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  • Armenian Government Takes On Gold Company

    Institute for War and Peace Reporting, UK
    July 27, 2006

    Armenian Government Takes On Gold Company


    An American mining group accuses the Armenian government of trying to
    expropriate its assets.

    By Susanna Petrosian in Yerevan

    Armenia's environment ministry is trying to revoke the license of an
    American gold company in a dispute that puts investors' rights under
    the spotlight.

    Connecticut-based Global Gold Corporation, GGC,is contracted along
    with the Australian company Iberian Resources to mine gold, silver
    and zinc in the Marjan district of southern Armenia until the end of
    2007.

    Now the ministry is claiming it has lost its right to do so - though
    GGC continues its exploratory work, saying it has the law on its
    side.

    Some say Armenia wants to take back the mine in order to then sell it
    off to a Russian group. Russia is by far the biggest investor in
    Armenia with investments worth 400 million US dollars.

    The government, however, insists GGC has lost its license because it
    has failed to meet its obligations.

    `The ministry gave the license and it can take it away,' said Grant
    Avetisian, who heads the department for protecting underground
    resources at the environment ministry. He declined to say whether the
    ministry was planning to go to court to enforce its claim against
    GGC.

    `GGC carried out only five per cent of the work,' added environment
    minister Vardan Aivazian. `They did not fulfil their duties as
    investors. As they cannot work legally, they should go and someone
    else should replace them.'

    But GGC's regional director Ashot Boghosian told IWPR that the
    company had only just begun work in the mines and there was no legal
    basis for stopping them continuing.

    Boghosian says that by law his company's right to do exploratory work
    can be suspended only by a court, and that the company must be
    informed of the allegations levelled against it 90 days before the
    court hearing.

    Gagik Adibekian, head of the department that deals with agreements
    and contracts at Armenia's trade ministry, confirmed that a court
    order was needed for a company to lose its license.

    `We did not receive any warning, and we don't know what infringement
    we have committed,' said Boghosian.

    `If the ministry tries to deprive us of our licenses and to give them
    to another organisation, the best definition of this action will be
    expropriation,' said Boghosian. `I don't think this is the situation,
    and I hope that GGC's investments will not be expropriated, as that
    is a serious responsibility.'

    Van Krikorian, president and chief adviser to the company, said that
    the Armenian government risked counter-measures from the United
    States government if it tried to force GGC to shut down its
    operations, and that the company might seek international
    arbitration. `The decision to strip us of our license is illegal,' he
    told IWPR.

    GGC has a number of projects throughout Armenia and says it will
    invest almost 10 million dollars in the country by the end of this
    year. It says it is spending 1.2 million dollars on its exploratory
    work in the Marjan mine, which contains an estimated 17.8 tonnes of
    precious metals.

    Around 400 people are employed on the project. Ashot Saakian, head of
    administration of the nearby village of Arevis, told IWPR that locals
    are pinning their hopes on the mining project and on GGC restoring
    outdated infrastructure.

    The company has won the support of economist and opposition
    parliamentary deputy Tatul Manaserian, who said revoking the
    company's license without proper justification could hurt
    Armenian-American relations.

    `Statements like this made against GGC will make the investment
    climate unpredictable in the future, and this lack of clarity is the
    most serious threat for business in terms of instability,' said
    Manaserian.

    However, the ministry is not backing down. It says not only has GGC
    has lost its license, but that it may soon announce the name of the
    new company contracted to work in the mines.

    A source in government told IWPR on condition of anonymity that a
    Russian investor was interested in acquiring the Marjan mine.

    Under a `debt-for-assets' deal, Russian companies now control almost
    the entire energy network of Armenia and have expressed an interest
    in acquiring the telephone network.

    Some experts see this is an economic takeover that undermines
    Armenia's sovereignty, although trade minister Karen Chshmaritian
    says there is nothing to be worried about.

    `All of these processes, including the energy sector, are under our
    full control,' said the minister.

    Critics are not convinced, seeing the travails of GGC as a symptom of
    a wider phenomenon.

    `Today Armenia's attitude to investors is defined by its foreign
    policy, which is basically focused on Russia,' said Stepan Grigorian,
    head of the Analytical Centre on Globalisation and Regional
    Cooperation in Yerevan.

    `Russia thinks it is not enough to keep its influence over Armenia
    through the military sector alone, and is now using economics as
    well.'

    Susanna Petrosian is a journalist with the Noyan Tapan news agency in
    Yerevan.
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