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- @node Geography (Armenia)
- @section Geography (Armenia)
-
- @display
-
- Location:
- Southeastern Europe, between Turkey and Azerbaijan
- Map references:
- Africa, Asia, Commonwealth of Independent States - European States, Middle
- East, Standard Time Zones of the World
- Area:
- total area:
- 29,800 km2
- land area:
- 28,400 km2
- comparative area:
- slightly larger than Maryland
- Land boundaries:
- total 1,254 km, Azerbaijan (east) 566 km, Azerbaijan (south) 221 km, Georgia
- 164 km, Iran 35 km, Turkey 268 km
- Coastline:
- 0 km (landlocked)
- Maritime claims:
- none; landlocked
- International disputes:
- violent and longstanding dispute with Azerbaijan over ethnically Armenian
- exclave of Nagorno-Karabakh; some irredentism by Armenians living in
- southern Georgia; traditional demands on former Armenian lands in Turkey
- have greatly subsided
- Climate:
- continental, hot, and subject to drought
- Terrain:
- high Armenian Plateau with mountains; little forest land; fast flowing
- rivers; good soil in Aras River valley
- Natural resources:
- small deposits of gold, copper, molybdenum, zinc, alumina
- Land use:
- arable land:
- 29%
- permanent crops:
- 0%
- meadows and pastures:
- 15%
- forest and woodland:
- 0%
- other:
- 56%
- Irrigated land:
- 3,050 km2 (1990)
- Environment:
- pollution of Razdan and Aras Rivers; air pollution in Yerevan; energy
- blockade has led to deforestation as citizens scavenge for firewood, use of
- Lake Sevan water for hydropower has lowered lake level, threatened fish
- population
- Note:
- landlocked
-
-
-
- @end display
-
- @node People (Armenia)
- @section People (Armenia)
-
- @display
-
- Population:
- 3,481,207 (July 1993 est.)
- Population growth rate:
- 1.23% (1993 est.)
- Birth rate:
- 25.79 births/1,000 population (1993 est.)
- Death rate:
- 6.77 deaths/1,000 population (1993 est.)
- Net migration rate:
- -6.76 migrant(s)/1,000 population (1993 est.)
- Infant mortality rate:
- 28.2 deaths/1,000 live births (1993 est.)
- Life expectancy at birth:
- total population:
- 71.77 years
- male:
- 68.36 years
- female:
- 75.36 years (1993 est.)
- Total fertility rate:
- 3.31 children born/woman (1993 est.)
- Nationality:
- noun:
- Armenian(s)
- adjective:
- Armenian
- Ethnic divisions:
- Armenian 93%, Azeri 3%, Russian 2%, other 2%
- Religions:
- Armenian Orthodox 94%
- Languages:
- Armenian 96%, Russian 2%, other 2%
- Literacy:
- age 9-49 can read and write (1970)
- total population:
- 100%
- male:
- 100%
- female:
- 100%
- Labor force:
- 1.63 million
- by occupation:
- industry and construction 42%, agriculture and forestry 18%, other 40%
- (1990)
-
-
-
- @end display
-
- @node Government (Armenia)
- @section Government (Armenia)
-
- @display
-
- Names:
- conventional long form:
- Republic of Armenia
- conventional short form:
- Armenia
- local long form:
- Hayastani Hanrapetut'yun
- local short form: Hayastan
- former:
- Armenian Soviet Socialist Republic; Armenian Republic
- Digraph:
- AM
- Type:
- republic
- Capital:
- Yerevan
- Administrative divisions:
- none (all rayons are under direct republic jurisdiction)
- Independence:
- 23 September 1991 (from Soviet Union)
- Constitution:
- adopted NA April 1978; post-Soviet constitution not yet adopted
- Legal system:
- based on civil law system
- National holiday:
- NA
- Political parties and leaders:
- Armenian National Movement, Husik LAZARYAN, chairman; National Democratic
- Union; National Self-Determination Association; Armenian Democratic Liberal
- Organization, Ramkavar AZATAKAN, chairman; Dashnatktsutyan Party (Armenian
- Revolutionary Federation, ARF), Rouben MIRZAKHANIN; Chairman of
- Parliamentary opposition - Mekhak GABRIYELYAN; Christian Democratic Union;
- Constitutional Rights Union; Republican Party
- Suffrage:
