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Karabakh Complains Of Losing Money On Relationship With Armenia

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  • Karabakh Complains Of Losing Money On Relationship With Armenia

    KARABAKH COMPLAINS OF LOSING MONEY ON RELATIONSHIP WITH ARMENIA
    by Anna Israelyan

    Aravot, Armenia
    Nov 22 2006

    "The NKR gives more money to Armenia than gets"

    The speaker of Nagornyy Karabakh's parliament, Ashot Gulyan, is not
    happy with the size of the credit allocated from the Armenian budget
    to the Nagornyy Karabakh republic [NKR]. When Robert Kocharyan, former
    NKR president, became the president of Armenia in 1998, an office
    of the State Customs Committee which had been working on the border
    between the NKR and Armenia for seven years was closed. The decision
    was logical from the political standpoint, for states which aspire
    to unite should not have points that separate them. But whether or
    not the move was economically justified remains at least disputable,
    at least in terms of the interests of the NKR.

    All the goods that enter Nagornyy Karabakh have passed through
    Armenian customs and Armenia has kept sizable funds which should
    be given to the NKR. According to estimates of the NKR government,
    the customs fees transferred to the Armenian budget amount to some
    5bn drams [more than 13m dollars] a year. For this reason the NKR
    officials have repeatedly said that this sum should really be passed
    on to Nagornyy Karabakh immediately and could form the bulk of the
    money given [by Armenia] to the NKR.

    The leader of the parliamentary commission on finance, budget and
    economic issues, Gagik Minasyan, told us that 4.4 per cent of the
    Armenian budget is given to Karabakh through the inter-state credit
    every year. And he confirmed the current state of affairs. "I can say
    that if any other state includes customs fees in its state funds,
    then Karabakh does not have such an opportunity, I think that this
    money fully compensates the inter-state credit which we give to the
    NKR," Minasyan said.

    Let us note that by means of the inter-state credit Armenia supplies
    about 65 per cent of the NKR budget. People in Karabakh think that
    it is necessary to specify that the sums of the inter-state credit do
    not come 100 per cent from Armenia and its state budget. One top NKR
    official even told us that actually they leave bigger sums in Armenia
    when performing customs clearing than the Armenian budget allocates
    to them. Asked about this, NKR parliament speaker Ashot Gulyan smiled
    and replied in a diplomatic way: "There are various calculations. I
    cannot say if these sums are really bigger than those given to us.

    But I think they need to be specified. Anyway, it is more correct to
    have bigger demand as in the economic development sense today the NKR
    needs more investment, and this applies to foreign investment as well
    as to the inter-state credit."

    For several years now the NKR has proposed establishing finance and
    economic specifications between Armenia and Karabakh. The dignity
    of proud Karabakh residents will not be insulted and they will be
    pleased if it becomes a fact that they acquire the [customs] sums
    that should have reached them anyway. They want a separate line [in
    the budget accounts] to say how much NKR money from the inter-state
    credit is left at customs points [in Armenia].
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