The future of genocide

The Ideas Guy

Richard Handler

The future of genocide

Last Updated: Wednesday, January 26, 2011 |

By Richard Handler, CBC News

Genocide, a term coined after the vast bloodletting of the Second World War,
has a powerful resonance. Just thinking of the word conjures up images of
factory death camps and butchered and emaciated bodies all over the world.

>From Ukraine, central Europe and Armenia to Rwanda and Cambodia, genocide
has invoked powerful revulsion and also raised the question of whether any
one group can lay claim to the moral authority that flows from that
revulsion.

That is the problem facing those in charge of setting up the new Canadian
Museum for Human Rights in Winnipeg, which is set to open in two years time.

The singularity of suffering. An unidentified youth jumps from one pillar to
another at the Holocaust Memorial in Berlin in March 2010. (Tobias
Schwarz/Reuters)

Is the Holocaust of the Jews to be given special space and status in this
museum? Will other groups, such as the Ukrainians who were starved and
murdered under Stalin, have to share a “mass atrocity gallery.”

It is a debate about the singularity of suffering, its special meaning.

For some, like Taras Zalusky, executive director of the Ukrainian Canadian
Congress, “It’s about fair and equitable treatment of these tragedies,” as
he told the Winnipeg Free Press.

But to rate genocides according to their special meaning and purpose only
leads to endless, partisan bickering ‘ and lots of hurt feelings.

‘Bloodlands’

Timothy Synder is a Yale historian who has been criticized for wanting to
sidestep some of these debates. Comparing victim status, he says, risks
turning any lessons into a “genocide derby.”

But his new book, Bloodlands: Europe Between Hitler and Stalin, is
nonetheless receiving considerable attention for its meticulous and human
account of the slaughter committed by both the Nazis and the Soviets between
1933 and 1945.

Bloodlands, a term Snyder coined, refers to the killing fields between
Berlin and Moscow ‘ in Eastern Poland, the Baltic states, Ukraine, Belarus
and other areas in the Soviet Union and Eastern Europe.

Interestingly, Snyder does not use the word genocide when writing and
talking about these events.

As he explained to me in an Ideas interview (to run on Feb. 2), the term
genocide has both legal and popular definitions. But employing it, he says,
just closes the door to discussion.

The 1947 legal definition by the UN incorporates several aspects of targeted
oppression, such as “Causing serious bodily or mental harm to members of the
group” and “Forcibly transferring children of the group to another group.”

The popular definition is simpler: The wholesale killing of a people because
of religion, race or ethnicity.

Double victims

For his part, Snyder prefers the term “mass killing,” which there was
certainly plenty of in that barbarous 13-year period ending with the Second
World War.

Historian Timothy Snyder (Yale University website)

By his count, 14 million people were murdered in those European blood lands,
a staggering number almost outside of our imaginations.

Synder is a one of that new generation of scholars since the fall of the
Berlin Wall with access to the archives of Eastern Europe and the Soviet
Union. His book is cool and humane, scrupulous and horrifying.

Turn to almost any page and precise statistics leap out ‘ for instance, that
35,454 kulaks (wealthier peasants) were shot at a set date.

The book begins with the Ukraine famine of 1932-33 when some parents were
forced to eat their dead children ‘ and some children, their dead parents.
Some 3.3 million died from starvation and other causes.

It notes that nearly 2.5 million Jews were killed outside the death
factories by bullets, over ditches. (Snyder spends considerable time on the
precise step-by-step history of the Holocaust.)

One thing he makes clear is how often the civilian populations of Eastern
Europe were caught between the see-sawing armies of Nazi Germany and the
Soviet Union.

People could become, in a sense, double victims.

Can it happen again?

One of Snyder’s important contributions is in exploring how Stalin and
Hitler enabled each other in these mass killings.

Hitler learned much, for example, from Stalin’s starving of Ukrainian
peasantry. (Their grain was seized to feed workers in the cities and for
export.).

Then they took turns destroying the Polish elite and bourgeoisie.

After Germany invaded the Soviet Union in 1941, thousands of Soviet soldiers
were left stranded by Stalin to die horrible deaths by exposure in Nazi
pens.

Who then, asks Snyder, was ultimately responsible?

When I asked Snyder how could so many ordinary people stand over ditches to
shoot Jews (or Poles or Belarusians or Soviet prisoners of war) he, normally
a forceful talker, hesitates and tells me simply that such activity was,
unfortunately, “normal.”

Not that Germans in 1933, at the start of the Nazi regime, could imagine
some day standing over ditches to put a bullet in the back of a Jew or
Russian. They were led to it, step by step.

A racist ideology helped. So did the prospect of economic advantage in a
period of protracted want (take the apartments and wealth of those you
imprison and exile).

Throw in desperation over food shortages and living space as populations
were moved about. Then add conformism and fear of criticism.

In fact, the more the Nazis began to lose on the battlefield, the more they
insisted on the mass killing of the Jews ‘ as a desperate justification for
the war itself.

Could this happen again, perhaps in the near future? This is a question
Snyder asks in a New Republic essay ominously titled “The Coming Age of
Slaughter: Will Global Warming Unleash Genocide.”

