Sargsyan evaded an expression of clear & firm support of Moscow

WPS Agency, Russia
DEFENSE and SECURITY (Russia)
September 5, 2008 Friday

IF

by Igor Glanin

PRESIDENT OF ARMENIA EVADED AN EXPRESSION OF CLEAR AND FIRM SUPPORT OF
MOSCOW’S ACTIONS IN THE CAUCASUS; Russia is seeking support for its
actions in the Caucasus from the military-political alliance of CIS
countries.

The Russian authorities continue diplomatic efforts to secure support
of their actions in the Caucasus and the recognition of Abkhazia and
South Ossetia as sovereign states. The efforts these days are focused
on the military-political CIS Collective Security Treaty Organization,
a structure that has never given any reason to question its loyalty to
Russia so far.

Dmitry Medvedev received President of Armenia, Serj Sargsjan. Armenia
is about to become CIS Collective Security Treaty Organization
chair-in-office, and Russia intends to put support of its recent
actions in the Caucasus on the agenda of the next summit. Russian
diplomatic and military circles even allowed for the membership for
Abkhazia and South Ossetia in the CIS Collective Security Treaty
Organization at one point, but this development requires their
recognition by all members first.

The Russian president pointed out that this was his first meeting with
the president of Armenia after the Georgian aggression against South
Ossetia. Medvedev said he wanted pressing matters of international
magnitude and situation in the Caucasus discussed and asked for
Sargsjan’s opinion on the matter.

The visitor said he had already discussed the matter with Medvedev
over the phone. Sargsjan offered condolences in connection with the
deaths of Russian nationals and peacekeepers and wished Medvedev rapid
dealing with the humanitarian catastrophe in South Ossetia and its
consequences.

Sargsjan barely acknowledged the matter of Armenian-Russian economic
cooperation and concentrated instead on the forthcoming summit of the
CIS Collective Security Treaty Organization in Moscow. The visitor
suggested "advancement" of the Armenian-Russian relations by all means
possible including within the framework of the CIS Collective Security
Treaty Organization but never said anything that could be interpreted
as support of Russia in the matter of Georgia.

Medvedev could only say that countries of the CIS Collective Security
Treaty Organization would "formulate their positions" during the
summit in Moscow.

Source: Vremya Novostei, September 3, 2008, p. 2

ANKARA: Gul Extends Olive Branch To Turkey’s Last ‘Enemy’

GUL EXTENDS OLIVE BRANCH TO TURKEY’S LAST ‘ENEMY’

Today’s Zaman
Sept 5 2008
Turkey

President Abdullah Gul was welcomed warmly in the central Anatolian
province of Sivas during a visit on Thursday.

President Abdullah Gul has finally ended a guessing game on whether
he will accept an invitation from his Armenian counterpart, Serzh
Sarksyan, and announced that he will watch a World Cup qualifying game
between the Turkish and Armenian national teams in Yerevan on Saturday.

Given the current status of relations with Armenia — there have
been no formal ties between the two neighbors since 1993 — it was
no surprise that it took some time for Gul to decide whether to go
to Armenia. Though officials are trying to play down impact the visit
will have on relations that have been on ice for more than a decade,
expectations are high that it will be a huge leap in restoring dialogue
with Armenia, the last "enemy neighbor."

Over the past decade, Turkey has turned long-standing rivalries
with Greece, Iran and Syria into cooperation. Gul, the first Turkish
president ever to visit Armenia since it declared independence from
the Soviet Union in 1991, will meet with Sarksyan for about an hour
at the Armenian presidential palace ahead of the match in Yerevan’s
Hrazdan Stadium. Minutes before the two leaders head for the stadium,
Gul will break his Ramadan fast at a dinner hosted by Sarksyan. He
will return after watching the game.

"We believe this match will be instrumental in removing the barriers
blocking rapprochement between the two peoples with a common history
and prepare new ground," a statement on the president’s official Web
site said on Wednesday. "We hope this will be an opportunity for the
two peoples to understand each other better," it said.

