Karabakh Ceasefires Troubled Anniversary

Institute for War and Peace Reporting
May 12 2004

Karabakh Ceasefire’s Troubled Anniversary

A decade after war ended in Nagorny Karabakh, the peace is still as
fragile as ever.

By Thomas de Waal in London (CRS No. 233, 12-May-04)

Appearances can be deceptive.

The 200-kilometre strip of land that marks the ceasefire line around
Nagorny Karabakh is one of the most peaceful places on earth. In the
last ten years it has become overgrown with wild vegetation and tall
thistles.

The main sound is of soft birdsong. The main scourge appears to be
the locusts and other insects that range freely here.

Yet no one can set foot here, because the land is heavily mined. And
for ten years, two armies have faced each other across the line. The
Azerbaijani and Karabakh Armenian soldiers looking at one another
through binoculars do not even have telephone or radio contact.

Perhaps only the militarised border between North and South Korea is
a more forbidding dividing line than this one. Although the ceasefire
agreement of May 12, 1994 halted more than two years of heavy
fighting – sealing a de facto Armenian victory – it did not resolve
the conflict.

The ceasefire line continues to scar the southern Caucasus and
prevents hundreds of thousands of refugees from returning to their
homes. Peace plans have come and gone, yet nothing has shifted.

Looking back on a decade of truce, Vladimir Kazimirov, the Russian
diplomat who negotiated the 1994 ceasefire agreement, told IWPR that,
“it really does summon up mixed feelings. It’s good that it’s held
for ten years – that the mass bloodshed has stopped in the gravest
armed conflict on the territory of the former USSR, but it’s sad that
in all that time the mediators have not managed to achieve a
breakthrough in the political resolution of the conflict.

“Back then, I knew it could take several years – but not that it
would take so long.”

Moscow’s original plan to deploy Russian peacekeepers along the
ceasefire line was vetoed by Azerbaijan, with the result that the
conflict effectively has a self-regulating truce with no neutral
troops in between.

“There are pluses and minuses in the fact that the parties to the
conflict bear all the responsibility for observing the ceasefire,”
said Kazimirov. “It means no one but them is responsible for
incidents along the line of contact.”

That makes for a truce that is particularly vulnerable. The last year
has been one of the most difficult of the whole decade. In 2004,
around 30 soldiers died in shooting incidents across the front line,
a reverse in what had been a positive trend. Others continue to be
killed by mines.

International mediators and analysts worry that the situation of “no
war, no peace” is unsustainable in the long-term, and needs to be
buttressed by a proper peace settlement. A second Karabakh war, given
the weaponry that both sides have acquired since 1994, would be far
more devastating than the first.

That war of 1991-94 was tragic enough, resulting in the deaths of
perhaps 20,000 people, the wounding of more than three times that
number, and the displacement of hundreds of thousands of refugees.

“There is a saying that once a year a gun fires itself – there is
always a temptation to use it,” warned Ambassador Andrzej Kasprzyk in
an interview to IWPR by telephone. Kasprzyk is the personal
representative of the chairman-in-office of the Organization for
Security and Cooperation in Europe, OSCE, with responsibility for the
Karabakh conflict – in other words the international official who
most closely monitors the situation on the ground.

“The Armenian side likes to say that the ceasefire holds because of a
balance of power; that there is no chance for either of the two
parties to win,” said Kasprzyk. “But in a situation where you have
two armies facing each other, there is always a temptation to start
something.”

US diplomat Carey Cavanaugh – who convened talks at Key West, Florida
in 2001 that came closer than ever before to a peace plan – noted
that the first thing the mediators did when the talks failed was to
support the ceasefire.

Some in Azerbaijan argue that the coming billion-dollar oil revenues
the country is about to earn from the Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan pipeline
project will change the balance of power, especially if the price of
oil remains at levels of more than 30 dollars a barrel.

