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  • Putin , Armenian President To Discuss Bilateral Relations, Regional,

    PUTIN , ARMENIAN PRESIDENT TO DISCUSS BILATERAL RELATIONS, REGIONAL, INT'L AFFAIRS

    ITAR-TASS
    August 8, 2012 Wednesday 01:02 AM GMT+4
    Russia

    Russian President Vladimir Putin and his Armenian counterpart Serzh
    Sargsyan will hold negotiations on Wednesday to discuss bilateral
    relations, regional and international affairs.

    Sargsyan came to Moscow on Tuesday. The official program of his visit
    starts on Wednesday.

    "The visit will witness summit negotiations on topical aspects of
    bilateral relations and regional and international affairs, such as
    ways to deepen bilateral interaction in the CIS and dynamic Eurasian
    integration processes," the Kremlin said.

    "The visit is bound to become a new step towards building a friendly
    and mutually advantageous strategic partnership of Russia and Armenia,"
    it said.

    The year 2012 is remarkable for the two countries - it hosts the
    20th anniversary of Russian-Armenian diplomatic relations and the
    15th anniversary of the Russian-Armenian Interstate Treaty on Amity,
    Cooperation and Mutual Assistance.

    Sustainable development of Russia-Armenia relations has been supported
    with regular political contacts, primarily between the two chiefs of
    state. There is a traditionally intensive dialog between governments,
    parliaments and departments and at regional organizations.

    Russia is the key foreign economic partner of Armenia and the leading
    foreign investor. Bilateral trade restored to the pre-crisis level
    in 2010-2011 and continued to grow. Trade reached $556 million in
    January-June 2012, which was 32% more than the year before.

    Russia is implementing large investment projects in Armenia, including
    those in energy and transport. Russian direct investments in Armenia
    accumulated at $2.4 billion from 1998 through 2011. Russia mostly
    invests in energy, banks, telecommunications, mining and metallurgy
    and construction.

    Russian leading corporations, among them Gazprom, Inter RAO UES, VTB,
    Russian Railroads, Russian Aluminum and AFK Sistema, are efficiently
    operating on the Armenian market.

    About 1,300 companies doing business in Armenia have Russian capital,
    which is over 25% of all companies with foreigners' stakes.

    The Intergovernmental Commission on Economic Cooperation is an
    important instrument of the coordination and upgrading of trade and
    economic contacts. Its 13th session was held in Rostov-on-Don on
    July 8, 2011, and the commission cochairmen rendezvoused on February
    6-7, 2012.

    Fuel and energy are cooperation priorities. Russian companies own and
    manage important electric power generation and distribution facilities
    in Armenia. These facilities have become efficient and ensure steady
    energy supply to the Armenian socioeconomic sector. Russian companies
    also meet a considerable part of the Armenian demand for natural gas
    and nuclear fuel. Atomic energy cooperation is entering into a new
    phase. The construction of a new unit of the Armenian nuclear power
    plant will become a major investment project.

    Historical and cultural traditions connecting Russia and Armenia ensure
    a high level of humanitarian cooperation. About 70 constituents of the
    Russian Federation are taking part in this cooperation. There are 28
    interregional agreements on trade, economic, scientific, technical
    and cultural cooperation. The first Russian-Armenian interregional
    forum held in Yerevan on April 18-19, 2011, became a landmark event
    for both countries.

    Moscow and Yerevan are constructively cooperating at integration
    structures of the CIS. Armenia's interest in Eurasian integration
    is mounting. The sides coordinate their positions on key aspects of
    international politics, including European and regional security.

    There is interaction at international organizations, such as the United
    Nations, the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe, the
    Council of Europe, and the Black Sea Economic Cooperation Organization.