Turkish officials say three issues will be raised by the Turkish side
during the meeting: a Turkish proposal to create a Caucasus Stability
and Cooperation Platform, a mechanism that will also include Armenia;
the problematic issue of Armenian occupation in the Azerbaijani
territory of Nagorno-Karabakh; and a Turkish call for establishing
a joint team of Turkish and Armenian scholars to investigate events
of World War I in eastern Anatolia, which Armenians claim amounted
to genocide but Ankara says were losses on both sides as Armenians
took up arms to revolt against the Ottoman Empire while seeking an
independent state of their own. Yerevan has already said it welcomed
Turkey’s Caucasus platform proposal, introduced after a brief war
between Georgia and Russia in August following a Georgian offensive
in the breakaway region of South Ossetia. The scheme is planned to
include Turkey, Russia, Georgia, Azerbaijan and Armenia.

Despite widespread domestic and international approval for Gul’s visit,
there are concerns that contacts between Turkey and Armenia could
spoil ties with Azerbaijan, a regional ally. In an apparent attempt
to assure Azerbaijan that its interests will not be compromised, Gul
is preparing to visit Azerbaijan in the coming weeks, officials told
Today’s Zaman. No exact date was given, but the visit to Azerbaijan
is expected to take place before Gul flies to the United States
in September.

Speaking on the sidelines of a four-way summit on the Middle East in
Syria, Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan said he had spoken with
Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev and that Baku had no problem with
Gul going to Yerevan for the soccer game.

Azerbaijanis are divided on whether Gul’s visit should be condemned or
encouraged. Opponents see the rapprochement between Turkey and Armenia
at a time when Azerbaijani territory is still under Armenian occupation
as a betrayal of the alliance and brotherhood between Turkey and
Azerbaijan. Others say it may help resolve the Nagorno-Karabakh dispute
if Turkey starts talking to Armenia about this deep-seated conflict.

Warning against high expectations for any breakthrough, officials
say Gul will "encourage" Armenia to pursue a settlement on the
Nagorno-Karabakh dispute on the basis of a set of principles proposed
by a group of international mediators.

Armenia says it is ready for diplomatic relations with Turkey without
any conditions, referring to the dispute on the genocide claims, and
wants the border, closed since 1993, to reopen. But Gul is expected
to dismiss any piecemeal approach in the restoration of relations and
call for a discussion of all issues pertaining to relations as a whole.

Gul will be greeted by Armenian Foreign Minister Eduard Nalbandian
at the airport and will proceed to the Armenian presidential palace
along a high-security route. The section of the stadium where Gul
will be watching the game will be protected by bulletproof glass as
a measure against a possible assassination attempt.

A Turkish delegation, headed by Foreign Ministry Deputy Undersecretary
Unal Ceviköz, had talks in Yerevan on Wednesday to discuss
arrangements for Gul’s visit and reportedly told Gul that security
measures taken by the Armenian side were satisfactory.

Representatives from international news agencies as well as French
newspapers Le Monde and Le Figaro will be on Gul’s plane to Yerevan.

—————————————- ——————————

Yerevan excited, preparing for match with Turkey

Officials from the Armenian Football Federation (FFA) were yesterday
finishing up with preparations for an upcoming match between the
national football teams of Armenia and Turkey, an event that will
see the first-ever visit by a Turkish president to Yerevan.Ruben
Hayrapetian, the chairman of the FFA, yesterday told the Anatolia news
agency that the FFA had completed all preparations for the match and
that everybody was ready for it.

Executives from the FFA have stated that they expect the 52,000-seat
Hrazdan Stadium to be completely full during the match, saying 12,000
tickets have been sold to date and that 2,700 seats were allocated
to Turkish fans. More than 100 foreign correspondents, in addition to
60 domestic correspondents, have been accredited to watch the match,
the same executives said.

Armenian officials also noted that all necessary precautions have
been taken both for the period of time before and after the match,
the Anatolia news agency reported. The Turkish national team will stay
in the Golden Palace Hotel, which is a little outside of the Yerevan
city center, Anatolia said. Meanwhile, players of the Armenian national
team, speaking to Anatolia, expressed pleasure over Gul’s visit, while
noting that they were interested in sports, not in politics. Ankara
Today’s Zaman with wires

–Boundary_(ID_+Mjmc3KwjIGnks8XYeV62g)–

TBILISI: Armenia Aims To Become Regional Financial Centre

ARMENIA AIMS TO BECOME REGIONAL FINANCIAL CENTRE
By M. Alkhazashvili

The Messenger
Sept 4 2008
Georgia

Armenia is getting ready to become a financial centre for the South
Caucasus, says Prime Minister Tigran Sarkisian, who has committed
himself to creating an economic situation in the country which will
facilitate such developments.

