Yervant1 Posted September 13, 2014 Report Share Posted September 13, 2014 ARMENIA IN GLOBAL PUBLICITY DRIVE12 September 2014 Last updated at 00:29By Russell Padmore Business reporter, BBC World ServicePresident Serzh Sargsyan wants to raise Armenia's profile Continuereading the main storyRelated StoriesArmenia country profile The president who threatened war on TwitterFifteen die in Karabakh clashesWhere in the world is Armenia? It's a question that the country'sPresident, Serzh Sargsyan, is hoping to get more people around theglobe to answer correctly.He wants to mobilise the 10 million Armenians living abroad for aglobal internet publicity campaign to boost tourism and influenceforeign investors.Entitled the One Armenian, One Article campaign the idea is to getexpatriates to write positive stories about the country.President Sargsyan and others behind the publicity drive say theircountry needs a higher profile, because many people struggle to recallanything about the nation.So just what do people know about Armenia?'We never hear about it'London in the summer is full of tourists so it was easy to conductan impromptu series of informal interviews, ambushing dozens ofunsuspecting strangers from around the globe to get their views.A couple from Saudi Arabia had heard of Armenia but only knew it wasin Asia, while a Danish woman told me that "we never hear about itin Denmark."But the most amusing was a man with his family from the United States,who could only tell me that "all the people's names end in '-ian'."His wife was quick to tell me he based that on the celebrity KimKardashian.The socialite Kim Kardashian is one of many who have family rootsin ArmeniaOnly one of the people I spoke to knew much about Armenia, and thatwas a woman from Paris who had been to the capital, Yerevan, and said,"It is a small country and its people have suffered a lot."My questioning was strictly informal, but it does suggest the sizeof the challenge facing President Sargsyan and his compatriots.'Soft power'Enlisting people around the world who have Armenian roots to raise thecountry's profile could prove effective. Famous people with connectionsto Armenia include the singer Cher, tennis player Andre Agassi,billionaire investor Kirk Kerkorian and the late Steve Jobs of Apple."The Armenian diaspora sees itself in many ways as the second army ofthe Republic of Armenia," says Aram Suren Hamparian, executive directorof the Armenian National Committee of America, based in Washington DC."Armenians spread around the world and prospered wherever they went,and they haven't forgotten their roots and they try to stay connected -and that is part of the soft power of the Armenian nation."Armenia's ancient culture survived decades of Soviet influence beforeindependence in 1991. But despite its independence, the country stillhas significant economic ties to Russia.Next year, the government in Yerevan plans to join the common economiczone of the Russian Federation, alongside Kazakhstan and Belarus.Armenia relies heavily on loans from Moscow as well as the World Bank,the International Monetary Fund and the Asian Development Bank.Armenia: Key factsSize of economy: $10.4bn (£6.3bn) Economic growth: 3.5% Population:2.9 million Proportion of population below poverty line: 32.4% Lifeexpectancy: 74 yearsSources: World Bank and CIA World Factbook, 2013Closed borders Continue reading the main story"Start QuoteOpening the border with Turkey will really be a game changer"End Quote Teresa Daban Sanchez IMF representative in YerevanMoney sent home by expatriate workers is also a major driver ofeconomic activity, and accounts for one-fifth of Armenia's economy."Remittances from Armenian workers living abroad are very important,it provides resources, US dollars, to fund imports in Armenia andto fund consumption," says Teresa Daban Sanchez, the IMF's residentrepresentative in Yerevan.Yet "90% of remittances come from Russia," she adds - underliningthe country's trade links with Russia.However, Armenia's economic development is hindered because itsborders with Azerbaijan and Turkey are closed.Being blocked from trading with Turkey, one of the region's biggesteconomies, is a big barrier to growth.Reopening the borders would transform Armenia's economy, says MsDaban Sanchez."Opening them, especially the border with Turkey, will really bea game changer, because Turkey's a large diversified economy withaccess to European markets."Being landlocked presents a "huge challenge", says the IMF's TeresaDaban SanchezThe reasons the borders are shut lie in two 20th Century conflicts.During World War One, between 1915 and 1917, hundreds of thousandsof ethnic Armenians died at the hands of Ottoman Turks.Yerevan wants Turkey to recognise the deaths as genocide and somecountries have done so, but Ankara insists there was no genocide andthat the dead were victims of the war.It remains a highly sensitive issue.Expatriate Armenians provide significant "soft power", says AramSuren HamparianMeanwhile, a fragile ceasefire is in place with Azerbaijan on Armenia'seastern border, over the disputed Nagorno-Karabakh region.In 1988, towards the end of Soviet rule, Azerbaijani troops andArmenian secessionists began a war that left the region in the handsof ethnic Armenians when a truce was signed in 1994.Negotiations have so far failed to produce a permanent peace agreement,and the dispute remains as a so-called frozen conflict.Tourism potentialYet even if Yerevan and its neighbours do reopen their borders, theIMF's Teresa Daban Sanchez cautions that the country still faces themore basic challenge of its location."Armenia, remember is a landlocked country, so even without thesegeopolitical problems Armenia has a huge challenge."If Armenia's expatriate community can effectively be mobilised foran online public relations offensive then the country could attractmore visitors and perhaps more business for travel agents."People will get an idea of what it's like," says Gillian Leaning,marketing manager at the UK travel company Regent Holidays."They'll see images of the ancient monasteries and they'll hearabout the rolling valleys of the Lesser Caucasus, or what it's liketo taste the country's brandy in Yerevan."So they'll be far more likely to choose it as a destination fortheir next holiday."In addition to boosting tourism, positive stories online could alsocatch the attention of possible foreign investors and to quote anold Armenian proverb: "Whatever the eye sees, the heart won't forget."Listen to more from Russell Padmore on Armenia's publicity drive onBBC World Service's World Business Report.http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/business-28974770 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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