Armenian
attorneys and it bears Soviet era influence. However, I am hopeful that
with Armenian lawyers at our side it will be a good experience for them
and that we will execute a successful defense. We are collaborating
with Ruben Sahakyan, President of the RoA Chamber of Advocates. It
will help to include young lawyers in such cases; so that they too
become skilled in the defense of political rights.

Regarding Georgia, during the past 10-15, there’s been such treatment
of national minorities exhibited that many have been forced to flee the
country. For example, there used to be 500,000 Armenians in Georgia;
today there are 300,000. Yezidis are also disappearing in Georgia as
a national minority.

In this context, it was very complicated for Georgian lawyers to
maintain their juridical independence and to assume the defense in
such cases.

I have a dual role in this case. The first role, as a traditional
lawyer, is to expose and condemn the negative treatment of national
minorities in Georgia. The second role is to attempt to defend the
rights of the Armenian minority in Georgia from the outside.

You live and work in France. In practical terms, how will you carry out
the dense of Vahagn Chakhalyan? This is not an exceptional case. There
are many cases in the world when individuals are tried for political
reasons and lawyers from other countries come to defend them. I have
experience in mediating in political processes and have received a
corresponding education. My only weak point in this case is that I
am Armenian.

At the same time, since I know the region well, I have an advantage
in this judicial proceeding. The fact that the discrimination faced
by national minorities in Georgia is condemned in Europe is a first
victory. For diaspora Armenians who have no information about the
plight of Armenians in Javakhk and Akhalkalak, this is already a
victory of sorts. As a result of this, the fact that international
organizations, for example the International Federation of Human
Rights, have condemned the actions of the Georgian authorities is
once again a victory.

Some in Javakhk believe that Vahagn Chakhalyan is being persecuted
for being a political activist; others as simply a settling of scores
for certain actions he did in the past. What is your view?

I am convinced that this is essentially a political affair. I was
able to see how Armenians live in Akhalkalak. I heard from numerous
witnesses as to what had happened. I met and spoke with the family
of the murdered policeman, Armen Grigoryan. The family has been cast
adrift and forlorn after the loss. The Georgian authorities have
refused to shed any light on the incident, even to the level where
the possibility exists to conclude that he committed suicide. I
wasn’t able to meet with the family of the other slain policeman,
Artur Berujanyan. However, I know that the family presented a serious
complaint to the local police. They do not agree with the version
of the incident put forth by the police. We really are dealing with
a political case here. The abuses of the police in the matter are
quite evident. The most terrible aspect of the case is that these were
Armenian policemen who were carrying out repressive measures against
fellow Armenians. The same police have now arrested Vahagn’s brother
and his brother’s friends. It’s a traditional method; terrorize
the Armenian community by waging an assault and by targeting the
youth. From this viewpoint I do not understand why in Armenia they
cannot more severely condemn the actions of an Armenian policeman.

In other words, what you are saying is that the Armenian side has
adopted a more conciliatory stance regarding the matter?

The reality is that in Armenia there is the perception that they are
treating the Javakhk Armenians as they do their compatriots; in the way
that the Armenians of the RoA assisted their brothers in Karabakh. The
Armenia authorities however are obliged to cooperate with the Georgians
due to the importance of Georgia for Armenian trade and transportation.

Mr. Arabian, it’s been about eight months this you applied to the
Georgian Ministry of Justice but they are refusing your requests to
officially register as Vahagn Chakhalyan’s defense attorney. What do
you plan to do if your appeal is also rejected?

As a lawyer, my struggle is a legal one. The legal process has many
stages. The first is an investigative stage, the second, the Court
of First Instance and the third is the Appeals Court. The Cassation
Court follows and then the case is sent to the European Court of Human
Rights. The presence of Armenians in Javakhk is much older than this
process. We must never forget that a man has wound up in prison and
that one family is being repressed.

Did the protest demonstration outside the Georgian Embassy in Paris
yield any results?

In my view it was a great success. For the first time in the diaspora,
Armenians decided to say "no" to the Georgian authorities. It
was definitely a political protest. We have never seen Georgians
protesting outside an Armenian Embassy. Georgians residing in Armenia
have never had any problems while Armenians in Georgia faced problems
of a national nature. One need only look at the problem of Armenian
churches. There is not one group of Armenians that isn’t being
terrorized or repressed. What is being threatened in Georgia is the
Armenian national identity. For some, the protest was a ray of hope,
for others, a political protest of the first order.

Have you ever been refused the right to defend a certain individual?

This is the first such case of an international lawyer going to Georgia
and being refused the right to legally defend a client. As a rule,
opposition activists in Georgia flee the country and their rights
are defended outside.

