Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Millennium Challenges Corporation Did Not Stop Financing Programs In

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

  • Millennium Challenges Corporation Did Not Stop Financing Programs In

    MILLENNIUM CHALLENGES CORPORATION DID NOT STOP FINANCING PROGRAMS IN ARMENIA

    ARKA
    March 20, 2008

    YEREVAN, March 21. /ARKA/. The Millennium Challenges Corporation did
    not stop financing programs in Armenia, neither did it demand any
    report on activities of the Millennium Challenges -Armenia Foundation,
    Chief Executive Officer of the "Millennium Challenges -Armenia
    Foundation" non-commercial organization Ara Hovsepyan told reporters.

    Under the agreement signed on March 27 2006, the Millennium Challenges
    Corporation pledged to extend $235.65 to Armenia in five years to be
    used for implementation of programs for irrigation system and road
    system improvement. Armenia received $11mln from Millennium Challenges
    Corporation in 2007.

    "No financial transfers were blocked. The money is transferred
    quarterly and the April-June plan has already been approved. The
    February-March funds were transferred with no difficulty," Hovsepyan
    said.

    The corporation-funded programs are being implemented according to the
    schedule. The first contractors for improvement of 272-kilometre-long
    rural roads have already been selected, Hovsepyan said.

    US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice stated in Congress on March 12
    that the Bush administration insists on lift of state of emergency
    imposed in Armenia following the clashes between law-enforcement
    bodies and the opposition discontent with the results of February 19
    presidential elections.

    The Secretary of State stressed that Armenia is the largest recipient
    of American assistance as per capita "in that part of the world"
    and said the state of emergency told upon even some of the assistance
    programs.

    She said imposing state of emergency in Armenia made the USA stop
    implementation of some programs.

    >From February 20 to March 1, Armenia's opposition political forces
    led by ex-president Levon Ter-Petrosyan were holding rallies in
    Liberty Square in Yerevan protesting against the results of February
    19 presidential elections attributing victory to Prime Minister Serge
    Sargssyan. As a result of public unrest and clashes between the rally
    participants and the police, 131 people were injured, and eight were
    killed. On March 1, RA President Robert Kocharyan issued a decree on
    imposing a twenty-day state of emergency in the capital.
Working...
X