RPA Board Plans To Discuss Issue Of Electing Head Of Party’s Parliam

RPA BOARD PLANS TO DISCUSS ISSUE OF ELECTING HEAD OF PARTY’S PARLIAMENTARY FACTION

Noyan Tapan

Nov 10, 2008

YEREVAN, NOVEMBER 10, NOYAN TAPAN. The board of the Repulican Party
of Armenia (RPA) plans to discuss the issue of electing the head of
the parliamentary "RPA" faction at its sitting late November 10. This
position has been vacant since the appointment of the faction’s former
head Karen Karapetian as the chief of the RA presidential staff.

NT correspondent was informed by Edward Sharmazanov, member of "RPA"
faction, spokesman for the RPA (by the way, there were also rumors
about his candidacy in recent period) that it is impossible to speak
about candidates in advance as they will be nominated at the sitting
of the RPA board.

According to another NA deputy – member of RPA board, the most likely
candidate is the deputy chairman of RPA Galust Sahakian who headed
their faction in the National Assembly of the previous convocation
(2003-2007), as well as the parliamentary faction of "Unity" bloc
in 1999-2003.

http://www.nt.am?shownews=1009614

Public Relations And Information Center To Be Set Up

PUBLIC RELATIONS AND INFORMATION CENTER TO BE SET UP

Noyan Tapan

Nov 10, 2008

YEREVAN, NOVEMBER 10, NOYAN TAPAN. At the November 6 sitting, the
RA government made a decision on creation of a Public Relations and
Information Center.

The main purposes of the center’s activities are to conduct studies
on public relations, transparency of state bodies, accessibility of
information, and process of information collection and dissemination,
to conduct general and thematic monitoring and analysis of the mass
media, as well as studies and monitoring of the mass media market,
to study international experience in public relations and information
sector and put forward proposals on legal regulation of the mass
media activities.

By the decision, the managerial authority over the Public Relations
and Information Center was reserved for the RA Presidential Staff.

http://www.nt.am?shownews=1009594

A Northern Neighbor Growls, and Azerbaijan Reassesses Its Options

A Northern Neighbor Growls, and Azerbaijan Reassesses Its Options

By SABRINA TAVERNISE
The New York Times
Published: October 22, 2008

BAKU, Azerbaijan ‘ This country has always had tricky geography. To its
north is Russia. To its south is Iran. And ever since the collapse of
the Soviet Union it has looked west, inviting American companies to
develop its oil reserves and embracing NATO.

Azerbaijan, a small, oil-rich country on the Caspian Sea, has balanced
the interests of Russia and the United States since it won its
independence from the Soviet Union. It accepts NATO training but does
not openly state an intention to join. American planes can refuel on
its territory, but American soldiers cannot be based here.

`Azerbaijan is doing a dance between the West and Russia,’ said Isa
Gambar, an Azeri opposition figure. `Until now, there was an unspoken
consensus. Georgia was with the West, Armenia was an outpost of Russia,
and Azerbaijan was in the middle.’

But with the war in Georgia, Russia burst back into the region,
humiliating Tbilisi and its sponsor, the United States, which issued
angry statements but was powerless to stop Russia’s advance. It was a
sobering sight for former Soviet states, and one that is likely to
cause countries like Azerbaijan to recalibrate their policies.

`The chess board has been tilted, and the pieces are shifting into
different places,’ said Paul Goble, an American expert on the region,
who teaches at the Azerbaijan Diplomatic Academy in Baku, the capital.
`What looked balanced before does not look balanced now.’

A Western official said, referring to Azerbaijan: `Georgia was very
much a wake-up call. This is what the Russians can do and are prepared
to do. Georgia events underscored their vulnerability.’

Azerbaijan will be under more pressure from Russia when undertaking
energy contracts and pipeline routes that Russia opposes, said one
Azeri official, who spoke on the condition of anonymity because of the
delicacy of the matter. Officials from Russia’s gas monopoly, Gazprom,
on a trip here this spring, offered to buy Azerbaijan gas at European
prices, rather than at the former reduced rate. That offer, if the
Azeris chose to accept it, could sabotage a Western-backed gas pipeline
project called Nabucco.

Rasim Musabayov, a political commentator in Baku, said that under the
new conditions, many Azeris think that selling gas to Russia is not
such a bad idea.