What levers can be pulled in order to influence the Georgian
authorities? What measures will you be taking? This is a very important
issue for me. It is one thing when a lawyer steps forward to defend
an individual’s rights. It is his work and profession. Clearly, in
this case, we are dealing with the issue involving Armenian-Georgian
relations. It must be defined on the level of political officials
and not by attorneys. The Georgians must be assured of the position
of Armenians in Armenia. They don’t want to face a situation as they
did with the Abkhaz and Ossetian people. This is one of the reasons
why there is repression against the Armenian community as a national
minority. The Armenian side must make the Georgians understand that
they cannot oppress the Armenian community and that the two peoples
must live side by side in Georgia in peace and prosperity.

In your view, what are the most glaring violations in the Chakhalyan
case that can substantiate the political persecutions carried out
by the Georgian authorities and that can lead to results in the
European Court?

These include the absence of any investigation and ballistic testing
of the guns, not hearing witness testimony and assaults on the rights
of the defense. These are the three pivotal arguments of the defense.

To date, what have been the shortcomings of the defense team?

The defense was organized but the team wasn’t aware of such political
repression. The defense team didn’t explore the issue in the full
context of minority rights in Georgia. Today, the defense is more
united in that sense.

Recently, they beat Vahagn but he refused to name names. Why?

I’ve been a lawyer for more than twenty-five years. I make the
prison rounds on a weekly basis. There’s a particular reality within
prison walls. If a prisoner condemns what happens to him, it is very
important and is seen as a sign of bravery and defiance. Prison is
itself a form of repression. Anyone winding up in prison would do
well not to make enemies.

According to the Georgian Human Rights Ombudsman Sozar Subari,
Vahagn Chakhalyan was facing a thirty year sentence for the charges
levied against him but he received a ten year sentence. Is Subari
exaggerating the point or can other interpretations be given?

What is unusual in this Georgian process is that we are faced with a
constantly changing set of charges. At one point the charge is arms
possession and then they present political charges. In dealing with
the Georgian authorities we are faced with a scenario in which they
want to silence the Armenian voice within the span of ten years. From
the start, Georgia’s Ombudsman has been supporting us because the
violations are so glaring he had no other choice but to condemn
them. In the context of Georgian reality, I would say that Subari
has exhibited courage.

Knowing the situation in Javakhk and being appraised of the case,
I am convinced that Vahagn is totally innocent. The only charge
against him to which I agree is the fact that he is Armenian.

How do you see the case winding up? From a legal point of view is
there a realistic basis on which to apply to the European Court of
Human Rights and win the case there?

The slogan of the opposition in Armenia, "struggle, struggle until
the end", is well-known in Europe. I would adopt that slogan in
this matter since the struggle of Armenians in Georgia will not end
today. It is a long-term struggle.

Of course there is every possibility to win the case in the European
Court. Emphasis must be placed on all the violations that have been
committed during the judicial process.

http://hetq.am/en/politics/p-arapyan/

Armenia’s Prime Minister For Opening Armenian-Turkish Border

ARMENIA’S PRIME MINISTER FOR OPENING ARMENIAN-TURKISH BORDER

/PanARMENIAN.Net/
06.06.2009 14:08 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Armenia’s prime minister Tigran Sargsyan made a
speech in support to opening of the Armenian-Turkish border. Delivering
a lecture "Crisis as an opportunity" to young professionals in
Yerevan, he particularly mentioned, that Armenia currently is too
dependent on Georgia. "2/3 of our foreign turnover is carried out via
Georgia, transit rates are too high and we can settle that question
at all. Cargo delivery from any country to Poti or Batumi is twice
chipper than the delivery from those ports to Armenia. High cost of
transportation negatively impacts Armenian business. In this regard
opening of the Armenian-Turkish border can positively affect our
economy. Though, we do not expect wonders, but the level of economic
safety of Armenia will rise," Tigran Sargsyan said.

U.S. Assistant Secretary To Visit Armenia

U.S. ASSISTANT SECRETARY TO VISIT ARMENIA

A1+
11:41 am | June 05, 2009

Politics

Dr. Philip Gordon, Assistant Secretary for European and Eurasian
Affairs, will travel to the South Caucasus next week, visiting
Armenia on June 9. The purpose of the visit is to discuss regional
and bilateral issues. During his visit, Dr. Gordon will meet with
government officials, civil society representatives, and other local
figures. Following his trip to Armenia, Dr. Gordon will visit Georgia
and Azerbaijan.

This is Dr. Gordon’s first visit to the South Caucasus as Assistant
Secretary. He assumed office on May 15, 2009, replacing Daniel
Fried. Before joining the State Department, Dr. Gordon was a Senior
Fellow from 2000-2009 at the Brookings Institution, in Washington, DC,
where he focused on European and U.S. foreign policy issues. Prior to
joining Brookings, Dr. Gordon served as Director for European Affairs
at the National Security Council in the Clinton Administration.