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Khatami Reaffirms Armenia's Importance To Iran

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  • Khatami Reaffirms Armenia's Importance To Iran

    Khatami Reaffirms Armenia's Importance To Iran
    By Ruzanna Stepanian 10/09/2004 08:46

    Radio Free Europe, Czech Republic
    Sept 10 2004

    Iranian President Mohammad Khatami ended on Thursday a two-day
    official visit to Armenia, lavishing more praise on Armenians and
    their long-standing contribution to the development of his country.

    Khatami said the Iranian and Armenian peoples remain part of the
    same ancient "civilization" despite their cultural and religious
    differences developed over the centuries.

    "Every Iranian seems to again find his identity by coming to
    Armenia," he declared in a speech at Yerevan State University (YSU).
    "The poetry, the art works and the sparkles of kindness of this land
    are all testimony to the existence of bonds between Iran and Armenia."

    "Since the dawn of history Armenia has had deep and strong links with
    Iranian culture and civilization," he went on. "Even religious and
    ideological differences, which usually create serious divisions in
    geopolitical regions, have been unable to destroy the civilizational
    unity of the Iranian world and the Armenian people."

    Khatami also paid tribute to Iran's ethnic Armenian citizens that
    currently number more than 100,000. "The role and participation of
    the Armenians and Armenia in the opening of new horizons and paths
    of Iran's development has been significant," he said in a speech
    tinged with philosophical passages about the worldwide "dialogue of
    civilizations" promoted by Tehran.

    The Iranian leader began the second day of the trip with a visit to
    the genocide memorial in Yerevan where he laid a wreath in memory of
    some 1.5 million Armenians slaughtered in Ottoman Turkey.

    He further underscored the Islamic Republic's strong interest in
    its sole Christian neighbor by receiving leaders of the Armenian
    Revolutionary Federation (Dashnaktsutyun), an influential nationalist
    party which favors close ties with Russia and Iran and a hard line
    on Turkey and Azerbaijan. It is represented in Armenia's government
    and has branches in all major Diaspora communities, including Iran.

    A statement by Dashnaktsutyun's office in Yerevan cited Khatami as
    praising the party's "pan-Armenian essence and Armenia's "important
    role" in the region. The Dashnaktsutyun leaders, for their part,
    welcomed his visit as "a new stage" in the Iranian-Armenian
    relationship.

    Khatami and his Armenian counterpart Robert Kocharian signed
    on Wednesday a framework treaty on the "principles and bases"
    of bilateral relations. They also formalized the release of a $30
    million Iran loan to Yerevan to be used for the construction of a
    gas pipeline that will link the two neighboring countries.

    Answering questions from YSU students, Khatami was asked to comment
    on his recent remark that Iran recognizes Azerbaijan's territorial
    integrity in the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict. He said Tehran respects
    the "sovereignty and territorial integrity of countries," but stopped
    short of describing Karabakh as an integral part of Azerbaijan.

    Khatami's Thursday schedule also included a visit to an 18th century
    Persian mosque in Yerevan renovated by the Iranian government and a
    meeting with the head of the Armenian Apostolic Church, Catholicos
    Garegin II.
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