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John Evans: Free and Fair Election Vital for Future of Armenia

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  • John Evans: Free and Fair Election Vital for Future of Armenia

    John Evans:Free and Fair Election Vital for Future of Armenia

    28.04.2006 12:13

    YEREVAN (YERKIR) - Armenia's participation in the Millennium Challenge
    Account was a new stage in development of the U.S.-Armenian
    relations. The U.S. is confident in the peaceful settlement of the
    Nagorno Karabakh conflict.

    The U.S. is providing financial assistance and developing cooperation
    with Armenia. Nevertheless, in his annual speech in 2006
    U.S. President George W. Bush again failed to properly acknowledge the
    events of 1915 by avoiding the word «genocide.»
    U.S. Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary John Evans answered
    some questions of PanARMENIAN.Net regarding these matters.

    - Armenia is the second largest recipient of humanitarian aid from the
    United States after Israel. What is planned for 2006 considering the
    parliamentary elections in 2007 and 2008?

    - Armenia is one of the largest recipients of U.S. assistance on a per
    capita basis. Since 1992, the United States has provided more than
    1.6 billion dollars of assistance to Armenia in support of the
    country's transition to democracy. Through this assistance, the
    United States government is cooperating with Armenia in pursuit of
    three major goals: strengthening democratic institutions, providing
    for a more stable and secure South Caucasus, and building the
    economies of all three countries of the region.

    In addition to our on-going programs, the United States has developed
    a program of assistance worth approximately seven million dollars to
    help Armenia in holding free and fair elections in 2007 and 2008. This
    comprehensive package of election-related assistance will provide
    support for the development of the national voter registry and the
    conduct of voter education campaigns.

    It will also include assistance for the development of voter education
    materials, training for various sectors of society including
    representatives of the judicial system and political party
    representatives, and exchange visits for media outlets. We believe it
    is vitally important for Armenia’s future that the upcoming
    elections be free, fair and transparent, and be perceived as such not
    only by the international community, but most importantly by the
    Armenian people themselves.

    In addition, on March 27 the United States Millennium Challenge
    Corporation signed a $235 million Compact with Armenia. This
    assistance program will focus on rural road rehabilitation and
    improved irrigation, and will directly impact approximately 75% of the
    rural population, increasing their annual income by an estimated $36
    million in 2010 and over $113 million in 2015. In order to remain
    eligible for this funding, Armenia must continue to demonstrate a
    commitment to ruling justly, investing in people, and encouraging
    economic freedom.

    - How is economic cooperation between Armenia and the United States
    developing?

    - U.S.-Armenian economic cooperation is continuing to develop in the
    right direction. In addition to the U.S. assistance programs
    outlined above, more than seventy American firms are currently doing
    business in Armenia, several of which have made sizeable
    investments. In addition, a number of Armenian products have found
    markets in America. As this cooperation continues to develop, we
    hope to establish additional, stronger economic links between the
    United States and Armenia.

    - Your country is a Co-Chair of the OSCE Minsk Group. Is it possible
    to expect something new in the settlement of the Nagorno Karabakh
    conflict this year?

    - In March of this year, U.S. Co-Chair of the OSCE Minsk Group
    Ambassador Steven Mann addressed this issue when he said, "[The]
    United States believes that the way peace is best served is by
    taking that first step towards an agreement in 2006. I
    don’t believe we can solve the entire Nagorno-Karabakh
    issue in 2006. I think realistically the process of the Karabakh
    settlement is going to be something that takes place over many
    years. But I think this is our year, and these are the months, to
    take that first important step. And I am absolutely convinced that
    in the months ahead the two sides have the chance to greatly lower
    the dangers of a new war."

    - In 2005 at a meeting with Armenian-American Diaspora, you said that
    the events of 1915 in the Ottoman Empire were "genocide." Do you
    still hold this point of view?

    - I would refer you to President Bush's April 24 statement, in which
    he noted, "Today, we remember one of the horrible tragedies of the
    20th century – the mass killings and forced exile of as
    many as 1.5 million Armenians in the final days of the Ottoman
    Empire in 1915.

    This was a tragedy for all humanity and one that we and the world must
    never forget. We mourn this terrible chapter of history and recognize
    that it remains a source of pain for people in Armenia and for all
    those who believe in freedom, tolerance, and the dignity and value of
    every human life. It is a credit to the human spirit and generations
    of Armenians who live in Armenia, America, and around the globe that
    they have overcome this suffering and proudly preserved their
    centuries-old culture, traditions, and religion."

    I would also point you to remarks made by Assistant Secretary of State
    Daniel Fried, who said in March of this year, "The U.S. position on
    events of 1915 has not changed. We believe that a productive dialogue
    is the best way to establish a shared understanding of history that
    honors the victims of these horrific events, murders on a mass scale,
    killings without justification, deportations. Over 1.5 million people
    lost their lives, innocent victims.

    But we want to foster reconciliation and peace based on an
    understanding of history, not a denial of it. We believe that the
    tragedy of 1915, the killings, is of enormous human significance and
    its historical assessment should be determined not on the basis of
    politics, but introspection among civic leaders and scholars. This
    process has begun in Turkey where it needs to take place."
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