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Int'l opp continues to mount against Caucasus railroad proposal

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  • Int'l opp continues to mount against Caucasus railroad proposal

    Noyan Tapan News Agency
    Oct 14 2005

    INTERNATIONAL OPPOSITION CONTINUES TO MOUNT AGAINST CAUCASUS
    RAILROAD PROPOSAL THAT BYPASSES ARMENIA


    WASHINGTON, OCTOBER 14, NOYAN TAPAN - ARMENIANS TODAY. The European
    Commission has added its voice to the growing international
    opposition to a Caucasus railroad proposal by the Turkish government
    that would, if built, institutionalize Turkey's border closure with
    Armenia, reported the Armenian National Committee of America (ANCA).

    The Commission's position was articulated this week by the
    Directorate General for Transport and Energy. In explaining why the
    European Union would not support the creation of this rail line, the
    Directorate noted that its construction was both unnecessary and
    inefficient in light of the existing railroad connecting Kars,
    Gyumri, and Tbilisi. This line, which passes through Armenia, was
    effectively shut down more than a decade ago by Turkey's imposition
    of its blockade of Armenia, which continues to this day.

    The Commission's adoption of this position comes in response to a May
    21st letter from Armenian Foreign Minister Vardan Oskanian to Jacques
    Barrot, Deputy Chairman of the European Commission. In this letter,
    the Foreign Minister outlined the destabilizing implications of the
    proposed route bypassing Armenia, and stressed the willingness of the
    government of Armenia to cooperate in the reactivation of the
    existing Kars-Gyumri-Tbilisi railway, which remains fully functional
    but unused due to the unilateral Turkish blockade.

    "We welcome the wise position taken by the European Commission
    against Turkey's most recent effort to effectively institutionalize
    its border closure with Armenia. The well founded concerns raised by
    the Commission reflect and reinforce those being addressed in the
    U.S. Congress by the South Caucasus Integration and Open Railroads
    Act," said ANCA Executive Director Aram Hamparian. "In pressing
    forward so recklessly with this politically motivated proposal,
    Turkey openly disregards the Administration's repeated calls to end
    its decade-long border closure with Armenia. Clearly, this disregard
    must be recognized and reckoned with by the U.S. Congress, which
    should, in the coming weeks, act in an urgent and decisive manner to
    check Turkey's growing indifference to U.S. priorities in the
    region."

    On July 21st, Armenian Caucus Co-Chairs Joe Knollenberg (R-MI) and
    Frank Pallone (D-NJ), along with Rep. George Radanovich (R-CA),
    introduced legislation addressing this issue by barring U.S.
    financing for such rail projects circumventing Armenia. The ANCA
    welcomed this bipartisan effort, noting that it would protect U.S.
    taxpayers from subsidizing a totally unnecessary and regionally
    destabilizing proposal by Turkey aimed at isolating Armenia. The
    measure, known as the "South Caucasus Integration and Open Railroads
    Act of 2005" (H.R.3361), currently has 39 House cosponsors and is
    gaining support from both sides of the aisle.

    The text of the legislation notes "the exclusion of Armenia from
    regional economic and commercial undertakings in the South Caucasus
    undermines the United States policy goal of promoting a stable and
    cooperative environment in the region." In its operative section, the
    legislation prohibits U.S. assistance "to develop or promote any rail
    connections or railway-related connections that do not traverse or
    connect with Armenia, but do traverse or connect Baku, Azerbaijan;
    Tbilisi, Georgia; and Kars, Turkey." Specific forms of U.S.
    assistance prohibited would include: foreign economic and development
    aid, Overseas Private Investment Corporation, Trade and Development
    Agency, and the Export-Import Bank.

    The ANCA raised this issue publicly as early as June 10th of this
    year in a question to Foreign Minister Oskanian, during a briefing at
    the National Press Club. Minister Oskanian expressed concern that
    this would be a wasteful undertaking for the international community.
    He said that they [Turkey] are "planning on spending something from 0
    million to billion to put that railroad in place."

    The Minister closed his comments, by stressing that, "This is in no
    one's interest - not the U.S. or European Union or the countries
    involved. I have raised this issue with the Administration and they
    understand, they promised to follow this, and to try to talk them
    [the Turkish government] out of engaging in this type of senseless,
    useless activity."
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