- 18 years of age; universal
- Elections:
- President:
- last held 16 October 1991 (next to be held NA); results - Levon Akopovich
- TER-PETROSYAN 86%; radical nationalists about 7%; note - Levon TER-PETROSYAN
- was elected Chairman of the Armenian Supreme Soviet 4 August 1990
- Supreme Soviet:
- last held 20 May 1990 (next to be held NA); results - percent of vote by
- party NA; seats - (240 total) non-aligned 149, Armenian National Movement
- 52, Armenian Democratic Liberal Organization 14, Dashnatktsutyan 12,
- National Democratic Union 9, Christian Democratic Union 1, Constitutional
- Rights Union 1, National Self-Determination Association 1, Republican Party
- 1
- Executive branch:
- president, council of ministers, prime minister
- Legislative branch:
- unicameral Supreme Soviet
- Judicial branch:
- Supreme Court
- Leaders:
- Chief of State:
- President Levon Akopovich TER-PETROSYAN (since 16 October 1991), Vice
- President Gagik ARUTYUNYAN (since 16 October 1991)
-
-
-
- @end display
-
- @node Government (Armenia 2. usage)
- @section Government (Armenia 2. usage)
-
- @display
-
- Head of Government: Prime Minister Hrant BAGRATYAN (since NA February 1993); Supreme Soviet
- Chairman Babken ARARKTSYAN (since NA 1990)
- Member of:
- BSEC, CIS, CSCE, EBRD, IBRD, ICAO, IMF, NACC, UN, UNCTAD, UNESCO, UNIDO,
- UPU, WHO
- Diplomatic representation in US:
- chief of mission:
- Ambassador Rouben SHUGARIAN
- chancery:
- 122 C Street NW, Suite 360, Washington, DC 20001
- telephone:
- (202) 628-5766
- US diplomatic representation:
- chief of mission:
- Ambassador Designate Harry GILMORE
- embassy:
- 18 Gen Bagramian, Yerevan
- mailing address:
- use embassy street address
- telephone:
- (7) (885) 215-1122, 215-1144
- FAX:
- (7) (885) 215-1122
- Flag:
- three equal horizontal bands of red (top), blue, and gold
-
-
-
- @end display
-
- @node Economy (Armenia)
- @section Economy (Armenia)
-
- @display
-
- Overview:
- Armenia under the old centrally planned Soviet system had built up textile,
- machine-building, and other industries and had become a key supplier to
- sister republics. In turn, Armenia had depended on supplies of raw materials
- and energy from the other republics. Most of these supplies enter the
- republic by rail through Azerbaijan (85%) and Georgia (15%). The economy has
- been severely hurt by ethnic strife with Azerbaijan over control of the
- Nagorno-Karabakh Autonomous Oblast, a mostly Armenian-populated enclave
- within the national boundaries of Azerbaijan. In addition to outright
- warfare, the strife has included interdiction of Armenian imports on the
- Azerbaijani railroads and expensive airlifts of supplies to beleaguered
- Armenians in Nagorno-Karabakh. An earthquake in December 1988 destroyed
- about one-tenth of industrial capacity and housing, the repair of which has
- not been possible because the supply of funds and real resources has been
- disrupted by the reorganization and subsequent dismantling of the central
- USSR administrative apparatus. Among facilities made unserviceable by the
- earthquake are the Yerevan nuclear power plant, which had supplied 40% of
- Armenia's needs for electric power and a plant that produced one-quarter of
- the output of elevators in the former USSR. Armenia has some deposits of
- nonferrous metal ores (bauxite, copper, zinc, and molybdenum) that are
- largely unexploited. For the mid-term, Armenia's economic prospects seem
- particularly bleak because of ethnic strife and the unusually high
- dependence on outside areas, themselves in a chaotic state of
- transformation. The dramatic drop in output in 1992 is attributable largely
- to the cumulative impact of the blockade; of particular importance was the
- shutting off in the summer of 1992 of rail and road links to Russia through
- Georgia due to civil strife in the latter republic.
