Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

CENN Daily Digest -- Armenia - 04/21/2004

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • CENN Daily Digest -- Armenia - 04/21/2004

    CENN - APRIL 21, 2004 DAILY DIGEST -- ARMENIA
    Table of Contents:
    1. Dalma Gardens Will Be Seized
    2. Armenian President Says Iran Pipeline To End Energy Dependency
    3. Armenian Paper Critical of State Policy on Iran Gas Pipeline
    4. Armenian Industrial Production Up 10.5% in Q1
    5. Development Bank Looks East to Aid Poor Nations



    1. DALMA GARDENS WILL BE SEIZED

    Source: A1 Plus, April 20, 2004

    Dalma Gardens' renters have today assembled at Municipality again. Their
    problem is not settled, the territories will be taken away and the
    tenants demand to prolong the contracts by 25 years.

    Karen Davtyan, head of Department Real Estate Management of
    Municipality, says there is a special decision of Government under which
    a part of gardens is to remain as a green area and the rest will serve
    other purposes.

    Mr Davtyan informed they follow the above decision. "Policemen have come
    today with tractors to destroy our green territories", renter Azat
    Khachatryan says. Then they left warning to raze the green zones if the
    appropriate decision wasn't produced the next day.

    "No Court accepts any document on Dalma Gardens to launch legal
    proceedings", renter Yntsa Hovhannissyan says.

    Tenants assure policemen have today blocked the roads to Leningradyan
    street and Hrazdan Sport Complex to hamper the renters to come to their
    gardens.


    2. ARMENIAN PRESIDENT SAYS IRAN PIPELINE TO END ENERGY DEPENDENCY

    Source: Mediamax News Agency, April 20, 2004

    On April 20, 2004, in Yerevan Robert Kocharyan, the President Armenian
    stated that a gas pipeline to link Iran and Armenia will only be used to
    meet Armenia's energy needs. "We do not discuss any other options with
    the Iranian side," Robert Kocharyan said in reply to a question about
    the possible use of the pipeline for shipping gas to Europe.

    Mediamax quoted Kocharyan as telling a news conference in Yerevan today
    "the construction of the gas pipeline is very important as this will
    make Armenia independent in terms of energy supplies".


    3. ARMENIAN PAPER CRITICAL OF STATE POLICY ON IRAN GAS PIPELINE

    Source: Haykakan Zhamanak, April 17, 2004

    Text of Erdzanik Abgaryan's report by Armenian newspaper Haykakan
    Zhamanak on 17 April headlined "Kocharyan is giving a big gas pipeline
    to a Turk as a gift".

    It is no secret that the European Union has a positive attitude towards
    the idea that the Central Asia-Iran-Armenia gas pipeline should go via
    Armenia, suggesting the closure of the Armenian Nuclear Power Station,
    which meets the interests of the people's security. Iran's position on
    this issue is absolutely good.

    But it is strange and tragicomic that the special representative of the
    EU for the South Caucasus, Heikki Talvitie, and Iran's Foreign Minister
    Kamal Kharrazi have tried to persuade the Kocharyan administration to
    agree to build the gas pipeline via Armenia. So the gas pipeline caused
    a stir last week.

    [Armenian Foreign Minister Vardan] Oskanyan, who fails all strategic
    issues together with his chief [Armenian President Robert Kocharyan],
    visited Tehran and finally buried the hope that the gas pipeline will be
    constructed via Armenia. Information sources disseminate contradictory
    information about that visit and it may be concluded that the Armenian
    authorities and their secret services were behind that flow of
    disinformation. But on 13 April Iran's Oil Minister [Bizhan Namdar-]
    Zanganeh announced that a contract on the Iran-Armenia gas pipeline is
    already ready and he will soon visit Armenia for signing it. Saying that
    the volumes of Iranian gas supplies are limited by 1,500m cu.m.
    annually, Zanganeh in fact confirmed that the constructed pipeline will
    not be a transit one. That is, Armenia is withdrawn from this
    international programme just the same way as it was withdrawn from other
    international and regional programmes. As a result of it, the Armenians
    will be deprived of those significant sums that would be charged for
    transit, and of many jobs, and it is even more tragic that Armenia will
    be sidelined from all international interests.

    As can be seen, the Iran-Armenia gas pipeline will also be under
    Russia's control as Russia's Itera will be the gas pipeline's operator.
    We do not accuse Russia, we accuse its Armenian stooges: Kocharyan and
    his administration who betrayed our national interests. Nevertheless, it
    is obvious that Russia's diplomatic position on this gas pipeline is
    based not only on its aspiration to preserve its monopoly on gas
    supplies to Europe, but also on its aim to establish deeper relations
    with the Turks and Azerbaijanis. The point is that the Russians also
    know that the Central Asia-Iran-Europe pipeline will be undoubtedly
    constructed. And if not via Armenia, it may be constructed via Turkey or
    Azerbaijan.

