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MOSCOW: Sargsyan Wins Putin's Seal Of Approval

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  • MOSCOW: Sargsyan Wins Putin's Seal Of Approval

    SARGSYAN WINS PUTIN'S SEAL OF APPROVAL
    By Anna Smolchenko

    The Moscow Times
    March 25 2008
    Russia

    President Vladimir Putin and Serzh Sargsyan on Monday pledged
    continuity in bilateral relations, as the Armenian president-elect
    made Moscow his first destination after being declared the winner in
    a controversial election last month.

    "I know that political processes in Armenia are not developing easily,
    but we very much hope that everything we have built up in bilateral
    relations in recent years will remain and develop further in the
    future, regardless of events inside Armenia," Putin said at the start
    of the talks in the Kremlin.

    Sargsyan was elected in a Feb. 19 vote that the opposition says
    was rigged. The growing protests that followed were then violently
    dispersed by police and a 20-day state of emergency was imposed.

    The state of emergency ended last week.

    Sargsyan thanked Putin for Russia's support, including its backing
    in the run-up to the Armenian vote.

    "Both [Armenian President Robert Kocharyan] and our ambassador passed
    your personal messages on to me, and I will be honest: Never before
    have we witnessed such an unambiguous approach," he said.

    Sargsyan's trip comes on the heels of a visit by Kocharyan, who came
    to Moscow for an informal Commonwealth of Independent States summit
    on Feb. 22.

    Putin congratulated Sargsyan, currently prime minister, on his
    victory, while Sargsyan said the election of First Deputy Prime
    Minister Dmitry Medvedev as Putin's replacement in March instilled
    hope that the bilateral relations would continue to develop positively.

    Sargsyan met Medvedev earlier on Monday. Sargsyan is to be inaugurated
    on April 9, while the ceremony for Medvedev will take place on May 7.

    The talks between Putin and Sargsyan were to focus on expanding
    trade and economic relations, including nuclear cooperation, the
    Kremlin said in a statement on Monday. Armenia has been invited to
    join Russia's international uranium enrichment center in Angarsk and
    is expected to finalize its commitment in the near future.

    Azhdar Kurtov, an analyst with the Russian Institute of Strategic
    Studies, said continuity in relations with Yerevan was important
    for Moscow, as Armenia remains virtually its only ally in the South
    Caucasus.

    "Armenia has been successful so far in keeping the Caucasus from
    drifting toward the West or, rather, the south," said Kurtov, who
    focuses on the CIS.

    Landlocked Armenia borders Azerbaijan, Georgia, Iran and Turkey,
    in a region that is becoming a key transit route for oil exports to
    European and world markets. Georgia and Azerbaijan have both said
    they are interested in NATO membership.

    The difference between Moscow's relations with Armenia and its
    relationship with Georgia was evident, Kurtov said, from the Russian
    media coverage of postelection riots in Yerevan and of the earlier
    riots in Tbilisi. The disturbances and the police reaction in Armenia
    have received much less coverage than did the events in Georgia,
    he said.

    Armenia, which hosts a Russian military base, is part of the
    Russian-led Collective Security Treaty Organization, a regional body
    aimed at strengthening military and political ties. Armenia will take
    over the chairmanship of the organization this fall.

    Russian investment in Armenia totaled about $1 billion at the end of
    2007, a year that saw trade between the countries top $800 million,
    the Kremlin said, adding that a figure of $1 billion was a realistic
    forecast for the near future.

    In a standard indication of good relations between the countries, the
    Kremlin said Armenia would host a series of Russian cultural events
    this year, while Russia would host a "Season of Armenian Culture"
    in 2009.

    Despite the pledges of continued friendship, however, Gazprom is soon
    likely to significantly hike the prices that Armenia pays it for gas,
    analysts have said. Armenia currently pays a mere $110 per thousand
    cubic meters.
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