The HSBC Bank Armenia management, and that of other banks, expects
to participate in supporting the ambitious plans of Armenian
leadership. So far Georgia has played a leading role in this sector
and shown strong potential to become the financial services leader
in this region, but now the challenge is here.

Armenia Leaders, Turkish Envoy Discuss Security In Caucasus

ARMENIAN LEADERS, TURKISH ENVOY DISCUSS SECURITY IN CAUCASUS

Interfax
Sept 3 2008
Russia

Armenian President Serzh Sargsyan and Turkish presidential envoy,
ambassador Unal Cevikez discussed in Yerevan on Wednesday the issues
concerning Turkish President Abdullah Gul’s upcoming visit to Yerevan,
the Armenian president’s press office told Interfax.

The Armenian president invited his Turkish counterpart to watch a
football match between the Armenian and Turkish national teams in
Yerevan on September 6.

Cevikez’ visit is a chance for both parties to talk about how to
improve their relations, to exchange their views on the situation in
the region and to discuss a number of important issues, Sargsyan said.

The parties have discussed Ankara’s initiative to create the Platform
of Stability and Security in the Caucasus, according to a press
statement. Having mentioned that the Turkish prime minister initiated
a very complex, but important task, Sargsyan said that, "Armenia has
always welcomed the efforts aimed at strengthening trust, stability,
security and enhancing cooperation in the region."

For his part, Armenian Foreign Minister Edvard Nalbandian said at
a meeting with Cevikez that Armenia has always welcomed the efforts
to strengthen trust, stability and security in the region. "The idea
of creating the Platform can be hailed," said the Armenian foreign
minister.

There are still no diplomatic relations between Armenia and Turkey.

The 1915 events in the Ottoman Empire remain a stumbling block in the
relations between the two countries. The 1915 Armenian genocide in the
Ottoman Turkey, which, according to various sources, killed more than
1.5 million people, was recognized by a number of nations. Armenia is
seeking recognition from Turkey, but has so far failed in its efforts.

Ankara, for its part, demands that the Karabakh conflict be resolved
on the basis of Azerbaijan’s territorial integrity.

Russia Allies Fail To Back Moscow On Enclaves

RUSSIA ALLIES FAIL TO BACK MOSCOW ON ENCLAVES

Reuters
04 Sep 2008 11:13:54 GMT

MOSCOW, Sept 4 (Reuters) – A group of Moscow’s ex-Soviet allies
on Thursday stopped short of following Russia’s recognition of two
breakaway regions in Georgia.

While their statement criticised Georgia’s aggression it made no
reference to Russia’s recognition last month of Abkhazia and South
Ossetia as independent states. To date, only Nicaragua has followed
Russia’s lead.

Russia sent troops deep into the Caucasus state last month to prevent
Georgian rebels from being crushed by Tbilisi.

But the defence ministers of the Collective Security Treaty
Organisation (ODKB) did not follow Russia’s lead and recognise South
Ossetia and Abkhazia as independent states, leaving Moscow in almost
complete international isolation.

"The ministers are deeply concerned about Georgia’s military activities
in South Ossetia, which led to multiple civilian casualties … and
a major humanitarian catastrophe," they said in a final statement
following their meeting in Moscow.

The Russia-led ODKB also includes Belarus, Armenia and the Asian
ex-Soviet states of Kazakhstan, Uzbekistan, Tajikistan and Kyrgyzstan.

The West has condemned Russia for the intervention in which its troops
took under control both separatist provinces and seized a large chunk
of Georgian territory outside them.

Russia says it has withdrawn most of its forces from the conflict zone
under a ceasefire deal mediated by French President Nicolas Sarkozy.

But it has said it will keep a limited number of peacekeepers in
"buffer zones" on Georgian territory proper until an effective security
mechanism involving international monitors is in place.

"The events around South Ossetia showed the danger of double standards
in international relations," the statement said in a clear sign of
support for Russian claims of Western bias in assessing the Georgian
crisis.

The ministerial meeting of ODKB took place ahead of the group’s summit
in Moscow on Friday, at which Russia intends to press for full support
for its actions in Georgia.

Russia’s initial attempt last week to win backing from another friendly
alliance — the Shanghai Cooperation Organisation (SCO) grouping
Russia, China and the four ex-Soviet Asian republics — failed.

China and most ex-Soviet states, some of whom have separatist problems
of their own, declined to back Russia too strongly to avoid irking
the West with which they are trying to build ties.