New projects carry political risks, he said, and if Russia `will pay us
a price we agree on for our gas, why build something new?’

`You can’t have a foreign policy that goes against your geography,’ he
added. `We have to get along with the Russians and the Iranians.’

After the fall of the Soviet Union, Russia was weak, with a collapsed
economy and a scattered, inconsistent foreign policy. Azerbaijan used
that to its advantage. Now Russia is stronger and speaks in one voice,
and Azerbaijan has to be more careful in its relations with its big
neighbor.

Georgia is now so hostile to Russia that working with it as a partner
in the region is increasingly difficult, said Borut Grgic, chairman of
the Institute for Strategic Studies in Ljubljana, Slovenia, an expert
on Caspian energy infrastructure.

`Azerbaijan will never seek E.U.-NATO integration at the expense of
functional and working relations with Russia,’ he said. The Georgian
president, Mikheil Saakashvili, he said, `is making this balance
difficult to sustain.’

At no point in the crisis did Azerbaijan take a position that would
have made Moscow bristle. When the fighting began, Azerbaijan appealed
to Russia, asking it to preserve its infrastructure in Georgia ‘ a
port, an oil terminal and a pipeline. Moscow agreed, according to
Azerbaijan’s foreign minister, Elmar Mammadyarov.

Azerbaijan helped European diplomats enter Georgia while it was under
attack, but when the leaders of Ukraine, the Baltics and Poland
traveled to Tbilisi to express solidarity with the Georgians, the Azeri
president, Ilham Aliyev, did not make the trip. And after Vice
President Dick Cheney visited Baku in September, Mr. Aliyev flew
immediately to Moscow for talks with the Russians.

But the issue closest to this country’s heart is that of
Nagorno-Karabakh, an area in its southwest where Armenian separatists
formed an independent enclave in the 1990s. For years, Azerbaijan has
tried, through international mediation, to reclaim the territory and
allow Azeri refugees who fled to return.

Since the war this summer, the Russians seem to have grabbed the
initiative. President Dmitri A. Medvedev, on a trip to Yerevan,
Armenia, this week, said Russia was pushing for a meeting between the
Azeri and Armenian presidents.

`I hope such a meeting will take place in Russia,’ he said, Reuters
reported.

Russia has traditionally backed the Armenians, but times are changing.

`One of the positive effects of the Georgian crisis is that the Kremlin
will try to show that they are not crazy guys,’ an Azeri official said.
`That they can be good neighbors, too.’

The Russian attitude toward Azerbaijan, one Azeri official said, was
that `the U.S. has come to your country and is plundering your natural
resources, but not giving you any support. Why not go with us instead?’

Mr. Cheney, on his visit to Baku, also pledged to redouble efforts,
causing some Azeris to remark ruefully that it took him eight years to
make the trip.

Ali Hasanov, an official in Azerbaijan’s presidential administration,
said concrete progress would win many points in Baku.

`If a big country takes a position, stands on the side of unbroken
territory, we will follow its interests,’ he said.

Chief epidemiologist concludes recent events

Panorama.am

17:35 08/11/2008

CHIEF EPIDEMIOLOGIST CONCLUDES RECENT EVENTS

Today the chief epidemiologist of Armenia Ara Asoyan expressed his
view points on the recent disease revealed in Vanadzor and
Alaverdi. According to him the reason of the disease was that drinking
water and irrigation water were mixed. In the aftermath of the event
26 people in Alaverdi and 150 in Vanadzor suffered the disease, and
totally 300 `light’ cases were fixed who were cured at hope.

Regarding the hypothesis that milk and milk products imported from
China could be a source of disease, the chief epidemiologist said that
the current version is excluded as there the kidneys were infected and
death cases registered.

Source: Panorama.am

BAKU: Elnur Aslanov: "I Am Confident That The New US Administration

ELNUR ASLANOV: "I AM CONFIDENT THAT THE NEW US ADMINISTRATION WILL NOT SPOIL THE STRATEGIC PARTNERSHIP WITH AZERBAIJAN AND TURKEY"

Today.Az
litics/48774.html
Nov 5 2008
Azerbaijan

Day.Az interview with Elnur Aslanov, chief of department of political
analysis and information of the presidential administration of
Azerbaijan.

– What do you expect from election of Barak Obana as a new president
of the United States in the sense of the further development of
US-Azerbaijani relations?

