Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Armenian President To Pay Three-Day Visit To Moscow

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

  • Armenian President To Pay Three-Day Visit To Moscow

    ARMENIAN PRESIDENT TO PAY THREE-DAY VISIT TO MOSCOW

    ITAR-TASS
    June 24 2008
    Russia

    The presidents of Russia and Armenia, Dmitry Medvedev and Serge
    Sargsyan, will on Monday sign a joint statement of the heads of
    state. A senior Kremlin official told Itar-Tass that the document
    "covers a wide range of issues of Russian-Armenian relations."

    Medvedev and Sargsyan who took office almost simultaneously (with a
    difference in one month) this year have already met twice. Sargsyan
    visited Moscow late in March and was in St. Petersburg early in June
    to attend the informal CIS summit. The same day, the Russian leader
    extended an invitation to his Armenian colleague to come to Russia
    for an official visit.

    Sargsyan will stay in Moscow for three days. This is his first foreign
    trip after taking office.

    "The central events of his program include meetings with President
    Dmitry Medvedev and Prime Minister Vladimir Putin. They will continue
    an intensive and trustful Russian-Armenian political dialogue at
    various levels that sets positive dynamics to the entire range of
    bilateral relations," the Kremlin official said.

    "The talks will focus on a wide range of issues related to Russian
    and Armenian interplay, urgent regional and international problems,"
    the representative of the Kremlin administration said.

    He believes that "the intensity and productivity of Russian-Armenian
    bilateral and multilateral contacts confirm the sides' interest in
    ensuring the succession of a course towards further strengthening of
    mutually beneficial union partnership. They are a vital factor for
    safeguarding stability and security in the region."

    The Kremlin official said that Moscow and Yerevan were building and
    consolidating trade and economic links. Russia is one of Armenia's
    leading economic partners.

    The high-ranking official believes that the two countries whose
    "reciprocal trade turnover which surpassed a mark of 0.8 billion
    dollars in 2007 have a real chance to increase it to one billion
    dollars." The volume of Russian investments in the republic's economy
    is more than 1.2 billion dollars.

    "Bilateral investment cooperation actively contributes to forming
    favourable macroeconomic trends in Armenia's national economy and
    implementing large-scale economic projects which have social return
    for Armenian citizens," the Kremlin official went on to say.

    Russian companies are represented in promising sectors of the
    Armenian economy - mining, telecommunications and banking. Major
    Russian corporations such as Gazprom, Inter RAO EUS, the VTB Bank,
    Russian Aluminium and Vympelkom operate in the Armenian market. The
    Russian Railways Company, Alrosa and Mobile TeleSystems are joining
    big and significant projects.

    The Kremlin official recalled that energy is traditionally a priority
    area of cooperation. "Russian companies fully meet Armenia's needs
    in natural gas and fresh nuclear fuel, gas and energy projects are
    implemented, new opportunities are arising for joint work in nuclear
    energy, including safe operation of the Armenian nuclear power station,
    geological prospecting and industrial development of uranium deposits.

    The Russian president's administration notes positive shifts in the
    solution of the problem of expansion of Armenia's foreign transport
    links, especially with Russia.

    "New horizons are being opened as railway sea ferries between port
    Kavkaz and port Poti in Georgia begin active operation and as Armenian
    railways come under concession control of the Russian Railways,"
    the agency's interlocutor went on to say.

    He added that Russia and Armenia pay great attention to cultural
    and humanitarian aspects of bilateral relations. "The public in
    the two countries actively participates in numerous projects aimed
    at promoting cultural and educational ties. Cooperation has been
    developing successfully within the framework of the Council for
    humanitarian cooperation and the Inter-State Foundation for the
    CIS humanitarian cooperation. The First International festival of
    Russian-language radio broadcasting held on June 20-22 had a serious
    response," the Kremlin official said.

    In his view, the Russian and Armenian presidents will exchange view
    on international issues.

    "They are expected to stress the importance of close coordination
    of foreign policy actions on a bilateral and multilateral basis,
    including in the light of Armenia's upcoming presidency in the
    Collective Security Treaty Organization (CSTO)," the Kremlin
    administration official said.

    He added that the Nagorno-Karabakh settlement would also be a topic
    for discussion. "Russia's stance of principle remains unchanged - it
    will continue rendering assistance to the conflicting parties to find
    a mutually acceptable solution," the Kremlin representative emphasized.
Working...
X