The ODKB statement, which also acknowledged Russia’s active role as
a security guarantor in the Caucasus, appeared to offer Moscow firmer
support than the SCO document.

But it did not contain any sign that the allies planned to recognise
South Ossetia and Abkhazia, as sought by Moscow.

Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov said, however, that Moscow
was generally happy with the document.

"It lays the stress in the right place and includes all the right
remarks, including the unacceptable nature of Georgia’s actions
against South Ossetia … the unacceptable nature of double standards,"
he told a news briefing.

(Reporting by Conor Sweeney; Writing by Oleg Shchedrov; Editing by
Jon Boyle and Giles Elgood)

Armenia Willing To Discuss Turkey’s Caucasus Stability And Cooperati

ARMENIA WILLING TO DISCUSS TURKEY’S CAUCASUS STABILITY AND COOPERATION PACT

PanARMENIAN.Net
03.09.2008 17:34 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Armenian President Serzh Sargsyan met today with
Turkish President’s envoy Unal Cevikoz to discuss the forthcoming
visit of Abdullah Gul to Armenia and some regional processes, the RA
leader’s press office told PanARMENIAN.Net.

"Serious problems emerged after the recent developments in
Caucasus. Armenia welcomes all initiatives meant for strengthening
of trust, stability and security throughout the region. Although,
the Caucasus Stability and Cooperation can hardly be implemented,
we are ready to discuss it and any other proposal of the kind,"
the Armenian President said.

Seven Questions: Russia’s Big Mistake

SEVEN QUESTIONS: RUSSIA’S BIG MISTAKE

Foreign Policy Passport
p?story_id=4459&page=0
Sept 3 2008

Think Russia is the big winner in Georgia? Think again: Regional
expert and CIA veteran Paul A. Goble explains how Moscow has shot
itself in the foot by recognizing South Ossetia and Abkhazia and why
Russia’s nouveau riche might be the ones who pull the Kremlin back
from the brink.

Foreign Policy: There’s still a lot of debate about just who started
the war in Georgia. Russia, of course, claims that Georgia started it,
and Georgia says it was provoked by shelling from South Ossetia. Many
others see Georgia falling into a long-planned Russian trap. What’s
your view? What do you think provoked this war?

Paul Goble: Well, there are two different questions: what provoked
this war and what caused it. After the NATO summit in Bucharest, when
the United States indicated it would press for Georgia to be included
in NATO, the Russian government, as Mr. Putin indicated at the time,
was sufficiently angry that Moscow began planning to be able to use
force at some point. I believe that [Georgian President Mikheil]
Saakashvili gave Moscow the occasion for the use of such force. Had
Saakashvili not moved in the way that he did, it would have been
far more difficult for Moscow to present itself as acting within the
limits of its [peacekeeping] mandate.

However, once the Russian government moved beyond the borders of South
Ossetia and Abkhazia, and once it moved into parts of Georgia that
had never been in dispute, this was an act of Russian aggression,
even if the trigger was an unfortunate miscalculation by Tbilisi.

FP: Russian President Dmitry Medvedev writes in Wednesday’s Financial
Times that he chose to recognize the independence of Abkhazia and
South Ossetia because "some nations find it impossible to live under
the tutelage of another" and because he couldn’t "tell the Abkhazians
and South Ossetians… that what was good for the Kosovo Albanians
was not good for them." What do you make of his argument?

PG: Moscow’s effort to blame the West and blame NATO action in
recognizing Kosovo doesn’t cut as much ice as I think Moscow expected,
but the Russian government continues to make it. It’s significant
that the Serbians are very, very unhappy, because in Georgia Russia
is doing exactly what it denounced in Kosovo.

Medvedev’s comment can be played elsewhere as well. The country in
Eurasia that has the most people who would like to be independent is
not Georgia–it is the Russian Federation. In the words of one Chechen
I saw quoted the other day, "Are we any worse than the Abkhazians?" So,
Medvedev has unsheathed a sword that has two edges.

FP: Medvedev also writes, "In international relations, you cannot
have one rule for some and another rule for others."

PG: Well, he’s just done that, hasn’t he? He said there’s one rule for
Abkhazians and there’s another rule for Chechens. I have yet to see a
convincing argument on how those two crises are in principle different.