In Azerbaijan, there have already been vociferous calls this year for
the government to resort to the military option to reclaim its lost
territories. A pro-war group, the Karabakh Liberation Organisation,
is currently orchestrating a march from Baku to the ceasefire line.

The murder of Gurgen Markarian, an army officer from Armenia, by his
Azerbaijani colleague Ramil Safarov at a NATO language course in
Budapest in February showed how quickly passions can become inflamed
around this issue. As soon as the news broke, defence groups formed
for Safarov in Azerbaijan, while Markarian was given a public funeral
in Armenia and his death provoked angry denunciations of Azerbaijan.

Foreign diplomats point out that Azerbaijan currently has a
poorly-equipped army, which is far from ready to go back to war. It
would take years for that to change – but the perception inside
Azerbaijan that the power balance is shifting could in itself be
enough to halt the peace process in its tracks.

The Karabakh conflict has created a strange world in the south
Caucasus, in which two countries are almost hermetically sealed off
from one another and from the other’s attachments and concerns. That
means that the views that both societies have about each other are
still basically stuck back in 1988.

Two surveys taken in parallel by the Baku and Yerevan Press Clubs in
2001, the year of the Key West talks, suggest why those talks were
doomed to failure.

Asked what would be an acceptable status for Nagorny Karabakh, the
disputed territory at the heart of the conflict, 45 per cent of
respondents in Armenia said they wanted to see Karabakh become
independent and another 42.7 per cent said it should become part of
Armenia. Less than one per cent of those asked believed Karabakh
should be part of Azerbaijan.

The Azerbaijani poll produced answers that were polar opposites of
the Armenian ones. Fifty-six per cent of respondents said Karabakh
should be “within Azerbaijan, without any autonomy”, and 33.7 per
cent favoured Karabakh returning to Azerbaijan with autonomous
status. Only 0.9 per cent were prepared to countenance Karabakh
becoming independent or part of Armenia.

Yet the bold innovation of the document discussed at Key West was
that Azerbaijan was ready to cede sovereignty over Nagorny Karabakh
to Armenia, along with a land corridor through the town of Lachin
connecting Karabakh to Armenia.

In return, Azerbaijan was to get back the occupied parts of seven
provinces surrounding Karabakh, and a land corridor was to be built
through Armenia to link the Azerbaijani exclave of Nakhichevan with
the rest of the country. The town of Shusha, inside Karabakh, which
formerly had a majority Azerbaijani population, was to be placed
under international administration.

One problem with the scheme was that the Armenian side was unhappy
about giving up Shusha. More fundamentally, Azerbaijani president
Heidar Aliev had not prepared even some of his top advisers for the
idea of giving up sovereignty over Karabakh.

Boxed in by public opinion that they themselves had helped entrench,
the presidents of Azerbaijan and Armenia were unable to build on the
relative success of Key West.

Some observers including Kazimirov argue that it is impossible to
achieve a “package agreement” for Karabakh, in which everything is
decided at once.

However others involved in the process resist this idea, with the
Karabakh Armenians for instance opposing any deal in which their
final status is not determined at the outset. Others say that nothing
will be possible until Azerbaijan opens a dialogue with the Karabakh
Armenians – but it still refuses to do so.

As the Armenian and Azerbaijani foreign ministers meet in Strasbourg
in May 12-13, they find themselves as far from a solution as ever.
The silence on the front line is becoming a little ominous.

Thomas de Waal is IWPR’s Caucasus Editor in London.

BAKU: Meeting at the cabinet

Azer Tag, Azerbaijan State Info agency
May 11 2004

MEETING AT THE CABINET
[May 11, 2004, 19:04:44]

Deputy Prime Minister of Azerbaijan, Chairman of the State Committee
for Refugee and IDP Affairs Ali Hasanov met members of the Bundestag
Germany-Caucasus parliamentary group led by Cristoph Bergner at the
Cabinet of Ministers on May 10.

