Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Minister Oskanian Participates in Black Sea Economic Cooperation Min

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

  • Minister Oskanian Participates in Black Sea Economic Cooperation Min

    MINISTRY OF FOREIGN AFFAIRS OF THE REPUBLIC OF ARMENIA
    PRESS AND INFORMATION DEPARTMENT
    Telephone: +37410. 544041 ext 202
    Fax: +37410. 562543
    Email: [email protected]
    www.armeniaforeignministry.am

    Minist er Oskanian Participates in
    the XVI Meeting of BSEC Council of Ministers of Foreign Affairs

    On April 19, Foreign Minister Oskanian attended the meeting of the Black
    Sea Economic Cooperation Council of Foreign Ministers, held in Belgrade.

    The Foreign Ministers of Greece, Russia, Romania, Turkey, Azerbaijan, as
    well as high-ranking representatives of Albania, Bulgaria, Georgia,
    Moldova and Ukraine also took part in the meeting. The Foreign Minister of
    Serbia opened the Ministerial Meeting and the participants heard a
    welcoming speech from Serbian President Boris Tadic.

    At the conclusion of the meeting, the Belgrade Declaration was signed, as
    was a Memorandum of Understanding on the Coordinated Development of the
    Black Sea Ring Highway and the Motorways of the Sea in the Black Sea
    Region.

    The presidency of BSEC has now been passed from Serbia to Turkey for the
    next six months. The BSEC Summit, devoted to the 15th Anniversary of BSEC,
    will be held on 25 June in Istanbul.

    The complete text of Minister Oskanian's speech appears below:


    STATEMENT BY H.E. VARTAN OSKANIAN
    MINISTER OF FOREIGN AFFAIRS
    AT THE BSEC XVI MINISTERIAL MEETING
    Belgrade, Serbia
    April 19, 2007


    Mr. Chairman, I join my colleagues in thanking the Government and people
    of Serbia for their hospitality, and I would like to congratulate the
    Chairman-in-Office on the successful conclusion of a fruitful term.

    The Summit being planned for June will mark this organization's 15 years.
    Anniversaries are by definition significant, since they mark the
    recurrence of an event of historic importance. This anniversary marks the
    beginning of a visionary effort -- to turn neighbors into partners, and
    thus turn geography into history.
    For 15 years, a dozen of us have come together at various governmental
    levels to build bridges across the Black Sea, from west to east and from
    south to north. The Black Sea Economic cooperation was conceived to
    provide concrete opportunities for cooperation, integration and support,
    to provide benefits for all, from a limitless pool of potential, or I
    should say, a limitless sea of potential. The need that was clear 15 years
    ago has only become more acute today, especially as we consider deepening
    our relations with the EU.
    Mr. Chairman,

    The specific efforts aimed at broadening interaction between BSEC and the
    EU and
    institutionalizing such interaction will be remembered as one of the
    significant outputs of this period. You have engaged all BSEC
    institutions so that they can help formulate the structure for such
    cooperation.

    A Black Sea dimension within EU policy will formalize the premise that was
    at the heart of the establishment of this organization - that as Europe
    grows and changes, the promise of economic cooperation within and around
    Europe will grow, and the countries of the Black Sea must be prepared to
    contribute to and benefit from such developments.

    If today, we are signing the Belgrade Declaration, it is because we
    recognize, reaffirm, and emphasize that which our heads of state and
    government signed in June 1992 - that there are economic disparities
    amongst our members, that there are political hesitancies caused by
    historical and other experiences, and finally, that none of these are
    reason to avoid cooperation. On the contrary, they are the rationale and
    motivation for enabling, encouraging, supporting cooperation - albeit
    slowly and in stages.
    And we have done that. From the Black Sea Trade and Development Bank to
    the International Center for Black Sea Studies, we have built successful,
    functioning mechanisms for multilateral cooperation.
    Despite differences among states, BSEC and its institutions have already
    proven their viability. The BSEC tries to be the place where
    environmental, economic, social and even political differences are
    mitigated, keeping in view the future, and not the competitive, sometimes
    adversarial past.
    None of us, here, in the Black Sea Economic Cooperation are here by
    invitation. We are here because we are here, in this neighborhood, in this
    region. And, here, in this region, we have transport systems that need to
    be united, not divided, energy systems that need to be shared not
    isolated, banking systems that need resources added, not subtracted,
    education systems that need to be broadened, not secluded, societies that
    need to be inclusive, not exclusive.

    To accomplish this, it is our shared purpose and overlapping interests
    that must prevail over our sometimes deep-seated differences. As we plan
    to upgrade and refurbish water systems, we cannot allow existing rail
    lines to sit idle. As we work to ensure proper conditions for capital
    flow, we cannot prevent people flow. As we develop projects to share
    agricultural know-how, we cannot block trade across borders.

    Mr. Chairman,

    This organization got its start because there was a vision. It continued
    to operate because those around the Black Sea needed that vision, and
    those outside the Black Sea region wanted to believe in the promise of
    that vision. We wouldn't need an organization such as this one if every
    country in the Black Sea area cooperated and shared. We need this
    organization precisely because this is a complex region with a variety of
    economic, social, historic and political experiences that require special
    conditions. That is why we are today launching the Black Sea Ring Highway
    Caravan as a symbol of the importance of communication networks.

    Yet, the success and effectiveness of this organization will be measured
    not by the quantity of its projects, but by the audacity of their intent.

    As we congratulate Turkey on assuming the Chairmanship, we note that it
    will carry the same challenges that lay on their shoulders at the time of
    the creation of this organization - to be not just the geographical anchor
    for cooperation in and around the Black Sea, but also the political
    rudder.

    We wish them well and stand prepared to work with them to that end.

    Thank you.
Working...
X