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Kocharian To Attend Russian Ex-President's Funeral

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  • Kocharian To Attend Russian Ex-President's Funeral

    KOCHARIAN TO ATTEND RUSSIAN EX-PRESIDENT'S FUNERAL
    By Ruzanna Khachatrian

    Radio Liberty, Czech Rep.
    April 24 2007

    President Robert Kocharian will fly to Moscow to attend the state
    funeral of Russia's former President Boris Yeltsin scheduled for
    Wednesday, his office said on Tuesday.

    Yeltsin, who died of heart failure on Monday aged 76, had presided
    over the 1991 break-up of the Soviet Union and governed Russia until
    handing over power to his handpicked successor, Vladimir Putin, in late
    1999. He had also played a key role in close political and militaries
    relations forged by Armenia and Russia following the Soviet collapse.

    Kocharian sent a message of condolences to Putin late Monday, paying
    tribute to Yeltsin's contribution to democratic change in Russia
    and Russian-Armenian ties. "Boris Nikolayevich Yeltsin is an era,
    a reference point in the history of relations between our fraternal
    peoples," he said.

    Former President Levon Ter-Petrosian, who had closely dealt with
    the Yeltsin administration throughout his eight-year presidency,
    sent a separate message of condolences to the Russian ex-president's
    wife Naina. "I have lost a sincere and faithful friend who combined
    unwavering moral principles, kindness, humanity with the wisdom of
    a distinguished statesman," wrote Ter-Petrosian.

    "I would particularly like to emphasize the Boris Nikolayevich's
    contribution to the establishment and deepening of allied relations
    between Russia and Armenia in the interests of peace and stability
    in our region," he said.

    A spokesman for Ter-Petrosian told RFE/RL that the Armenian
    ex-president will not attend Yeltsin's funeral. Yeltsin met both
    Ter-Petrosian and Kocharian during his last, private visit to Armenia
    in October 2002.

    Yeltsin's political legacy was also praised on Tuesday by two Armenian
    opposition leaders who held senior government positions in the early
    1990s. Former Prime Minister Vazgen Manukian and former Foreign
    Minister Raffi Hovannisian said the Russian-Armenian relationship
    was based on an equal footing at the time.

    "Yeltsin's Russia had no imperial designs on Armenia, and Armenia's
    [former] leadership behaved more independently," Manukian told
    RFE/RL. "Relations with Russia were based on political, economic
    and military interests, rather than [the current Armenian leaders']
    desire to retain power."

    "The Boris Yeltsin era was a time of real partnership, mutual respect,
    and friendship of equals," agreed Hovannisian.
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