Having warmly greeted the guests, Ali Hasanov stressed the role of
the inter-parliamentary cooperation between the two countries.. He
expressed gratitude to the delegation members for the interest shown
for the sorest point of Azerbaijan – plight of refugees and
internally displaced people, and told of the work done in this sphere
by various German organizations especially underlining the role of
Ambassador of Germany to Azerbaijan Mr. Klaus Grewlich.

The Deputy Prime Minister updated the guest on the
Armenia-Azerbaijan, Nagorno-Karabakh conflict lingering around 4 acts
of deportation of Azerbaijanis in 20 century, destruction of
historical and cultural monuments in occupied territories, UN
resolutions, plight of over million Azerbaijanis displaced from their
native lands.

Mr. Cristoph Bergner thanked Mr. Ali Hasanov for the warm welcome and
detailed information. He said that Government of Germany welcomes the
efforts of the leadership of Azerbaijan towards peaceful resolution
of the conflict. We are ready to help develop inter-parliamentary
links and solve relevant problems.

On the same day, guests met with IDPs in Narimanov district.

Kocharian downplays repercussions of PACE resolution

ArmenPress
May 6 2004

PRESIDENT KOCHARIAN DOWNPLAYS REPERCUSSIONS OF PACE RESOLUTION

YEREVAN, MAY 6, ARMENPRESS: Armenian president Robert Kocharian
has swollen today the chorus of senior government officials who
downplayed the possible repercussions of an April 28 resolution of
the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe (PACE) that
called on Armenian authorities to warn that the PACE will consider
stripping its Armenian members of their voting rights unless the
authorities respect citizens’ freedom of movement and assembly,
release individuals detained for their participation in the recent
opposition rallies and investigates all “human rights abuses” by next
September.
Speaking to reporters, Kocharian said: “In what is related to its
(resolution) content I do not see major problems and there are also
some serious inaccuracies concerning the chronology of the events.”
In response to a question how he would comment on the document,
Kocharian said the authorities will prepare the response to the
descriptive segment of the resolution in few days and that the
official response to the resolution will be submitted to PACE June
session. He said a PACE monitoring delegation will arrive in Armenia
soon to examine the situation on the ground.
“Some of the wordings of the resolution do not reflect the real
situation, however, Armenia has its own voice in PACE and an
intention to defend it,” Kocharian said, adding that the Council of
Europe should not be perceived as the former Politburo, which took
and imposed decisions. “The Council of Europe is an organization, of
which we are a member and Armenia’s task there is to defend its
common interests rather than to clear its domestic matters,” he said.
Kocharian also downplayed fears that international discussions on
Armenia’s political instability may affect foreign investment.
“Armenian economy would suffer bigger damages if the investors were
not sure of Armenian authorities’ abilities to establish order in the
country,” he said, but admitted, however, that such discussions
nevertheless may have some negative impact. “Those people who are
trying to escalate the tension are doing a bad job as all negative
repercussions would eventually hit all Armenian citizens,” he said.

Public Lecture: Landmine Clearance in Nagorno Karabakh

Kurt Chesko of the HALO USA (Humanitarian Landmine Clearance) will speak at
10:30 AM on Saturday, May 15th at The Glendale Public Library’s Central
Auditorium (222 East Harvard Street, Glendale, CA
91205).

The NKR Office encourages participation of the general public and
representatives of the LA-based Armenian-American organizations.

