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  • Loyalty Reassurance: Armenia Says Committed To Allied Relations With

    LOYALTY REASSURANCE: ARMENIA SAYS COMMITTED TO ALLIED RELATIONS WITH RUSSIA DESPITE RECENT COMPLAINTS

    ANALYSIS | 09.04.15 | 10:32

    By NAIRA HAYRUMYAN
    ArmeniaNow correspondent

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    The invitation to Foreign Minister Edward Nalbandian to pay an official
    visit to Moscow was considered by many experts as an expression of
    concern of Russia over the estimations of Armenian-Russian relations
    heard from Yerevan.

    During the visit on April 7-8 Minister Nalbandian provided new
    assurances about Armenia's loyalty to friendship with Russia and to
    the Russian-led Eurasian Economic Union. President Serzh Sargsyan did
    the same from Yerevan in an interview with Russia 24 TV. But Sargsyan
    also made an important point. "With efforts of all sides, respect for
    each other, including for the sovereignty of each other, the Eurasian
    Economic Union will be beneficial to all," he said on Monday.

    This is not the first attempt by the Armenian president in the past
    few months to remind Russia about the interests of Armenia. A few
    weeks earlier he spoke about the inadmissibility of Russian arms sales
    to Azerbaijan, saying that if the Armenian soldier on the border with
    Azerbaijan realizes that he is being shot from weapons of Russian make,
    then it affects the relations between the two countries.

    Problems with the sovereignty were exposed after the tragic incident
    in Gyumri on January 12 when soldier of the Russian military base in
    Armenia Valery Permyakov allegedly massacred a seven-member Armenian
    family. The Russian side still refuses to hand Permyakov over to
    Armenian justice and he is likely to be tried by a Russian court.

    Russian State Duma Speaker Sergei Naryshkin, who visited Armenia
    last week, said that the trial of the soldier will be held in the
    territory of Armenia, but at the Russian base. This triggered a new
    wave of accusations against Russia, which, in fact, disregards the
    Constitution and sovereignty of Armenia, and suspicions that Moscow
    is hiding something.

    A scandal threatens another major area of Armenian-Russian relations
    - natural gas supplies. The interim parliamentary commission on
    gas issues established more than a year ago this week read out
    its conclusions. The chairman of the committee, ruling Republican
    Party of Armenia representative Vardan Ayvazyan said that nothing
    "criminal" was found in the actions of the Russian Gazprom company,
    the text of the conclusion, as well as the heated debate testified
    to the opposite. In Armenia, there is even talk about the probability
    of revising gas contracts with Russia.

    Against this background, the personal relations of the presidents
    of Armenia and Russia look more than strange. Sargsyan has long not
    met in person with Putin - he does not attend meetings of Eurasian
    Economic Union leaders, he does not make traditional visits to Moscow.

    The issue of Russian President Vladimir Putin's arrival in Yerevan
    for the event marking the 100th anniversary of the Armenian genocide
    has not been yet solved completely.

    "In the near future there will be a visit of Russian President
    Vladimir Putin to Armenia to participate in events connected with
    the 100th anniversary of the Armenian Genocide," Armenian Foreign
    Minister Nalbandian said at a joint press conference with his Russian
    counterpart Sergei Lavrov on Wednesday.

    "We also touched on the preparation of this visit. Our presidents
    will have an opportunity to meet again in May already during the
    events dedicated to the 70th anniversary of Victory [in the Great
    Patriotic War] in Moscow," he added.

    Remarkably, no exact dates of the visits of Putin and Sargsyan have
    been indicated yet. Some analysts do not exclude that Putin will
    come to Armenia not on April 24, but on a different day. Accordingly,
    it is not known whether Sargsyan will go to Moscow on May 8 for the
    Summit of the Eurasian Union and whether he will attend the May 9
    Victory Day parade in the Red Square in Moscow. In his interview with
    Russia 24 Sargsyan ambiguously said that "of course we will attend
    the Victory Day events."

    http://armenianow.com/commentary/analysis/62174/armenia_foreign_minister_edward_nalbandian_moscow_ visit

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