Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

AAA: Armenia This Week - 01/24/2005

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

  • AAA: Armenia This Week - 01/24/2005

    ARMENIA THIS WEEK

    Monday, January 24, 2005



    In this issue:



    Armenian government posts economic scorecard for 2004

    Governing coalition, opposition in talks over constitution reform



    ARMENIA POSTS STRONG ECONOMIC GAINS FOR 2004

    Armenia's main economic index, the Gross Domestic Product (GDP),
    increased by over 10 percent last year, the preliminary data of the
    National Statistics Service showed, a fourth consecutive year of
    double-digit growth. Armenia registered overall economic progress
    despite a shortfall in diamond-cutting, a major industry, and conclusion
    of the multi-million-dollar infrastructure projects funded by the
    U.S.-based Lincy Foundation. The overall GDP now totals over $3.5
    billion, which is roughly where it stood prior to the economic collapse
    of the early 1990s.



    Construction, agriculture and electricity generation posted the
    strongest figures of all economic sectors, growing by 17, 15 and 10
    percent year-on-year, respectively. Overall industrial output increased
    by two percent, reflecting decline in diamond-cutting and stoppages at
    major industrial enterprises. Exports increased by four percent to $715
    million. Twenty-five European Union countries accounted for 36.5 percent
    of Armenia's external trade, with Russia's share decreasing to 12.5
    percent. Armenia's trade with Georgia grew by 50 percent, the highest
    such increase with any one country, following the anti-corruption
    crackdown by the new administration of President Mikhail Saakashvili.



    The Statistics Service also reported a 23 percent increase in average
    incomes, now standing at just over $100 in the private sector and about
    half that in the smaller public sector, and registered unemployment
    falling from 9.7 to 9.3 percent of the labor force. The unemployment
    figures have been disputed by a recent poll held by the
    Armenian-European Policy and Legal Advice Center (AEPLAC) which found
    that more than 20 percent of respondents "could not find a job." At the
    same time, Armenia's Labor Minister Aghvan Vartanian recently suggested
    that at least 130,000 Armenians were employed unofficially, with their
    employers seeking to avoid tax and social security payments. President
    Robert Kocharian has recently pledged to crack down on this practice.
    (Sources: Armenia This Week 11-8; Arminfo 1-20; RFE/RL Armenia Report
    1-20, 21)



    COALITION MAJORITY, OPPOSITION TO DISCUSS CONSTITUTIONAL REFORM

    Armenia's main opposition groups last week submitted a set of proposals
    for reforming the Armenian Constitution, which the coalition majority
    leaders said would be seriously considered. Proposals submitted on
    behalf of the opposition Justice Bloc and National Unity Party mark a
    turnaround in their refusal to cooperate with the governing coalition
    following the end of opposition-led street protests last June. Armenia's
    President Robert Kocharian has long pledged to reform the 1995 Armenian
    Constitution, seen as giving too many powers to the President, but a
    government-backed referendum held in May 2003 failed to garner
    sufficient votes.



    According to media reports, the opposition reform package would
    strengthen parliamentary oversight of the government, limit the
    president's authority to appoint and dismiss judges and make the Yerevan
    mayor an elected official. The joint opposition proposal is the fourth
    such reform package. Last year, the coalition majority comprising the
    Republican and Country of Law Parties and the Armenian Revolutionary
    Federation (Dashnaktsutiun), the United Labor Party led by businessman
    Gurgen Arsenian and a member of the Justice Bloc Arshak Sadoyan had
    submitted their respective proposals.



    The Council of Europe's Venice Commission, which has long worked with
    Armenia on constitutional reform, last month published an "interim
    opinion" concluding that the coalition and Arsenian proposals represent
    an overall improvement over the Constitution in force, but would need
    further work to fully correspond to European standards of power-sharing
    and human rights. Sadoyan's proposal was criticized as containing
    "provisions that cannot be realistically implemented in practice." The
    Parliament is now expected to work out a compromise constitutional
    reform draft to be voted on a popular referendum, possibly later this
    year.



    Also in recent weeks, Nagorno Karabakh President Arkady Ghoukasian
    reshuffled his cabinet, dismissing the education minister, a senior
    member of the local branch of Dashnaktsutiun. The move led to a falling
    out with the party, which backed Ghoukasian's re-election bid in 2002.
    Last August, a Dashnak-backed parliamentarian defeated a pro-government
    candidate in elections for Stepanakert mayor. Local observers see these
    developments as setting the stage for a tough contest during Karabakh
    parliamentary elections due later this year. Pro-Ghoukasian Democratic
    Artsakh Union currently has a majority in the 33-seat Karabakh
    legislature, with Dashanks forming the second largest faction. (Sources:
    Armenia This Week 6-18, 8-23; http://www.venice.coe.int; RFE/RL Armenia
    Report 12-29, 1-7, 1-17, 21; Hayakakan Zhamanak 1-18, 19; Arminfo 1-20,
    21; Noyan Tapan 1-18, 20)



    A WEEKLY NEWSLETTER PUBLISHED BY THE ARMENIAN ASSEMBLY OF AMERICA

    122 C Street, N.W., Suite 350, Washington, D.C. 20001 (202) 393-3434 FAX
    (202) 638-4904

    E-Mail [email protected] WEB http://www.aaainc.org

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
Working...
X