Vardan Barseghian
Representative of the Nagorno Karabakh Republic

Office of the Nagorno Karabakh Republic in the United States
122 C Street, NW, Suite 360
Washington, DC 20001
Tel: (202) 347-5166
Fax: (202) 347-5168

For additional information, please contact:

Kurt Chesko
Program Officer

HALO USA
Humanitarian Landmine Clearance
850 Seventh Avenue, Suite 506
New York, NY 10019
212 581 0099 (tel)
212 581 2029 (fax)
<;

Info from <; :
In Nagorno Karabakh defensive minefields were laid by both Azeri and
pro-Karabakhi forces. Moves in the front lines resulted in minefields and
significant quantities of UXO being left in peaceful areas needed for
agriculture. In many areas access to prime land is denied and the steady
stream of casualties indicates the requirement for widespread mineclearance
ahead of cultivation. Aid organizations in the region have had to restrict
their operations due to fears of landmines on or just beside roads and the
presence of unexploded ordnance in and around many villages.
In 1995 and 1996 HALO conducted an 18-month long program in Karabakh that
established a mineclearance capacity for the local authorities. This
included a survey of the region and the equipping and training of deminers.
The teams operated without assistance for three years and whilst they
successfully cleared hundreds of mines, their equipment had degraded and
accurate records of clearance had not been kept for some time.
HALO returned to Karabakh in 2000 with a view to reinforcing capacity
through a project of re-equipment, providing additional training and by
establishing a mine action centre (MAC). The MAC collates information
concerning mines, UXO and safe routes, and disseminates it to all who
require it, in particular other NGOs and international humanitarian bodies
operating in Karabakh.
In addition to landmines, unexploded ordnance is as great a problem in
Nagorno Karabakh. In response, HALO deploys three mobile explosive ordnance
disposal teams that clear hundreds of hazardous items every month.

http://www.halousa.org&gt
http://www.halousa.org&gt
www.halousa.org
www.halousa.org

CR: Time to Remember the Armenian Genocide – Rep. McGovern

TIME TO REMEMBER THE ARMENIAN GENOCIDE

Mr. McGOVERN. Mr. Speaker, this April marks the 89th anniversary of
the cataclysmic events that occurred in the Turkish Ottoman Empire
between 1915 and 1923, where 1.5 million Armenians were killed and
over a half million survivors were forcibly deported into exile. On
Sunday, I had the privilege to participate in a service at the
Armenian Church of Our Savior in Worcester, Massachusetts, where in
the presence of 19 survivors, the community of Worcester paid homage
to the martyrs and survivors of the Armenian Genocide and their
descendents. Mr. Speaker, last May, the House Committee on the
Judiciary reported out House Resolution 193. We have been waiting for
nearly 1 year now for the Speaker of the House to schedule this bill
for a debate and for a vote, and I would urge at this time that the
Speaker schedule this bill as quickly as possible so that the House of
Representatives may join those nations and those scholars who affirm
the Genocide Convention and recognize the Armenian Genocide and
Holocaust as genocides of the 20th century. Mr. Speaker, I am
submitting for the Record comments I made at the Armenian Church of
Our Savior this past Sunday.

