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Armenia: Spurned By Mcc, Yerevan Looks To Iran, Russia For Road Mone

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  • Armenia: Spurned By Mcc, Yerevan Looks To Iran, Russia For Road Mone

    ARMENIA: SPURNED BY MCC, YEREVAN LOOKS TO IRAN, RUSSIA FOR ROAD MONEY
    Marianna Grigoryan

    EurasiaNet
    July 14 2009
    NY

    The Millennium Challenge Corporation's recent decision to slash
    funds for its Armenia program has prompted the Armenian government
    to seek alternative financing for infrastructure improvements from
    Iran and Russia.

    Citing the Armenian government's alleged inability to meet the
    program's "eligibility criteria" on civil rights, the Millennium
    Challenge Corporation's board of directors decided on June 10 to take
    $64 million out of an original $235.6 million budget for rural road
    reconstruction. [For background see the Eurasia Insight archive]. MCC
    Senior Executive Director Rodney Brent noted in a statement that "I do
    not anticipate that the Board will revisit this issue in the future."

    Hit hard by the global financial crisis -- the Armenian economy could
    shrink by 20 percent this year, according to Prime Minister Tigran
    Sarkisian. Thus, the MCC decision is forcing the Armenian government
    to scramble for ways to make up for the lost funding. The MCC program
    was touted as a way to support the country's agricultural sector and
    to slash poverty rates. "Reconstruction of rural roads is highly
    important and we will do our best to restart the program with the
    support of other international structures," stated Eduard Sharmazanov,
    spokesperson for the governing Republican Party of Armenia.

    Sharmazanov said discussions had been held with Iran about providing
    some part of the $64 million. But those discussions took place before
    Iran's bout of post-election unrest began in Tehran in mid-June. Iran,
    which borders Armenia to the south, is an ally with whom Yerevan has
    enjoyed growing energy ties. The two countries share a gas pipeline and
    work has begun on a cross-border railway. Plans for an oil pipeline
    have also been announced. "We were discussing the involvement of the
    Iranian side [with Tehran] before the political tensions there began,"
    Sharmazanov said.

    Emma Hakobian, an advisor to Economy Minister Nerses Yeritsian,
    whose ministry coordinates the road reconstruction project for the
    government, said that the possibility of asking for funding from
    Iran and Russia was debated internally as soon as the MCC made its
    June 10 decision. Russia has already pledged to extend a low-interest
    $500 million "stabilization" loan to Armenia this year. [For details,
    see the Eurasia Insight archive].

    Neither Hakobian nor Sharmazanov would elaborate about the status
    of discussions to find make-up funds. Talks with "very weighty
    [international] organizations" about compensatory financing had
    commenced, said Hakobian, who declined to identify the organizations
    by name. "We'll announce their names shortly, as soon as everything
    becomes clear," she said.

    Some 25 kilometers of road had been reconstructed and put into use
    before the June 10 decision hit, according to Millennium Challenge
    Armenia Chief Executive Officer Ara Hovsepian. About 350 kilometers
    of road were originally slotted for repair. Work has since stopped on
    the project until alternative financing can be found, Hovsepian said.

    Further cuts for US assistance to Armenia could be in store. On July 9,
    the US Senate Appropriations Committee approved a bill that would slice
    2010 aid to Armenia by $17 million compared to this year's allocation,
    according to the Armenian Reporter, a US-based weekly publication.

    Meanwhile, the blame game for Armenia's lost MCC funds has
    started. Despite a recent political amnesty that scored points with
    international observers, government critics charge that Yerevan
    still has far to go in proving its democratic credentials. They argue
    that not only was the March 1, 2008, political violence in Yerevan
    responsible for the loss of MCC funding, but also the government's
    conduct during the May 31 City Council elections in the Armenian
    capital - a vote that opposition leaders allege the Republican Party
    stole. [For background see the Eurasia Insight archive].

    "Authorities . . . do everything just the opposite way of how they
    should!" complained Hrant Bagratian, who served as prime minister
    from 1993 to 1996 under former president Levon Ter-Petrosian, who
    now leads Armenia's main opposition movement.

    Others blame the recent slow-down in Armenia's diplomatic rapprochement
    with Turkey. With the normalization initiative stalling, Armenia is
    losing leverage as it tries to curry favor with the international
    community, argued independent analyst Yervand Bozoian. [For background
    see the Eurasia Insight archive]. "Armenia has drastically lost its
    credits internationally due to both its foreign and domestic policies,"
    Bozoian said.

    It remains unclear what specific action or actions triggered the
    MCC's decision to revoke road-construction funds.

    Armenia MCC Director Hovsepian told EurasiaNet that "[t]he decision
    to suspend the financing of road construction programs temporarily
    was made after last year's March 1 events." [For background see the
    Eurasia Insight archive]. In a March 20, 2008 letter to then-outgoing
    president Robert Kocharian, MCC Chief Executive Officer John Danilovich
    warned that the crackdown "could have negative effects on Armenia's
    eligibility for MCC funding."

    A May 2009 letter from US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton to
    Armenian President Serzh Sargsyan, however, noted that Yerevan's May
    31 municipal elections "will definitely play an important role while
    discussing Armenian issues during the session of the MCC's board
    planned for early June."

    Republican Party spokesperson Sharmazanov dodged the suggestion that
    the MCC took action in response to the government's questionable
    election practices. While there are "some problems" with democracy
    in Armenia, he said, building a democracy is an ongoing process. "We
    don't think Armenia has regressed," he said. "[E]verything has been
    done to comply with the criteria for a democratic country."
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