    So withdrawing Armenia from the regional and international cooperation
    programmes, as well as from the Central Asia-Iran-Europe gas pipeline
    system, Russia simply cooperates with Turkey and Azerbaijan in the issue
    of sidelining Armenia from the world processes. So we can say that the
    "national" socialist Dashnaks and the law-abiding persons who have
    turned the National Assembly into barracks, headed by Kocharyan, are
    handing the strategic interests of Armenia to the Turks on a plate. And
    today's opposition, at its mass rallies, is obliged to disclose this
    crime along with other crimes of the Kocharyan administration that
    flouts the interests of the Armenian people and statehood.


    5. ARMENIAN INDUSTRIAL PRODUCTION UP 10.5% IN Q1

    Source: Interfax, April 19 2004

    Industrial production in Armenia in the first quarter 2004 increased
    10.5% year-on-year to 69.5 million dram, not including industrial
    production in the electricity sector, Economic Development and Trade
    Minister Ashot Shakhnazarian told journalists.

    He said that the mining and diamond cutting industries accounted for the
    largest share in industrial production in the reporting period.

    The minister said that exports of industrial products from Armenia
    increased 27% year-on-year to amount to 43.2 million dram in the first
    quarter this year. The official exchange rate on April 16 was 558.16
    dram to the dollar.


    6. DEVELOPMENT BANK LOOKS EAST TO AID POOR NATIONS

    International Herald Tribune, April 20, 2004

    LONDON With the most advanced economies in the former Communist bloc set
    to join the European Union next month, the multinational bank that was
    set up to aid the transition to capitalism said Monday that it would pay
    greater attention to poorer countries farther to the east.

    The agency, the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development, will
    not immediately cease operations in the eight Central and Eastern
    European countries that, along with Malta and Cyprus, are set to join
    the EU on May 1, 2004. But in those countries, the bank's "role should
    naturally fall away over the years to come," said Prime Minister Tony
    Blair of Britain, who addressed the agency's annual meeting in London on
    Monday.

    The development bank, which operates in 27 countries, said Monday that
    it had created a new program aimed at increasing its lending in seven of
    the poorest ones - Armenia, Azerbaijan, Georgia, the Kyrgyz Republic,
    Moldova, Tajikistan and Uzbekistan - where more than 50 percent of the
    population lives below the poverty line.

    In those countries, governments are too indebted to raise new financing,
    and foreign investors are often unwilling to enter, given the myriad
    risks - not least, in countries such as Uzbekistan, where George Soros
    and other investors have complained of a woeful human rights record.
    Meanwhile, the terrorist attacks of Sept. 11, and the subsequent ouster
    of the Taliban regime in Afghanistan - which borders on two of the seven
    countries, Tajikistan and Uzbekistan - heightened the awareness in some
    Western capitals of the strategic importance of former Soviet Central
    Asia, in particular.

    Jean Lemierre, the bank's president, who was elected to a second
    four-year term on Monday by the bank's board, said the bank would step
    up its efforts to finance small businesses, cross-border trade and
    small-scale infrastructure projects, among other things.

    "The bank is ready to take on the financial as well as reputational risk
    as we seek to invest more in countries at the earlier stages of
    transition," Lemierre said.

    The bank said it aimed to increase its combined investment in the seven
    countries to about E150 million, or $181 million, a year from the
    current E90 million. Because its investments typically result in
    additional private-sector activity, the bank said it expected the
    overall effect to be greater than that.

    The bank will take on added risk in part by adhering to local law,
    rather than international law, in some of its investments in the seven
    countries. Bankers said that should not pose a threat to the bank's
    financial health because the activities in the seven poorest countries
    account for only a fraction of the overall investments; the bank made
    E3.7 billion worth of new investments last year.

    Yet new lending in the seven poorest countries had actually been
    dwindling. By 2002, said Michael McCulloch, a consultant to the bank on
    its new initiative, these countries were actually paying more to service
    previous commitments to the bank than they were receiving in new
    investment flows.

    In the relatively well-to-do Eastern and Central European countries that
    are joining the EU, the agency has typically invested in large projects,
    often in cooperation with private-sector lenders. With their financial
    markets gained in depth and breadth, domestic and regional banks lend to
    smaller borrowers. But the seven poorest countries have few lenders
    willing to finance projects in the E500, 000 to E2 million range, the
    bank said, yet these will be crucial to the development of their
    economies.

    As the bank shifts its emphasis a bit to the east, its horizon is
    growing. Jean-Claude Juncker, the chairman of its board of governors and
    prime minister of Luxembourg, urged other governors to complete the
    process of accepting Mongolia as a country of operation for the bank.
    The United States, among others, has already approved Mongolia as a
    country of operation.



    --
    *******************************************
    CENN INFO
    Caucasus Environmental NGO Network (CENN)

    Tel: ++995 32 92 39 46
    Fax: ++995 32 92 39 47
    E-mail: [email protected]
    URL: www.cenn.org
Working...
X