I would very much like to thank Father Terzian and the
community of faith of the Armenian Church of Our Savior for
inviting me once again to this commemoration. It is one of the
great privileges of my office to participate in this annual day
of remembrance of the martyrs and survivors of the Armenian
Genocide. It is a privilege to be in the company of our city’s
mayor, the Honorable Tim Murray, and in the company of Councilor
Petty, Representative Leary, Representative Fresolo, Senator
Moore, Senator Glodis, and Selectman Montocalvo. And I am very
much looking forward to the pleasure of hearing the Worcester
Chorale perform after their five-month break, under the
continuing leadership of Maestro Petrossian. It is also a
pleasure for me to share the podium with Nathaniel Mencow, who is
so well known for his work as a historian, and who has worked for
so long for the recognition of the heroic service of his brother,
First Lieutenant William Martin Mencow, who gave his life in
defense of freedom during World War II. But I am most privileged
and most honored to be here in the presence of survivors of the
Armenian Genocide, their descendents, and the descendents of
those who perished in the genocide. This April marks the 89th
anniversary of the cataclysmic events that occurred in the
Ottoman Empire between 1915 and 1923, where one-and-a-half
million Armenians were killed and over half-a-million survivors
were exiled. Our city has been especially blessed by the
presence and contributions of a large and vital Armenian
community. Each year we come to this church to recognize, honor
and remember that this rich heritage is, in part, a sad
inheritance paid with the blood of millions of innocent men,
women and children. I know that most of you are aware that
legislation has been introduced in the U.S. House of
Representatives which reaffirms U.S. support for the Genocide
Convention, calls upon the president and the U.S. government to
work to prevent future genocides, and recognizes the Armenian
Genocide. This bill, H. Res. 193, has 110 bipartisan cosponsors
and was reported out of the House Judiciary Committee last May.
It has been waiting for nearly one year now for the Speaker of
the House, Dennis Hastert, to put it on the schedule of the House
for debate and vote. I am always amazed that there are those in
Congress who view this bill as controversial. They are
influenced, in part, by those voices who continue to deny that
the Armenian Genocide or the Holocaust, which is also cited in
this bill, ever happened. The Turkish government, for example,
claims that the Armenian Genocide does not meet the definition of
genocide, despite the fact that the father of the Genocide
Convention, human rights pioneer Rafael Lemkin, specifically
cited the Holocaust and the Armenian Genocide as the two clear
instances of genocidal crimes covered by the Convention.
Contrary to the Turkish government’s claims, legal scholars,
historians, human rights organizations, journalists and the
majority of political leaders around the world firmly believe and
assert that the 1915 mass slaughter of Armenians fits the legal
definition of genocide. Israel Charney, the noted genocide and
Holocaust scholar and the editor of the respected Encyclopedia of
Genocide, has written extensively about the psychology of
genocide denial. He has stressed that to deny the countless
deaths of a known event of genocide is to celebrate those deaths
and to send a signal that the power that brought about this
destruction is still in force and can be used again when
opportunity permits. To seek to erase agonizing memories–to
assert that those memories are false–is to

[[Page H2380]]

openly mock the feelings and sensibilities of the victims and
their descendents–to once again victimize the victims. This is
why it is so important to recognize–openly and freely,
officially and informally, every single day–the events of the
Armenian Genocide. America, along with the rest of the world, is
famous for using the words “never again,” when speaking about
the Armenian Genocide and the Holocaust carried out by Nazi
Germany. Unfortunately, “never again” happens over and over
again–in Cambodia, in Rwanda, in Kosovo, and now in present- day
Sudan. It has been a blessing to me in my work that when
genocide threatens any people, anywhere in the world, the
Armenian- American community has always worked to bring these
events to my attention and to the attention of U.S. and
international policy-makers. The Armenian-American community has
always joined with other organizations to educate the public
about present-day horrors and to organize relief and support for
victims and survivors. In this way, through these works, the
tragedy of the Armenian Genocide is transformed into a legacy of
life, of hope, of survival and resistance. So, I come here today
not only to remember and honor the martyrs, survivors and
descendants of the Armenian Genocide, but to honor and celebrate
this community, which has given back so much to this city and our
country. Please let me thank you–each and every one of you–for
allowing me to share this day with you.

ARKA News Agency – 04/29/2004

ARKA News Agency
April 29 2004

7TH annual meeting of BSTDB to take place in Yerevan

OSCE calls to Armenian authorities to investigate recent cases of
violence

CJSC ISC-Star plans to create center of satellite television in
Armenia

*********************************************************************

7TH ANNUAL MEETING OF BSTDB TO TAKE PLACE IN YEREVAN

YEREVAN, April 29. /ARKA/. 7th annual meeting of Black Sea Trade and
Development Bank will take place in Yerevan, the President of BSTDB
Mustafa Gyurtin stated at the meeting with RA Minister of Finance and
Economy Vardan Khachatrian. Khachatrian in his turn sad that increase
of BSTDB role in the region only contributes to bilateral mutually
beneficial cooperation.
BSTDB is an international financial organization created in 1994 by
OBSEC members. BSTDB members are Greece, Russia, Turkey, Bulgaria,
Romania, Ukraine, Albania, Armenia, Azerbaijan, Georgia and Moldova.
L.D. –0–