– First of all, we congratulate the US people with the successful
conduction of elections. These elections were quite intensive and it
was the most durable electoral process in the US history.

On the whole, the United States and Azerbaijan maintain close relations
of strategic partnership. We are cooperating on a number of questions
from energy security to the issues of political and military and
political cooperation. I sincerely hope and even confident that
these relations will further develop intensively and fruitfully for
the development of the two countries and for establishment of closer
ties between our publics.

The experience of construction of a democratic and secular state,
which the western world has, is very important and interesting for
Azerbaijan. At the same time we want these democratic values and ideas,
the values of a secular society, we are now forming, to respond to
our national interests and our mentality.

We are confident that our relations will develop and they will be
more effective and fruitful.

– During his electoral campaign B.Obama stated the intention to
recognize the so-called "Armenian genocide" in case he is elected
the US President. Do you think his administration will take this step
or these statements can be considered a traditional PR-action of the
Democratic Party?

– On the whole, the world is practicing the methods, according to
which the candidates may do different statements about what they are
going to do or wish to do in the future.

But at the same time I sincerely hope and I am confident that
the relations between the two countries (this implies not only
relations between USA and Azerbaijan but also US and Turkey, the
strategic partner of the United States) will not be caused a damage,
contradicting to the interests of strategic partnership.

– Is the new administration of the White House expected to take any
additional initiatives in the resolution of the Karabakh conflict?

– We hope that the Karabakh resolution will be reached on the
basis of the peaceful settlement of the conflict. It is certainly
difficult to speak about expectations on this issue, as the new US
president was elected just several hours ago. But we hope that the US
administration will spare no efforts for the fair peaceful resolution
of the conflict on the basis of the main principle of international
law – the territorial integrity of the state.

– The United States still preserve some discriminative decisions
towards Azerbaijan, such as amendment 907 and Jackson-Venick
amendment. Can we expect elimination of these amendments from Obama’s
administration?

Jackson-Venick’s amendment is absurd in the contemporary world. We
do hope that it will be fully annulled, as it does not work. As for
amendment 907, definite changes are introduced to its execution every
year. We hope and we believe that it will be annulled which will
have a positive influence on the effective development of relations
between our states.

http://www.today.az/news/po

According To Aram G. Sargsian, For Armenia, It Is Beneficial To Solv

ACCORDING TO ARAM G. SARGSIAN, FOR ARMENIA, IT IS BENEFICIAL TO SOLVE NAGORNO KARABAKH PROBLEM NOT IN POLITICAL, BUT IN LEGAL FIELD

Noyan Tapan

Nov 5, 2008

YEREVAN, NOVEMBER 5, NOYAN TAPAN. There are serious contradictions in
the Declaration on Nagorno Karabakh settlement signed by the Presidents
of Russia, Armenia, and Azerbaijan on November 2 in Moscow. As Aram
Sargsian, the Chairman of the Democratic Party of Armenia (DPA),
stated at the November 5 press conference, it is the formulation on
political settlement that first of all causes anxiety, as for Armenia,
it is beneficial to solve the Nagorno Karabakh problem not in the
political, but in the legal field.

According to Aram Sargsian’s estimation, the Armenian side does
not have the doctrine on Nagorno Karabakh settlement to present
to the world what solution to the conflict it proposes. Besides,
the Armenian side should be the instigator and not adopt a passive
position to achieve problem settlement. "The Armenian side should
present its proposals to the world and renounce that principle of
political settlement. After all, we should have a position of our
own, which the great powers should also take into consideration,"
A. Sargsian said. At the same time he said that by that Declaration
NKR was left out of the negotiations process, while the issue will not
be solved unless the Artsakh authorities take part in the negotiations.

A. Sargsian also said that DPA is against returning territories. "The
matter regards our state and national security. No matter how much
Azerbaijan threatens, all the same the return is impossible, it is
a very dangerous phenomenon and contains great shocks," he emphasized.

http://www.nt.am?shownews=1009462

Cyprus House President Wants Turkey Held Responsible For Talk Deadlo

CYPRUS HOUSE PRESIDENT WANTS TURKEY HELD RESPONSIBLE FOR TALK DEADLOCK
by Gregoris Savva

Financial Mirror
Nov 3 2008

President of the House of Representatives and President of the
Democratic Party (DIKO) Marios Garoyian believes the Greek Cypriot
side should move in a preemptive manner so that, in the event efforts
to reach a settlement of the Cyprus problem fail, it is clear which
side is responsible, and furthermore prevent efforts to upgrade the
puppet regime in the Turkish occupied areas of the Republic.