    The Wednesday negotiations will highlight security and stability in
    the South Caucasus. Close cooperation of foreign policies with Yerevan
    in this region adds to regional military and political stability.
    Content-Type: MESSAGE/RFC822; CHARSET=US-ASCII
    Content-Description:

    MIME-Version: 1.0
    Content-Type: text/plain; charset=ISO-8859-1
    From: Katia Peltekian
    Subject: Putin , Armenian president to discuss bilateral relations, regional,
    int'l affairs

    ITAR-TASS, Russia
    August 8, 2012 Wednesday 01:02 AM GMT+4



    Putin , Armenian president to discuss bilateral relations, regional,
    int'l affairs

    MOSCOW August 8


    Russian President Vladimir Putin and his Armenian counterpart Serzh
    Sargsyan will hold negotiations on Wednesday to discuss bilateral
    relations, regional and international affairs.

    Sargsyan came to Moscow on Tuesday. The official program of his visit
    starts on Wednesday.

    "The visit will witness summit negotiations on topical aspects of
    bilateral relations and regional and international affairs, such as
    ways to deepen bilateral interaction in the CIS and dynamic Eurasian
    integration processes," the Kremlin said.

    "The visit is bound to become a new step towards building a friendly
    and mutually advantageous strategic partnership of Russia and
    Armenia," it said.

    The year 2012 is remarkable for the two countries - it hosts the 20th
    anniversary of Russian-Armenian diplomatic relations and the 15th
    anniversary of the Russian-Armenian Interstate Treaty on Amity,
    Cooperation and Mutual Assistance.

    Sustainable development of Russia-Armenia relations has been supported
    with regular political contacts, primarily between the two chiefs of
    state. There is a traditionally intensive dialog between governments,
    parliaments and departments and at regional organizations.

    Russia is the key foreign economic partner of Armenia and the leading
    foreign investor. Bilateral trade restored to the pre-crisis level in
    2010-2011 and continued to grow. Trade reached $556 million in
    January-June 2012, which was 32% more than the year before.

    Russia is implementing large investment projects in Armenia, including
    those in energy and transport. Russian direct investments in Armenia
    accumulated at $2.4 billion from 1998 through 2011. Russia mostly
    invests in energy, banks, telecommunications, mining and metallurgy
    and construction.

    Russian leading corporations, among them Gazprom, Inter RAO UES, VTB,
    Russian Railroads, Russian Aluminum and AFK Sistema, are efficiently
    operating on the Armenian market.

    About 1,300 companies doing business in Armenia have Russian capital,
    which is over 25% of all companies with foreigners' stakes.

    The Intergovernmental Commission on Economic Cooperation is an
    important instrument of the coordination and upgrading of trade and
    economic contacts. Its 13th session was held in Rostov-on-Don on July
    8, 2011, and the commission cochairmen rendezvoused on February 6-7,
    2012.

    Fuel and energy are cooperation priorities. Russian companies own and
    manage important electric power generation and distribution facilities
    in Armenia. These facilities have become efficient and ensure steady
    energy supply to the Armenian socioeconomic sector. Russian companies
    also meet a considerable part of the Armenian demand for natural gas
    and nuclear fuel. Atomic energy cooperation is entering into a new
    phase. The construction of a new unit of the Armenian nuclear power
    plant will become a major investment project.

    Historical and cultural traditions connecting Russia and Armenia
    ensure a high level of humanitarian cooperation. About 70 constituents
    of the Russian Federation are taking part in this cooperation. There
    are 28 interregional agreements on trade, economic, scientific,
    technical and cultural cooperation. The first Russian-Armenian
    interregional forum held in Yerevan on April 18-19, 2011, became a
    landmark event for both countries.

    Moscow and Yerevan are constructively cooperating at integration
    structures of the CIS. Armenia's interest in Eurasian integration is
    mounting. The sides coordinate their positions on key aspects of
    international politics, including European and regional security.
    There is interaction at international organizations, such as the
    United Nations, the Organization for Security and Cooperation in
    Europe, the Council of Europe, and the Black Sea Economic Cooperation
    Organization.

    The Wednesday negotiations will highlight security and stability in
    the South Caucasus. Close cooperation of foreign policies with Yerevan
    in this region adds to regional military and political stability.

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