*********************************************************************

OSCE CALLS TO ARMENIAN AUTHORITIES TO INVESTIGATE RECENT CASES OF
VIOLENCE

YEREVAN, April 29. /ARKA/. OSCE calls to Armenian authorities to
investigate recent cases of violence, OSCE Yerevan Office press
release states. According to press release, OSCE Yerevan Office is
concerned with absence of progress in punishment of guilty and
atmosphere of intolerance in the republic. `It is necessary to
consider cases of use of violence and punish all guilty in the frames
of law’, the Head of OSCE Yerevan Office, the Ambassador Vladimir
Pryakhin stated in the letter to RA Foreign Minister Vardan Oskanian.
In accordance to this, Pryakhin mentioned attack on RA NA Deputy
Viktor Dallakian, beating of the Chairman of Helsinki Association of
Armenia Mikael Danielian and Political Scientists Ashto Manucharian.
L.D. –0 –

*********************************************************************

CJSC ISC-STAR PLANS TO CREATE CENTER OF SATELLITE TELEVISION IN
ARMENIA

YEREVAN, April 29. /ARKA/. CJSC ISC-Star plans to create center of
satellite television in Armenia, the company told ARKA. The Center
will be called ZVEZDA-STV. It is planned that the Center will deal
with transmission of programs of Armenian TV companies outside of
Armenia – for Armenia Diaspora. Besides, the company plans to create
own TV programs as well. The company conducts works on creation of
own ZVEZDA-PRODUCTION producer center.
Armenian-Russian-American joint venture was registered in Armenia,
Sept 24, 2001. The founders of the ISC-Star, JV are both legal and
physical entities of some foreign countries, Russia including, and
residents of the Republic of Armenia. ISC-Star currently has over 100
IP-communication and paging communications units all over the world.
L.D. -0 –

Armenian, French leaders to discuss Karabakh settlement

ITAR-TASS, Russia
April 25 2004

Armenian, French leaders to discuss Karabakh settlement

YEREVAN, April 25 (Itar-Tass) – Armenian President Robert Kocharyan
leaves on Sunday for France, where the problem of the mostly Armenian
populated Azerbaijani enclave of Nagorno-Karabakh is expected to be
in the focus of attention.

On Monday, the visiting Armenian president will meet with French
President Jacques Chirac, the press service of the Armenian president
reported on Saturday.

Although the agenda of the working visit has not been announced yet,
Tass has learnt that the Karabakh settlement will be one of the main
issues to be discussed. France, Russia and the USA are co-chairmen of
the OSCE Minsk Group on Nagorno-Karabakh.

The two presidents will also discuss bilateral political relations
and economic ties.

Late on Sunday, the Armenian president and his wife will attend a
concert of Charles Aznavour. The famous French singer of Armenian
origin will give a concert on the occasion of his 80th birthday.

On April 27, the Armenian delegation led by Robert Kocharyan will fly
from Paris to Warsaw to take part in a world economic forum. The
Armenian leader will attend a working session on the Caucasus and
will meet the executive chairman of the forum, Klaus Schwab.

He will also meet within the framework of the forum with Polish
President Alexander Kwasniewski and Georgian President Mikhail
Saakashvili.

Onus is on Azeris, Armenians to solve conflict – German FM

Onus is on Azeris, Armenians to solve conflict – German foreign minister

Mediamax news agency
22 Apr 04

YEREVAN

German Foreign Minister Joschka Fischer said in Yerevan today that he
paid special attention to the settlement of the Nagornyy Karabakh
problem during his talks with Armenian President Robert Kocharyan and
Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev.

Speaking at a briefing in Yerevan today, Fischer said that the
international community was ready to assist in finding a solution to
the Nagornyy Karabakh problem, Mediamax news agency reports. At the
same time, “the onus is obviously on the sides to the conflict to find
a peaceful solution”, he said.