In an interview with CNA, Garoyian referred to a "plan B" proposed by
DIKO to the National Council, the top advisory body to the President
of the Republic on the Cyprus problem. According to Garoyian, "plan
B" contains measures to make sure it is clear to the world that the
Greek Cypriot side made every possible effort to reach a settlement
of the Cyprus problem.

"Despite the earnest efforts of our side and the President of the
Republic, so far there is no proof that Turkey has abandoned its
well known intransigent and implacable stance. Of course, it is
too soon to assess and prejudge the course of events. However,
with the facts we have today, it appears that the Turkish side is
not behaving or giving prospects or possibilities for results in this
dialogue. Hopefully things will change. When we say we want a solution
of the Cyprus problem that will be functional, viable and just, the
soonest possible, we mean it and all our proposals, approaches and
behaviour comply with what we say," Garoyian pointed out.

He noted that the good will of the Greek Cypriot side was not enough
to reach a settlement and that the international community should
exert pressure on Turkey to comply with UN resolutions, international
law and the EU principles and values.

Garoyian said that, after the February 2008 presidential elections,
won by Demetris Christofias, certain decision-making centres are
impressed by the President’s initiatives and believe some of the
positions expressed by the Turkish side are worse than those presented
before 2004.

He pointed out that with the election of Demetris Christofias,
"a good impression has been made" but noted that this did not mean
that previous leaders had not done their utmost to reach a settlement.

"Indeed, despite our initiatives, despite the efforts of President
Christofias, it is clear that the Turkish side has not budged from its
positions and has not made any move forward. On the contrary, some of
its positions are worse than those presented before 2004. Therefore,
the problem is not our side. The problem is the Turkish side," he said.

Referring to "plan B", Garoyian said DIKO prepared and presented the
plan to the National Council because "we assessed the possible Turkish
policy, which does not leave room for Mr. Talat, even if he wanted to,
to make specific moves in substantive matters."

President Christofias and Turkish Cypriot leader Mehmet Ali Talat began
direct negotiations on September 3 in an effort to reach a settlement.

Garoyian explained that DIKO proposed "plan B" in order to
"preemptively inform the international community on the various
phases of the Cyprus problem, so that it could judge whether our
side’s proposals complied with international law, UN resolutions and
the EU principles and values, and if the Turkish proposals complied
with them."

He said DIKO maintains its position that the basis of a settlement
has not been clarified but still insists on a solution through
negotiations. "We want a functional and viable solution of the Cyprus
problem and not a wishy washy closure," Garoyian pointed out.

"If the dialogue collapses or things do not work out in the right
direction, we must have carried out all the necessary work so that
Turkey feels the burden of its own breach of faith and its own
implacable stance, the pseudo state is not upgraded and at the same
time our side has the outside testimony that it did everything humanly
possible on the basis of principles, on the basis of functional
proposals, on the basis of the reunification of the institutions,
the people and Cyprus," he said.

He added that "at the same time it must be clear that this process
did not bear fruit due to the Turkish stance and behaviour."

Garoyian noted that the key for a settlement is in Ankara and that
pressure must be exerted on Turkey to comply with the principles of
a Cyprus settlement.

Referring to the EU role in efforts to reach a settlement, Garoyian
said a solution is being sought in the context of the UN but since
the Republic of Cyprus is an EU member and Turkey is aspiring to join
the bloc, the role of the EU should be "creative and substantive,"
on the basis of EU principles and values.

"This is why we believe the EU has a role to play," Garoyian said,
adding that the result of the negotiations should comply with EU
principles.

Regarding parliamentary diplomacy, Garoyian said he is planning a
series of trips abroad, including the USA, Russia, China, Armenia,
Albania, Hungary, the Czech Republic, Ukraine, Moldavia, and African,
Central Asia and Arab countries, and pointed out the need for planning
so that the House may contribute to further strengthening the positions
of the Greek Cypriot side.

