Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Armenia, Iran Pledge To Widen Commercial Ties

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

  • Armenia, Iran Pledge To Widen Commercial Ties

    ARMENIA, IRAN PLEDGE TO WIDEN COMMERCIAL TIES
    By Shakeh Avoyan

    Radio Liberty, Czech Rep.
    July 20 2007

    Armenia and Iran pledged to give a new boost to the development of
    bilateral commercial ties following a regular meeting in Yerevan on
    Friday of their intergovernmental commission on economic cooperation.

    Iranian Foreign Minister Manouchehr Mottaki and Armenian Energy
    Minister Armen Movsisian, the two co-chairmen of the commission, signed
    a memorandum on the start of feasibility studies on the ambitious
    ideas of building an Armenian-Iranian railway and oil refinery.

    Movsisian said work on a third high-voltage line linking the power
    grids of the two neighboring states will get underway "in one or two
    months." He said Yerevan and Tehran are also pressing ahead with the
    construction of a major hydro-electric plant on the river Arax that
    marks the Armenian-Iranian border.

    "I am convinced that we still start concrete work on the Arax plant
    next year," he told a news conference.

    "Iran's economic cooperation with Armenia is very broad-based," Mottaki
    said, for his part. He welcomed a rise in bilateral trade, saying
    that its volume could more than double to $500 million this year.

    It was also announced that Iran's President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad will
    pay an official visit to Armenia before the end of this year.

    Ahmadinejad and his Armenian counterpart Robert Kocharian already
    met on the Armenian-Iranian border last March during the official
    inauguration of the first section of a gas pipeline that will deliver
    Iranian natural gas to Armenia.

    The pipeline's second, much longer section is slated for completion
    by the end of next year.

    Armenia's growing ties with Iran prompted concern from the United
    States last month, with a senior American diplomat warning that they
    might run counter to international sanctions imposed on Tehran over
    its controversial nuclear program. "We have expressed our concerns to
    the government of Armenia on all levels," said the then U.S. charge
    d'affaires in Yerevan, Anthony Godfrey.

    Mottaki brushed aside the warning. "Armenian-Iranian relations are
    not directed against any third country," he said. "They stem from the
    interests of the two countries. No third country must allow itself
    to meddle in the friendly Armenian-Iranian relations."

    Asked to comment on the Iranian nuclear program, Movsisian said:
    "We respect the Iranian people's right to use nuclear energy for
    peaceful purposes,"

    Meeting with Mottaki earlier in the day, Foreign Minister Vartan
    Oskanian was reported to have asked his Iranian counterpart to brief
    him on the ongoing international negotiations on the issue. According
    to the Armenian Foreign Ministry, Mottaki assured Oskanian that
    the Islamic Republic is committed to finding a negotiated solution
    to the dispute "within the framework of the International Atomic
    Energy Agency."
Working...
X