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  • Ahmadinejad Cuts Short Armenia Visit

    AHMADINEJAD CUTS SHORT ARMENIA VISIT
    By Ruzanna Stepanian, Ruzanna Khachatrian and Ruben Meloyan

    Radio Liberty, Czech Rep.
    Oct 23 2007

    Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad rushed back to Tehran on Tuesday,
    cutting short a two-day official visit to Armenia for reasons that
    were not immediately clear. Armenian officials linked the move with
    the political situation in Iran.

    Ahmadinejad arrived in Yerevan on Monday and held talks with President
    Robert Kocharian that focused on growing bilateral cooperation in
    the energy sector. The Iranian leader was scheduled to begin the
    second day of the trip with a visit to the Tsitsernakabert genocide
    memorial in Yerevan. He was also due to deliver a speech in Armenia's
    parliament and visit a 18th century Iranian mosque in the capital
    later in the day.

    Although all of these engagements were abruptly cancelled, Ahmadinejad
    claimed on his return to Tehran that he did not cut short the
    visit. "The trip to Armenia took longer than what was scheduled
    before," the Iranian state news agency IRNA quoted him as saying,
    according to AFP. "This trip was due to last 22 hours but because of
    some visits, it became one hour and half longer than the schedule."

    A senior Armenian Foreign Ministry official told RFE/RL, however,
    that Ahmadinejad did change his visit itinerary which had been agreed
    by both the Iranian and Armenian sides beforehand. IRNA and other
    Iranian news agencies themselves reported on Monday he will address
    the National Assembly and meet representatives of the Iranian community
    in Armenia on the second day of the trip.

    According to Kocharian's spokesman Victor Soghomonian, Ahmadinejad
    informed his Armenian counterpart late Monday that he has to head back
    home earlier than expected for "urgent reasons." Soghomonian refused
    to specify those reasons, insisting only that they have nothing to
    do with the Iranian-Armenian relationship.

    The abrupt end of Ahmadinejad's visit coincided with the start of
    negotiations in Rome on Iran's controversial nuclear program. Iran's
    new nuclear negotiator, Saeed Jalili, was due to hold his first talks
    there over the atomic crisis with European Union foreign policy chief
    Javier Solana.

    Ahmadinejad flew back to Tehran at around noon after a breakfast
    meeting parliament speaker Tigran Torosian, Foreign Minister Vartan
    Oskanian and Energy Minister Armen Movsisian. Torosian said afterwards
    that the visit was cut short due to unspecified "internal issues"
    in Iranian.

    "It is not customary to discuss such issues [with foreign officials,]"
    Torosian told reporters. "Especially considering the fact the visit
    was not initiated by the National Assembly."

    "Mr. Ahmadinejad asked me to tell our parliamentarians that he regrets
    the need to interrupt the visit and return to Iran and that he will
    not be able to visit the parliament," he told the National Assembly
    later in the day.

    Deputy Foreign Minister Gegham Gharibjanian, who was also present at
    the meeting, said the Iranian side presented "very serious arguments"
    in favor of the change of plans but declined to disclose them. "I
    spoke to the Iranian deputy foreign minister," said Gharibjanian. "He
    said there are urgent issues and that they have to depart."

    Gharibjanian also insisted that Ahmadinejad's visit was "very
    successful." "A lot of progress was made on serious [Armenian-Iranian]
    economic projects," he said.

    Kocharian said after talks with the Iranian leader on Monday that
    they agreed to press ahead with plans to jointly build a large oil
    refinery in southeastern Armenia as well as an Armenian-Iranian
    railway. The two governments also plan to start next year work
    on a major hydro-electric plant on the Arax River marking the
    Armenian-Iranian border. In addition, the Armenian side has pledged
    to complete by the end of 2008 the ongoing construction of the second
    and final Armenian section of a natural gas pipeline from Iran.

    Speaking at a joint news conference with Kocharian, Ahmadinejad said
    Iran remains committed to deepening ties with Armenia as it believes
    they are "very important" for the two nations and the region as a
    whole. "Fortunately, Armenian-Iranian relations are warm, strong
    and developing," he told professors and students at Yerevan State
    University later on Monday. "Relations that are based on friendship,
    justice and mutual respect."

    Ahmadinejad stressed at the same time that Tehran and Yerevan are
    only "at the beginning of the road" and that their relationship has a
    "bright future." "I believe we should step up efforts to deepen our
    relations in the scientific, cultural and intellectual spheres and
    to develop our infrastructures," he said.
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