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ANCA: Senate Adjourns Before Adopting Armenia Trade Provision

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  • ANCA: Senate Adjourns Before Adopting Armenia Trade Provision

    Armenian National Committee of America
    888 17th St., NW, Suite 904
    Washington, DC 20006
    Tel: (202) 775-1918
    Fax: (202) 775-5648
    E-mail: [email protected]
    Internet: www.anca.org

    PRESS RELEASE
    October 12, 2004
    Contact: Elizabeth S. Chouldjian
    Tel: (202) 775-1918

    SENATE ADJOURNS BEFORE ADOPTING
    KEY U.S-ARMENIA TRADE PROVISION

    -- U.S. House Gave Final Approval Last Week to Extending
    Permanent Normal Trade Relations Status to Armenia

    -- Post-Adjournment Session May Approve Measure After Election

    WASHINGTON, DC - U.S. Senators left Washington yesterday to hit the
    campaign trail before taking up a large trade bill that includes a
    provision to permanently normalize trade between the U.S. and
    Armenia, reported the Armenian National Committee Of America
    (ANCA).

    The failure of the Senate to act on this provision, which grants
    Permanent Normal Trade Relations (PNTR) status to Armenia, was due
    to entirely unrelated concerns about other parts of the larger
    trade measure, H.R.1047 - the Miscellaneous Trade and Technical
    Corrections Act. The U.S. House passed this bill on October 8th.
    The last opportunity for Congress to approve this measure during
    the 108th Congress will be during a rare post-adjournment session
    of Congress - either before or, more likely, after the November 2nd
    election. This session will deal primarily with approving
    appropriations bills and finalizing legislation on intelligence
    reform.

    Armenian Caucus Co-Chairman Joe Knollenberg (R-MI) was the first to
    raise the issue of Armenia PNTR in Congress. His legislation,
    H.R.528, introduced last year was supported by the Armenian Caucus
    and cosponsored 112 other Members of Congress. A companion bill
    was introduced on the Senate side by Senator Mitch McConnell (R-KY)
    and cosponsored by 21 other Senators. The strong support for these
    measures paved the way for serious consideration of their inclusion
    by members of Congress negotiating the final version of the larger
    trade measure.

    "We want to thank Congressman Knollenberg, Senator McConnell and
    all those who played a role in bringing Armenia PNTR to the brink
    of final adoption," said ANCA Executive Director Aram Hamparian.
    "While we would have liked to have seen the Senate act before
    adjourning, we remain hopeful that this measure will be enacted
    into law before the end of the 108th Congress."

    Over the past two years, the ANCA has worked, in Washington, DC and
    in local communities throughout the country to generate bipartisan
    support for this trade measure among legislators, including those
    serving on key trade subcommittees. This trade bill represents a
    core element of the ANCA's efforts to expand bilateral economic
    relations, provide new commercial opportunities, and further
    strengthen the enduring bonds between the American and Armenian
    peoples. Over ten thousand pro-Armenia activists sent ANCA
    WebFaxes to Congress, thousands more made phone calls in support of
    PNTR, and this important issue was raised in several hundred
    Congressional visits, both in District Offices and the nation's
    capital. The sample ANCA WebFax letter for activists included
    several reasons to support this legislation, among them:

    * Increased U.S.-Armenia trade and investment advances U.S.
    foreign policy by strengthening Armenia's free market economic
    development and integration into the world economy.

    * Expanded U.S.-Armenia commercial relations will strengthen
    bilateral relations and reinforces the enduring friendship between
    the American and Armenian peoples.

    * Adoption of PNTR for Armenia will help offset - at no cost to
    U.S. taxpayers - the devastating impact of the dual Turkish and
    Azerbaijani blockades, estimated by the World Bank as costing
    Armenia up to a third of its entire GDP (as much as $720 million
    annually) and half of its exports.

    The Trade Act of 1974 excluded all Soviet countries from having
    normal trade relations (NTR) status with the United States. One
    particular provision of the Act, known as the Jackson-Vanik
    amendment, required the President to deny NTR to those countries
    that restricted free emigration. The policy was adopted, in part,
    in response to Communist government restrictions on the emigration
    of Jews. According to the terms of the Jackson-Vanik amendment,
    when the President determines that freedom of emigration rights
    have been reinstated in a country, normal trade relations may be
    granted. To maintain NTR, the President must report to Congress
    twice a year that Jackson-Vanik requirements have been met. While
    successive Presidents have waived the Jackson-Vanik Amendment
    restrictions on Armenia during the past decade, the passage of the
    Knollenberg bill, would grant Armenia permanent normal trade
    relations status, without the need for semi-yearly Presidential
    determinations.

    The depth of American support for Armenia PNTR was made clear in
    the responses from around the nation to the multi-issue candidate
    questionnaires circulated this election season by the ANCA.
    Challengers and incumbents from both parties have stressed their
    support for legislation that would grant Armenia Permanent Normal
    Trade Relations (PNTR) status.

    The text of the Armenia PNTR provision in H.R.1047 is provided
    below:

    Title II, Section 2001

    Subtitle A - Miscellaneous Provisions

    SEC. 2001. TERMINATION OF APPLICATION OF TITLE IV OF THE TRADE ACT
    OF 1974 TO ARMENIA.

    (a) FINDINGS. ­ Congress makes the following findings:

    (1) Armenia has been found to be in full compliance with the
    freedom of emigration requirements under title IV of the Trade Act
    of 1974.

    (2) Armenia acceded to the World Trade Organization on February 5,
    2003.

    (3) Since declaring its independence from the Soviet Union in 1991,
    Armenia has made considerable progress in enacting free-market
    reforms.

    (4) Armenia has demonstrated a strong desire to build a friendly
    and cooperative relationship with the United States and has
    concluded many bilateral treaties and agreements with the United
    States.

    (5) Total United States-Armenia bilateral trade
    for 2002 amounted to more than $134,200,000.

    (b) PRESIDENTIAL DETERMINATIONS AND EXTENSIONS OF NONDISCRIMINATORY
    TREATMENT.

    Notwithstanding any provision of title IV of the Trade Act of 1974
    (19 U.S.C. 2431 et seq.), the President may:

    (1) determine that such title should no longer apply to Armenia;
    and

    (2) after making a determination under paragraph (1) with respect
    to Armenia, proclaim the extension of nondiscriminatory treatment
    (normal trade relations treatment) to the products of that country.

    (c) TERMINATION OF APPLICATION OF TITLE IV.

    On and after the effective date of the extension under subsection
    (b)(2) of nondiscriminatory treatment to the products of Armenia,
    title IV of the Trade Act of 1974 shall cease to apply to that
    country.

    #####
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