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Armenia: A Cognac By Any Other Name

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  • Armenia: A Cognac By Any Other Name

    ARMENIA: A COGNAC BY ANY OTHER NAME

    EurasiaNet.org, NY
    April 23 2013

    April 23, 2013 - 3:36pm, by Yigal Schleifer

    Brandy means big business in Armenia -- it was the country's
    second-largest export last year, after the less drinkable copper
    concentrate -- so recent negotiations with the European Union over
    what to call the libation could have profound implications.

    Yerevan and Brussels are currently negotiating the terms of a Free and
    Comprehensive Free Trade Agreement (DCFTA), part of a larger agreement
    that would help bring Armenia and the EU closer together. As part of
    the negotiations, Yerevan is asking that the EU allow it to continue
    marketing its brandy as "cognac," which is the name used to sell
    the stuff in many parts of the former Soviet Union, which remains
    the largest market for Armenian brandy. According to European law,
    the name "cognac" can only be used for brandies that come from the
    French region of, well, Cognac. Reports the Armenpress website:

    "There have certainly been discussions and they still continue. If
    there is an agreement, we will let you know", - said the Deputy
    Minister of Economy [Garegin Melkonya]. Melkonyan stated that all
    the parts of the negotiations on the Armenia-European Union Deep and
    Comprehensive Free Trade Area, which had not been finally agreed,
    would be passed to the next stage.

    The Deputy Minister of Economy of the Republic of Armenia Garegin
    Melkonyan earlier informed that the word "Cognac" was protected by the
    European Legislation and was registered as a geographical indication.

    The Armenian side presented the European partners that cognac in
    Armenia was perceived as a kind of a product.

    Meanwhile, for a bit of background on the role of brandy in Armenian
    life and about some of the lore surrounding it (there is an apocryphal
    claim it was a favorite of Winston Churchill's), check out this
    interesting article from the BBC.

    http://www.eurasianet.org/node/66870

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