The Russian government is basically saying, "If you’re friends with
us, we’ll support territorial integrity; if you’re not friends with
us, we will support self-determination for minorities." That is a
pretty heavy-handed approach, and it’s one that at, least so far,
isn’t getting much positive support around the world. Indeed, in the
first 24 hours, the only political leadership in the world that has
supported Russia is Hamas, and that’s hardly much of a recommendation.

FP: So, what’s the difference between Kosovo and Abkhazia and South
Ossetia?

PG: I’m not an expert on Yugoslavia, but what I see is the
following. The first difference is that Kosovo did not become a client
state of someone else. It did not get absorbed by Albania, as Serbs
and Russians said would happen at the time. With all due respect,
the governments in South Ossetia and to a lesser extent Abkhazia are
clearly client states. The South Ossetian government says whatever
Moscow wants to be said, and you don’t have that in Kosovo.

The second difference is that nobody went in and said, "We have
international peacekeeping responsibilities, and now we’re going to
put our forces in so we can recognize this place." That’s in effect
what the Russians did.

FP: But if the South Ossetians and the Abkhazians don’t want to be
part of Georgia, why should the West support President Saakashvili’s
position? Why is it a good idea to support Georgia’s "territorial
integrity"?

PG: Since 1932–since the Stimson Doctrine was articulated when
the Japanese seized Manchuria and transformed it into "Manchukuo"
as a client state–it has been (largely) consistent American policy
that the United States does not recognize territorial change achieved
by an act of aggression. So, the issue is not, as the Russians have
put it, between simple territory integrity or the right of nations
to self-determination. It is whether the United States and Western
governments will accept border changes brought about by the use of
force. And that’s what has happened in this instance.

FP: What about Azerbaijan, which has the Nagorno-Karabakh
enclave? Should Azerbaijan worry about being next on Moscow’s hit list?

PG: Russian policy in this region is vastly more variegated than we
assume. What Russia will do to promote its interests in Ukraine or
Azerbaijan or Georgia are three different things.

For one thing, the Azerbaijanis have a lot more money than the
Georgians do, and they’ve invested more in their military. Azerbaijan
is far more concerned about being able to ship its oil across
Georgian territory through the Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan pipeline than
almost anything else. Earlier in the week when that pipeline was not
working, Azerbaijan was sending oil through Russia to Novorossiisk,
which of course gave Russia a hold, and it was also sending oil south
across Iran, an action I suspect a large number of American officials
would have problems with.

What Moscow may do either in eastern Ukraine or especially in Crimea
is very different than what it has done in Georgia–not only because
Ukraine is a lot bigger. It’s really only the Americans who seem to
think that all these countries are somehow branch offices. Russia has
a very, very good set of experts who understand just how different
these places are.

Now, the domestic reaction in Russia hasn’t gotten a lot of attention,
but you’ve got people speaking out. You’ve had demonstrations
against the war. You’ve got soldiers’ mothers’ committees going to
court because the Russian Defense Ministry lied and said that there
would be no draftees used in combat, which they were. Boris Nemtsov,
the opposition leader, reportedly wrote on his blog that if Moscow
continues on the path it is now, "Russia and Russians will suffer
even more."

FP: But this is a minority viewpoint, right?

PG: I’m not suggesting that if a vote were taken tomorrow, Russians
would vote down what Putin and Medvedev have done. But it’s wrong
to assume that every Russian thinks this was the greatest act of
statecraft in the history of the world. There are a lot of people
who don’t, and while I don’t think they set the weather, to ignore
the role they play is a mistake.

I believe that one of the reasons the fighting stopped was not because
there weren’t people in the defense ministry who thought it should
go on for a bit longer, but because in the first two working days of
the war, there was a total of some $8 billion net capital outflow
from Russia. You’re talking about serious consequences for wealthy
Russians, and they matter a whole lot more than the soldiers’ mothers’
committees or Boris Nemtsov or Garry Kasparov.

Because of this war, Russians are no longer going to be as welcome
in foreign countries. We’re probably going to see the spread of what
is an unfortunate thing: In Germany and France, Europeans are now
choosing to go on trips to resorts that the tour operators promise are
"Russian free." In human terms, that’s ugly, but in collective terms
that’s a source of enormous pressure.

Polls tell us that for many Russians, the single most important
right they acquired after 1991 was the right to travel. If getting
a visa becomes more difficult, Russians are going to have a harder
time moving about. It’s going to be harder to get their children
into elite international schools. There’s going to be less money
around. So, there’s probably a constituency, and a pretty large one
among an influential group of people, who are going to go to the
Russian government and say, "You’re hitting us where it matters most:
in our pocketbooks." And that’s a source of influence that should
not be discounted at all.

