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Armenian Leaders Look to Future

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  • Armenian Leaders Look to Future

    Armenian Leaders Look to Future
    By DAVID ZHOU, Contributing Writer

    The Harvard Crimson
    Wednesday, March 09, 2005

    Analyzing the current economic situation in Armenia with an emphasis
    on future growth strategies, government officials from Armenia
    and executive board members of an Armenian diaspora organization
    participated in an all-day summit at the Kennedy School of Government
    yesterday.Lawrence University Professor at Harvard Business School
    Michael E. Porter also spoke at the event, entitled â~@~The Global
    Summit on the Future of Armenia.â~@~] The Foreign Minister of Armenia,
    Vartan Oskanian, was scheduled to speak, but did not attend after
    contracting pneumonia, according to Belfer Center Communications
    Officer Sharon R. Wilke.

    Vahram Nercissiantz, the chief economic advisor to Armenian President
    Robert Kocharian, spoke with The Crimson after the summit to discuss
    a number of the countryâ~@~Ys important political and economic
    issues. Three board members from Armenia 2020â~@~Tan organization that
    studies development in Armeniaâ~@~Talso participated in an interview.

    â~@~[The summit] presents a visionary review and analysis of the
    Armenian political and economic transition,â~@~] Nercissiantz said.
    â~@~Lots of analytical work was done on what are policy options
    and strategic directions.â~@~]

    The summit, which touched on domestic issues that confront todayâ~@~Ys
    Armenian leaders, was hosted by the Belfer Center for Science and
    International Affairs. The event was co-sponsored by Armenia 2020
    and the Armenian General Benevolent Union, which sets up programs to
    promote Armenian culture.

    The press conference following the summit also focused on tensions
    with Turkey, which Nercissiantz said stem in large part from the
    Turkish governmentâ~@~Ys continuing refusal to recognize the genocide
    perpetrated against Armenians after the First World War.

    â~@~We have a rage for that genocide which is still with us,â~@~]
    Nercissiantz said. â~@~The Turks have a responsibility to face
    their own history.â~@~]

    Noubar B. Afeyan, an Armenia 2020 executive board member, said that
    Turkeyâ~@~Ys economic sanctions are â~@~because of Armenian pressure
    for recognition of the genocide.â~@~]

    Nercissiantz said fears of another genocide prompted the conflict
    with Azerbaijan, a neighboring nation that has been involved in a
    dispute over territory with Armenia.

    â~@~This fits into the pattern of an ideology which has existed
    in the region called Pan-Turkism,â~@~] he said. â~@~It is very
    similar to Nazi ideology where they wish to eliminate all non-Turkish
    elements.â~@~]

    Nercissiantz said that genuine peace between the three countries
    depends on the development of liberal democracy because â~@~citizens
    never vote to eliminate an element of their society.â~@~]

    While Turkey is widely hailed as a triumph of democracy in the region,
    Nercissiantz said, the government must do more to protect minority
    rights.

    Armenia has been moving toward both a liberalized political system
    and economy, he said. The country has enjoyed high rates of growth
    throughout the 1990s and joined the World Trade Organization in 2003.

    The countryâ~@~Ys economy collapsed along with the former Soviet
    Union, has been playing catch-up ever since, and is now approximately
    back to its 1989 level, said Andrew Lazarian, another executive
    board member of Armenia 2020.

    â~@~Our approach has been growth with equity, assist a good business
    environment and invest in people,â~@~] Nercissiantz said. â~@~We
    do have considerable progress, but we have a long way to go.â~@~]

    --Boundary_(ID_nlfyU+X06DWeUoo74XjVGA)--
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