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Armenia to give growth in economy priority over rights

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  • Armenia to give growth in economy priority over rights

    Armenia to give growth in economy priority over rights
    By Andrew Bounds in Brussels

    FT
    April 9 2007 03:00

    Armenia will put economic development ahead of human rights
    improvements, its new prime minister said in an interview with the
    Financial Times.

    Serge Sargysan, the defence minister who was promoted on Wednesday
    after the death of Andranik Margaryan from a heart attack last month,
    said jobs were more important than rights. Despite double-digit
    economic growth in the past few years, a third of the 3m-strong
    population of the landlocked Caucasian republic lives below the
    poverty line.


    "It is hard to talk about democratic and human rights when you need to
    solve the social and economic needs of the population," the prime
    minister said during a trip to Brussels. "We would not like to be a
    state stuck in our transition."

    He said the huge Armenian diaspora - estimated at up to three times
    the native population - should get more involved in the country. Only
    1 per cent of investment came from them, he said, and he was looking
    at ways they could be encouraged.

    However, Mr Sargysan said the government in Yerevan would keep pledges
    made to international bodies after criticism of its rights record and
    he was hopeful that the May 12 parlia-mentary elections would be the
    first to be pronounced free and fair by the Organisation for Security
    and Co-operation in Europe (OSCE), the European security watchdog.

    "We have made commitments to different programmes and we think
    compliance is in our interest. We want to become part of the European
    family."

    Mr Sargysan, who helped organise militias that seized the enclave of
    Nagorno-Karabakh from Azerbaijan in a three-year war following
    independence from the Soviet Union in 1991, said his top priority was
    to conclude a peace treaty with its Muslim neighbour.

    The oil-rich state has been rearming recently but Mr Sargysan said
    that was sabre-rattling. Turkey closed its border with Armenia during
    the war and the premier said he would strive to restore relations and
    sign a peace deal. Armenia could grow far faster if rapprochement was
    reached with its bigger neighbours, he said.

    Yet Armenia remains in control of Nagorno-Karabakh and hundreds of
    thousands of people are still displaced. Turkey - which has been
    offered talks without conditions - has shown no willingness to
    compromise.

    Mr Sargysan said that, despite ties to influential exiles in the US,
    Yerevan would remain friendly to Moscow and would not support a US
    base in the volatile Caucusus. In a swipe at neighbouring Georgia,
    whose "rose revolution" against Russian domination has endeared it to
    the west, he said he did not see it as a model to emulate.

    "One can either exploit their differences between superpowers or work
    with them. We prefer to work with them. There are many conflicts in
    our region."

    Mr Sargysan said Armenia would one day like to join the European Union
    but had no desire to join the Nato defence alliance, although it was
    working closely with it.
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