Paul A. Goble is a long-time specialist, at the Central Intelligence
Agency and elsewhere, on the non-Russian peoples of Eurasia. Currently
director of research and publications at the Azerbaijan Diplomatic
Academy, he blogs at WindowonEurasia and for the New York Times.

http://www.foreignpolicy.com/story/cms.ph

Cambridge Armenian Sister City Group To Attend Training Program

CAMBRIDGE ARMENIAN SISTER CITY GROUP TO ATTEND TRAINING PROGRAM

Cambridge Chronicle
s/x1577093566/Cambridge-Armenian-sister-city-group -to-attend-training-program
Sept 2 2008
MA

On Sept.15, the Cambridge-Yerevan Sister City Association (CYSCA) will
welcome a group of 10 professional tourism educators from Yerevan,
Armenia, for a three-week training program aimed at enhancing tourism
in Armenia. The program has been developed jointly by CYSCA and
Middlesex Community College. Included in the group are educators
from various universities and institutes in Yerevan involved in
teaching tourism.

Despite the historical heritage and natural beauty of Armenia as
a tourist attraction, the quality of tourism services needs to be
upgraded to achieve world-class level. The economic potential for
tourism is great for Armenia, but the training of tourism specialists
is left to a few educators, many of whom lack practical experience
in international standards and norms expected by tourists.

The training program, developed with Prof. Barbara Dexter-Smith of MCC,
will include meetings with tourism faculty members at area colleges
and universities that will involve seminars, roundtable discussions,
talks and hands-on training covering specific objectives of the
program. These include such topics as teaching methods, lesson
planning, cooperation with the private sector, human resource
management, international cooperation, promotion, market research,
international tourism norms/standards, cultural tourism, ecological
tourism, excursions/tours, ethics/behavior, organizing scientific
forums/conferences, and others.

The program also has cultural component. Participants will be exposed
to American history, culture, values and everyday life as they visit
historic and cultural sites in Greater Boston. Home-stays will be
provided by volunteer host families.

The tourism educators will present a panel discussion, "Tourism in
Armenia: Challenges and Opportunities," Sunday, Sept. 28, from 3
to 5 p.m. in the Armenian Library and Museum of America at 65 Main
St. in Watertown. The moderator will be Barbara Dexter-Smith of
Middlesex Community College. Co-sponsors are CYSCA and the Armenian
Library and Museum of America. For more information, call the museum
at 617-926-2562.

http://www.wickedlocal.com/cambridge/new

Armenian Datacom Company Announces New Internet Service Prices

ARMENIAN DATACOM COMPANY ANNOUNCES NEW INTERNET SERVICE PRICES

ARKA
Sep 1, 2008

YEREVAN, September 1. /ARKA/. The Armenian-Norwegian "Armenian Datacom
Company" (ADC) CJSC has announced lower prices for Internet services.

>From September 1, the company reduced prices for Internet Office and
Data Pro DPRS.

In fact, the clients will get higher-speed Internet access for the
same price.

The reason for the company’s step is the rapidly developing market
and competition, when Internet providers are implementing a flexible
pricing policy, rendering new and higher-quality services.

The lower prices will also be in effect for the clients that have
concluded contracts.

The ADC CJSC was founded in 2006.

Armenia’s President Serzh Sargsyan Receives China’s Ambassador To

ARMENIA’S PRESIDENT SERZH SARGSYAN RECEIVES CHINA’S AMBASSADOR TO ARMENIA

ARMENPRESS
Aug 28, 2008

YEREVAN, AUGUST 28, ARMENPRESS: Armenia’s president Serzh Sargsyan
received today China’s ambassador to Armenia Hun Zioun and thanked
him for the warm welcome given to Armenian athletes at the Beijing
Olympic Games.

President Sargsyan was quoted by his press service as saying that
Chinese authorities and the people did everything possible to organize
the Games at the highest possible level.

Serzh Sargsyan singled out the Chinese’ hospitality, their attention
and willingness to help the guests. He then spoke about Armenia’s
excellent participation in the Games.The ambassador spoke for his
part about his government’s efforts to make the game an unforgettable
sporting event to its participants.

The two men also spoke about prospects for boosting bilateral ties. The
ambassador said his government gives great attention to cooperation
with Armenia.