- National product:
- GDP $NA
- National product real growth rate:
- -34% (1992)
- National product per capita:
- $NA
- Inflation rate (consumer prices):
- 20% per month (first quarter 1993)
- Unemployment rate:
- 2% of officially registered unemployed but large numbers of underemployed
- Budget:
- revenues $NA; expenditures $NA, including capital expenditures of $NA
- Exports:
- $30 million to outside the successor states of the former USSR (f.o.b.,
- 1992)
- commodities:
- machinery and transport equipment, light industrial products, processed food
- items (1991)
- partners:
- NA
- Imports:
- $300 million from outside the successor statees of the former USSR (c.i.f.,
- 1992)
- commodities:
- machinery, energy, consumer goods (1991)
- partners:
- NA
- External debt:
- $650 million (December 1991 est.)
- Industrial production:
- growth rate -50% (1992 est.)
-
-
-
- @end display
-
- @node Economy (Armenia 2. usage)
- @section Economy (Armenia 2. usage)
-
- @display
-
- Electricity:
- 2,875,000 kW capacity; 9,000 million kWh produced, 2,585 kWh per capita
- (1992)
- Industries:
- diverse, including (in percent of output of former USSR) metalcutting
- machine tools (5.5%), forging-pressing machines (1.9%), electric motors
- (9%), tires (1.5%), knitted wear (4.4%), hosiery (3.0%), shoes (2.2%), silk
- fabric (0.8%), washing machines (2.0%), chemicals, trucks, watches,
- instruments, and microelectronics (1990)
- Agriculture:
- accounts for about 20% of GDP; only 29% of land area is arable; employs 18%
- of labor force; citrus, cotton, and dairy farming; vineyards near Yerevan
- are famous for brandy and other liqueurs
- Illicit drugs:
- illicit producer of cannabis mostly for domestic consumption; used as a
- transshipment point for illicit drugs to Western Europe
- Economic aid:
- wheat from US, Turkey
- Currency: retaining Russian ruble as currency (January 1993)
- Exchange rates:
- rubles per US$1 - 415 (24 December 1992) but subject to wide fluctuations
- Fiscal year:
- calendar year
-
-
-
- @end display
-
- @node Communications (Armenia)
- @section Communications (Armenia)
-
- @display
-
- Railroads:
- 840 km; does not include industrial lines (1990)
- Highways:
- 11,300 km total; 10,500 km hard surfaced, 800 km earth (1990)
- Inland waterways:
- NA km
- Pipelines:
- natural gas 900 km (1991)
- Ports:
- none; landlocked
- Airports:
- total:
- 12
- useable:
- 10
- with permanent-surface runways:
- 6
- with runways over 3,659 m:
- 1
- with runways 2,440-3,659 m:
- 4
- with runways 1,220-2,439 m:
- 3
- Telecommunications:
- progress on installation of fiber optic cable and construction of facilities
- for mobile cellular phone service remains in the negotiation phase for joint
- venture agreement; Armenia has about 260,000 telephones, of which about
- 110,000 are in Yerevan; average telephone density is 8 per 100 persons;
- international connections to other former republics of the USSR are by
- landline or microwave and to other countries by satellite and by leased
- connection through the Moscow international gateway switch; broadcast
- stations - 100% of population receives Armenian and Russian TV programs;
- satellite earth station - INTELSAT
-
-
-
- @end display
-
- @node Defense Forces (Armenia)
- @section Defense Forces (Armenia)
-
- @display
-
- Branches:
- Army, Air Force, National Guard, Security Forces (internal and border
- troops)
- Manpower availability:
- males age 15-49 848,223; fit for military service 681,058; reach military
- age (18) annually 28,101 (1993 est.)
- Defense expenditures:
- 250 million rubles, NA% of GDP (1992 est.); note - conversion of the
- military budget into US dollars using the current exchange rate could
- produce misleading results
-
-
-
- @end display
-