Fischer urges concessions on NK from Armenia, Azerbaijan

Agence France Presse
April 22, 2004

Fischer urges concessions on Nagorno-Karabakh from Armenia,
Azerbaijan

YEREVAN

German Foreign Minister Joschka Fischer Thursday called on Armenia
and Azerbaijan to make concessions in their dispute over the
Nagorno-Karabakh enclave during a tour of the Caucasus region.

“To achieve peace in the region, you have to make concessions,”
Fischer told reporters after meeting with Armenian President Robert
Kocharian.

“In Baku as in Yerevan, everybody speaks of conditions,” said
Fischer, who was in Azerbaijan the previous day.

“But eventually neighbors are obliged to find a consensus” on
Nagorno-Karabakh, he said.

Azerbaijan and neighboring Armenia went to war in the early 1990s
when Nagorno-Karabakh, mainly populated by Armenians, seceded from
Azerbaijan at the time of the Soviet Union’s collapse, and the two
Soviet Caucasian republics became independent.

More than 30,000 people were killed and another million were left
homeless before a ceasefire was agreed in 1994. But Azerbaijan and
Armenia remain in an undeclared state of war over the enclave.

The United States, along with France and Russia, is a co-chair of the
Minsk Group, a 13-nation grouping within the Organization for
Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE) that has been seeking to
mediate between Armenia and Azerbaijan.

Lingering tensions over the conflict have caused instability in the
Caucasus region, an emerging key crossroads for oil exports from the
Caspian Sea to Western markets.

Separately, Fischer said he hoped that internal unrest in Armenia
“will be resolved in a peaceful manner.”

“Foreign investments are directly dependent on the political
situation in the country,” he warned.

Armenia’s opposition has continuously organized protests in Yerevan
during the past month, with the latest demonstration drawing between
10,000 and 12,000 people to Freedom Square.

The Armenian opposition says that Kocharian rigged a run-off
presidential vote in March 2003 to secure a second term in office and
is demanding that he either organize a national referendum of
confidence in his rule or step down.

On April 13, the police broke up an anti-government demonstration in
the capital Yerevan using water cannon and reportedly injuring dozens
of protestors.

Armenia’s economy grows steadily

ArmenPress
April 21 2004

ARMENIA’S ECONOMY GROWS STEADILY

YEREVAN, APRIL 21, ARMENPRESS: Armenian national statistical
service said the GDP volume in the first quarter of the year grew by
7.5 percent against the same time span of last year amounting to
223.7 billion Drams. The GDP growth in March against February was
21.3 percent, it said.
The volume of industrial production in terms of money in the first
three months of 2004 was 114,532,000 Drams (indirect taxes not
counted). The growth rate of industrial production in the first three
months of 2004 was 2.8 percent over the same time span of last year.
The growth rate in March against February amounted to 20.1 percent.
The volume of electricity produced in the first quarter was 1.75
billion kw/per hour, a 7.1 percent increase over the first quarter of
last year. The volume of agricultural growth (indirect taxes not
counted) in the first quarter of 2002 stood at 35.2 billion Drams, a
6 percent growth against 2002 January and a 31.2 percent growth
against February 2004.
According to Armen Avetisian, the chief of state customs
committee, the volume of exports in the first quarter of 2002 was 85
billion Drams against 78 billion Drams in the first quarter of 2003.
The volume of imports in the same time span amounted to 164
billion Drams against 148 billion Drams in the first quarter of 2003.
Avetisian also said that the collection of import duties met the
projected targets in the first quarter of this year despite the
political crisis in the country, amounting to 24.8 billion drams
($44.6 million) or 4 percent more than projected by the government
budget.
Earlier the state taxation service reported that it collected 28.3
billion drams in first-quarter revenues, up from 23.5 billion drams
collected during the same period last year.
Armenia’s 2004 budget projected 257 billion drams ($460 million)
in tax and customs revenues.