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Russian FM Discusses Bilateral Ties, Karabakh In Armenia

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  • Russian FM Discusses Bilateral Ties, Karabakh In Armenia

    Russian FM Discusses Bilateral Ties, Karabakh In Armenia

    Radio Free Europe, Czech Rep.
    Feb 18 2005

    Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov met with President Robert
    Kocharian and other Armenian leaders in Yerevan Thursday on an
    official visit which focused on bilateral relations and the unresolved
    Nagorno-Karabakh conflict.

    The talks were also aimed at preparing for Russian President Vladimir
    Putin's upcoming visit to Armenia, his country's main regional ally.

    "We expect a very busy year for our partnership and allied
    relationship," Lavrov said at the end of the one-day trip. "We
    have to implement agreements reached by the [Russian-Armenian]
    inter-governmental commission on economic cooperation last December.
    We agreed to accelerate implementation of all issues agreed by the
    parties so that our presidents can see … that their decisions are
    put into practice."

    "There are no problems in our relations. But because those relations
    are constantly developing they need constant attention," he added.

    "We are happy with the results of the visit. I believe that it will
    give an additional impetus to our relations," Oskanian said for
    his part.

    Kocharian was quoted by his press office as telling Lavrov that
    he is satisfied with the current state of bilateral ties and hopes
    that Russia will help to lift transport blockades resulting from the
    unresolved ethnic conflicts in the South Caucasus.

    The most intractable of those conflicts was a major theme of the
    talks. "We hope that the so-called Prague process of regular meetings
    between the foreign ministers of Armenia and Azerbaijan will bear
    fruit," Lavrov said. "The co-chairs of the OSCE's Minsk Group are
    ready to foster that. We will do our best to make sure that the
    process progresses successfully."

    "Sergei Lavrov is a minister who probably knows more [about the
    Karabakh peace process] than I," Oskanian joked at their joint
    news conference, underlining Moscow's role as a key international
    mediator. He announced that his next meeting with Azerbaijani Foreign
    Minister Elmar Mammadyarov in Prague will take place on March 2.

    Economic issues were another subject of discussions, with Kocharian
    and Prime Minister Andranik Markarian again calling on the Russians
    to speed up work on reactivating four of five moribund Armenian
    enterprises which were handed over to them two years ago in payment
    for Armenia's $100 million debt. Markarian also expressed concern
    at Russia's plans to finance a new railway to Iran that would bypass
    Armenia and run through its arch-rival Azerbaijan

    Lavrov, who revealed to reporters last year that his father was a
    Tbilisi-born Armenian, assured Markarian that "Russia will take into
    account Armenia's interests and will not take any steps that would
    damage them," according to an Armenian government statement.

    --Boundary_(ID_1iM+wtAgeYs6DkqCGz1gqg)--
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