"Parliamentary diplomacy is a necessity today. The parliaments
in many countries are playing a very important role and indeed
many parliaments influence the decisions of their governments. We
believe that our parliament has the responsibility, the obligation,
the duty to do everything humanly possible on the basis of planning,
on the basis of a well prepared programme, so that we can contribute
to the efforts of the Government and promote the positions of our
side and at the same time open some roads, which we believe may be
in the interests of our cause," he said.

Garoyian noted that efforts were being made so that House committees
had more contacts abroad and memorandums were signed.

On the role of DIKO, which supported Demetris Christofias in the
second round of the presidential elections, Garoyian said "we will
continue to be creative and substantive," adding that "it is a sincere
and honorable relationship."

Regarding the European Parliament elections of March 2009, Garoyian
said the party would be taking its final decisions when the time comes.

"The issue of cooperation is always open. We are a party that wants
and pursues an open dialogue, an open discussion with all sides that
feel and believe they belong to the centre. DIKO will take its final
decisions when the specific time comes," he added.

The Situation Along The Contact Line Discussed At NKR President’s Of

THE SITUATION ALONG THE CONTACT LINE DISCUSSED AT NKR PRESIDENT’S OFFICE

armradio.am
29.10.2008 11:42

On 27 October President of the Nagorno Karabakh Republic Bako Sahakyan
met personal representative of the OSCE Chairman-in-Office, Ambassador
Andrzej Kasprzyk, Central Information Department of the Office of
the NKR President informed.

Issues related to the current situation along the line of contact
between NKR and Azerbaijan armed forces were discussed during the
meeting.

Horseman stabilized Celtics

Horseman stabilized Celtics
By Bob Ryan, Globe Columnist

Boston Globe
October 26, 2008

Harry Mangurian was a big man with the ponies. I really had no idea
just how big until he died last Sunday and the tributes came pouring
in.

I guess all you need to know is that he won the 2001 Eclipse Award of
Merit for his lifetime contributions to the sport of thoroughbred
racing. I learned how he was the leading North American breeder by
earnings four consecutive years (1999-2002), that he was the leading
breeder by individual stakes winners from 1999-2001, and that he was
twice recognized as the national Breeder of the Year (1998, 2000) by
the Thoroughbred Breeders and Owners Association.

And all I knew was that he owned a horse farm in Florida.

All of this is very interesting. To me, Harry Mangurian was the guy
who saved the Boston Celtics from being turned into the Anchorage
Iceboxes or Key West Keystone Kops by buying out John Y. Brown. If
that guy had maintained any kind of influence with the team, Red
Auerbach really would have gone to New York, Larry Bird would never
have signed here, and there is a very real possibility the Boston
Celtics would have ceased to exist.

So, yes, say a prayer for the man, or whatever it is you do to honor
the distinguished deceased. Harry T. Mangurian was a very important
figure in the history of Boston sports.

"That was a very dark and difficult time in the history of the
franchise," asserts Jan Volk, then the Celtics’ assistant general
manager and later, of course, the successor to Auerbach as GM. "I
think Harry Mangurian is underappreciated and under-recognized for who
he was and what he did for the team at that particular point in
time. Some of it was circumstantial, but he certainly provided a
necessary alternative to John Y."

"He was an owner at a very interesting time," said NBA commissioner
David Stern. "He had a colorful and interesting partner, and he was a
key component in holding that team together at a very difficult time."

The Mangurian money had come from a family furniture store in
Rochester, N.Y. Harry T. Mangurian Jr., born 1926, died 2008,
parlayed the money he made from the store into a merger with the
General Portland Cement Company. He had interests in banking, real
estate, and construction. He founded Drexel Investments Inc., a Fort
Lauderdale-based firm that constructed and sold 10,000 units in South
Florida.

He entered sports by buying into the Buffalo Braves, who were, for a
brief time, an important part of the fabric of life in Western New
York. He was John Y. Brown’s partner in the great team swap of 1978,
when Irv Levin bought the Braves from them and moved the franchise to
San Diego, with the two Buffalo owners assuming control of the
Celtics. The man who brokered that deal was a bright young league
counsel named David Stern.

John Y. Brown was the bombastic big mouth married to the Miss
America/CBS-TV personality, Phyllis George. Harry Mangurian was the
so-called "silent partner." (With John Y., there was no other
kind). He wasn’t exactly the loquacious type, but he had excellent
powers of observation, and he must have recognized what his partner
was doing to this historic franchise and knew only he could stop Brown
from destroying it.

