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AAA: Armenia This Week - 05/23/2005

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  • AAA: Armenia This Week - 05/23/2005

    ARMENIA THIS WEEK
    Monday, May 23, 2005

    In this issue:

    Yerevan scholar urges renewed Diaspora focus on repatriation
    Officials see "movement forward" in Karabakh peace talks

    YEREVAN SCHOLAR URGES RENEWED DIASPORA FOCUS ON REPATRIATION
    A growing number of individual Armenians are immigrating to Armenia
    and both the Armenian government and Diaspora leaders should focus on
    ways to encourage this process, the American University of Armenia
    Political Science Professor Armen Aivazian argued at a roundtable
    discussion hosted last week by the Armenian Assembly of America in
    Washington, DC. Aivazian, who is also a researcher at the Matenadaran
    Institute of Ancient Manuscripts and is involved in non-government
    anti-corruption efforts in Armenia, is currently on a speaking tour of
    Armenian communities throughout the United States.

    Aivazian reported that thousands of Diaspora Armenians from the Middle
    East as well as the United States and other countries have moved to
    Armenia since independence, and argued more would resettle should
    there be an organized campaign to promote the process. Aivazian said
    that Armenia's economy has sufficiently stabilized to provide new
    arrivals with relatively comfortable living and opportunities for
    personal growth, absent for much of the 1990s. The period following
    the 1988 earthquake, economic disruption caused by the fall of the
    Soviet Union and blockades by Azerbaijan and Turkey, witnessed a
    country-wide energy crisis, economic standstill, deteriorating
    standards of living and resultant permanent and temporary emigration
    of up to a million people from Armenia. Official figures show that
    following four years of double-digit growth, Armenia's Gross Domestic
    Product has recovered to the level of the late 1980s, and the economy
    grew by eight percent in the first four months of this year. Last
    year, for the first time in more than a decade, more people moved to
    Armenia than left the country.

    Aivazian noted that the large-scale emigration of the 1990s will have
    a lasting negative effect on Armenia's demographics and argued that
    repatriation is the only available remedy. Armenia's current
    population stands at just over three million, with an estimated five
    million ethnic Armenians living in the Diaspora, primarily in Russia,
    the United States, Europe and the Middle East, a majority of them
    descendants of victims of the Armenian Genocide in Ottoman
    Turkey. Aivazian stressed that only through prioritizing the issue of
    repatriation, including creation of high-profile dedicated structures
    in both Armenia and Diaspora, can Armenia's population grow at a
    robust rate to reach four million by 2025 and six million by 2050, for
    the country to be able to face pressing national security
    challenges. (Sources: Mediamax 3-23; Armenia This Week 4-25; Arminfo
    5-20; R&I Report 5-20)

    OFFICIALS SEE "MOVEMENT FORWARD" IN KARABAKH PEACE TALKS
    Both Armenian and Azerbaijani officials made upbeat statements,
    following more than two-hour talks between Presidents Robert Kocharian
    and Ilham Aliyev at the Council of Europe summit held in Warsaw,
    Poland last week. But officials made differing interpretations of what
    was discussed at the meeting. Azerbaijan's Foreign Minister Elmar
    Mamedyarov claimed that the sides discussed a "timetable" for the
    Armenian withdrawal from the formerly Azeri-populated districts
    outside Nagorno Karabakh's Soviet-era borders. Azerbaijan has long
    insisted on unilateral Armenian compromises, but both the Armenian and
    Nagorno Karabakh leaders maintain that all contentious issues can be
    resolved as part of a package settlement.

    Armenia's Foreign Ministry rejected the Azeri claim that withdrawals
    were discussed, with Foreign Minister Vartan Oskanian noting "small
    movement forward" on the status issue, which will now allow for
    further talks between the two sides on the ministerial level. Oskanian
    and Mamedyarov are expected to resume their talks, dubbed the "Prague
    Process," after the French, Russian and U.S. mediators, working under
    the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE)
    umbrella, visit the region some time in July.

    In the meantime, Nagorno Karabakh's Deputy Foreign Minister Masis
    Mailian noted that last month's statement by the OSCE mediators, which
    urged an end to continued war rhetoric and called for a renewed
    commitment to the 11-year ceasefire, has had a positive impact on the
    situation along the Line of Contact between Karabakh Armenian and
    Azeri forces. In March, Mailian accused Azeri forces of moving their
    positions closer to Karabakh's leading to an increase in cease-fire
    violations. Mailian also urged the OSCE to beef up its monitoring
    presence, currently limited to monthly inspections by several unarmed
    observers. (Sources: Armenia This Week 4-19; Mediamax 5-13;
    Eurasianet.org 5-20)

    Note to Readers: Armenia This Week will not be issued next week due to
    the Memorial Day holiday. Publication will resume the week of June
    6. Visit http://www.aaainc.org/ArTW/archive.php for archive dating
    back to 1997.

    A WEEKLY NEWSLETTER PUBLISHED BY THE ARMENIAN ASSEMBLY OF AMERICA
    1140 19th Street, N.W., Suite 600, Washington, D.C. 20001 (202)
    393-3434 FAX (202) 638-4904
    E-Mail [email protected] WEB http://www.aaainc.org
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