Accordingly, he bought out Brown when the latter decided to run for
governor of Kentucky and was in firm control of the team when it came
time to sign the No. 1 draft pick from 1978 before a calendar year
expired, or the Celtics would lose the rights to Indiana State star
Larry Bird.

There is a longstanding urban myth that Harry muscled aside his GM to
take control of the Bird negotiations with agent Bob Woolf. Not quite,
says Volk.

"But he played a role, absolutely," Volk recalls. "He was the
owner. He had to play a role. He didn’t do any of the negotiations
that I know of. But it was the biggest rookie contract in the history
of the league and it had to be approved by the owner. He had to take
the risk on it."

"Horses," Bird says. "That’s the first thing I think of with Harry
Mangurian. I remember being in contract negotiations and he said he
couldn’t pay me that number because it was more than one of his horses
was worth. It gave me a good laugh."

Though Mangurian may have started out as John Y’s "silent partner,"
Volk quickly discovered after Mangurian took charge that he was now
working for a demanding and inquisitive owner.

"He was a very, very strong-minded guy," says Volk. "He was a
hands-on, active owner. He wanted to know everything that was going
on, and we would talk for hours every day, more than once."

"He was a complete gentleman," remembers Stern. "He was protective of
the Celtics and viewed them as under constant assault from the Lakers
and the Knicks."

Volk’s first major experience with Mangurian came when John
Y. personally traded three No. 1 picks that had been carefully
collected by Auerbach to the Knicks for Bob McAdoo.

"That deal was done without Red’s input or approval, and, in fact,
with Red’s disapproval," Volk explains.

That was bad enough. But when Mangurian discovered that as part of the
deal the Celtics would be assuming a rather large financial obligation
to McAdoo that carried over from the contract he had originally signed
with Buffalo, he said no.

"He said to me, ‘I don’t care how you get it done; that has to go
away,’ " Volk says. "He was decisive and he was smart."

He was probably the most stable owner the Celtics had known since
Walter Brown, and now we’re going back to the mid ’60s. He was the
owner when the Celtics went from 29 victories in 1978-79 to 61 in
1979-80 and then to a 14th championship the following year. He just
wasn’t in it for the long haul, selling the team to the triumvirate of
Donald Gaston, Alan Cohen, and Paul Dupee for $18 million in 1983 and
then heading down to Florida for good. That was more than 150 stakes
winners ago.

Messrs. Gaston, Cohen, and Dupee rode the NBA wave before selling to
the current ownership for $360 million. No one ever heard Harry
Mangurian complain. He liked his horses and he liked his life in
Florida. But it is too bad people forgot about him, because every
Celtics fan owes him thanks.

"He was the right guy at the right moment for the Celtics franchise,"
maintains Volk. "It’s fortuitous that he was there."

Save a little spot for him in your Winner’s Circle of Boston sports,
OK?

Bob Ryan is a Globe columnist. He can be reached at [email protected].

etball/celtics/articles/2008/10/26/horseman_stabil ized_celtics/

http://www.boston.com/sports/bask

Armenia, Albania Interested In Developing Bilateral Cooperation

ARMENIA, ALBANIA INTERESTED IN DEVELOPING BILATERAL COOPERATION

armradio.am
24.10.2008 12:53

Within the framework of his visit to Tirana, the Foreign Minister
of Armenia, Mr. Edward Nalbandian had a meeting with his Albanian
counterpart Lulzim Basha.

Edward Nalbandian anal Lulzim Basha expressed regret that having
a great potential of development, the relations between Armenia
and Albania are almost absent. The parties agreed to take steps
for fostering the bilateral cooperation in political, economic and
cultural spheres and forming a contractual-legal field between the
two countries.

During the meeting reference was made to a number of international
and regional issues, the opportunities of cooperation between the
two countries within international organizations.

Edward Nalbandian invited his Albanian counterpart to
Armenia. According to a bilateral agreement, the delegation of the
Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Albania will visit Armenia in the near
future to sign a number of agreements.

The same day the Deputy Prime Minister of Albania Genc Polo gave a
dinner in honor of Edward Nalbandian.

On October 23 the Armenian Foreign Minister met with the Prime Minister
of Albania Sali Berisha. During the meeting the parties discussed
the opportunities of establishing political, economic and cultural
cooperation between the two countries and the concrete steps to be
taken in this direction.