Snyder’s chilling point is that all us who see ourselves as bystanders in
history’s grand events can become participants in ways we can’t now imagine.

For example, what happens in a time when resources are shrinking? When food
and especially water are up for grabs?

Certain decisions must be made. Millions might die in us-against-them
scenarios. Eventually, mass killing, mass starvation on a Stalinist scale,
might even seem normal.

With the right conditions, and a mixture fear, conformity and ideology,
ordinary citizens can, history tells us, turn into murderous participants.

That means you and me. And that means we all have an equal stake in this
debate about the real meaning of genocide.

Read more:

From: A. Papazian

http://www.cbc.ca/canada/story/2011/01/26/f-vp-handler.html#ixzz1CDP9oynn

Armenia Ranked 115th In World For Charity

ARMENIA RANKED 115TH IN WORLD FOR CHARITY

news.am
Jan 26 2011
Armenia

In a worldwide ranking of the number of charities Armenia ranks 115th
among the 150 countries surveyed. This was stated in the report by
the international organization “Charities Aid Foundation”.

Azerbaijan is 67, Georgia – 134, Russia – 138. Australia and New
Zeeland share first place. Approximately 57% of the population is
involved in charity in both of those countries.

The top ten also includes Canada, Ireland, Switzerland, the USA,
the Netherlands, the UK, Sri Lanka and Austria.

From: A. Papazian

Singer-Songwriter Proves She’s Ready

SINGER-SONGWRITER PROVES SHE’S READY
By Brian McGackin

Burbank Leader

Jan 26 2011
CA

It isn’t every day that an artist gives the perfect description of
his or her music right in the middle of one of the artist’s own songs.

Burbank singer-songwriter Maria Cozette is not your everyday artist,
though. Cozette sums up “Born Ready,” her debut album, perfectly in
“Just Right,” the second track of the disc: “If you want that feel-good
pop, well here it is.”

Armenian American Cozette has been performing since 5, and her
experience shows. “Born Ready” boasts tracks featuring a soulful
blend of Top 40 pop, R&B and European-influenced dance beats. It is
rare that a debut album is put together so completely – and defines
an artist so clearly – as this one.

The party gets started right away with the first song. With a smooth
groove and techno-influenced sound, “Electronic Love” gets listeners
ready to have fun. The second track, “Just Right,” continues to
deliver with a heavy beat and catchy chorus, and could easily be a
hit in clubs across the country.

From: A. Papazian

http://articles.burbankleader.com/2011-01-25/entertainment/tn-blr-cdreview-01252011_1_second-track-album-lyrics

Scandal In Kiev: Erdogan Refuses To Visit Holodomor Victims Memorial

SCANDAL IN KIEV: ERDOGAN REFUSES TO VISIT HOLODOMOR VICTIMS MEMORIAL

PanARMENIAN.Net
January 26, 2011 – 15:42 AMT 11:42 GMT

Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayipp Erdogan~Rs visit to Kiev was
complicated with a conflict between the two countries~R protocols
services. Turkish party refused pointblank to satisfy the demand
of Ukraine to visit a memorial to Holodomor victims, an obligatory
procedure for all official visits.

The reaction of Ukraine~Rs guests was predictable. Turkey, accused
of being 1915 Armenian Genocide perpetrator, has a painful reaction
to similar historic events in other countries. ~SVictor Yushenko~Rs
request for Turkey to recognize 1930 Holodomor as genocide considerably
aggravated bilateral relations,~T Kommercant Ukraine cited a local
diplomat as saying.

From: A. Papazian

Through The Grapevine: Oldest Winery In Armenia

THROUGH THE GRAPEVINE: OLDEST WINERY IN ARMENIA

My San Antonio

Jan 26 2011

A prologue to wine history was discovered this month when
archaeologists from the Cotsen Institute of Archaeology at the
University of California, Los Angeles found what is believed to be
the world’s oldest winery in Armenia.

The site dates to 4,000 B.C. and proves that grape domestication
and wine production and distribution existed at least 1,000 years
earlier than previously believed. Before this discovery, the oldest
known winery dated to 1650 B.C. in Israel, according to researchers.

The find, which was reported in the Journal of Archaeological Science,
had been preserved by a collapsed roof inside a cave for an estimated
6,000 years. Inside were clay pots, a 15-gallon vat with residue,
a wine press and remnants of grapes and seeds. The archaeologists
believe the wine was probably ceremonial because the winery is near
a gravesite. It may have tasted similar to merlot.

This discovery is the biggest wine news since July, when 30 or so
bottles of Champagne were found at a 1780s shipwreck site between
Sweden and Finland.

Cups runneth over

Judges, ready your taste buds for the 2011 San Antonio Wine
Competition, scheduled for Saturday.

A panel of judges, including yours truly, will taste through more than
500 national and international wines to select bronze, silver and gold
medal winners to be tasted during the San Antonio Wine Festival, Feb.
18-20, which benefits KLRN-TV. It may sound fun, but that’s a lot
of wine.

Winning wines will be published in the Feb. 13 Taste section. Tickets
are still available; details are listed in the accompanying wine
calendar.

Jennifer McInnis is the wine columnist for the Express-News

From: A. Papazian

http://www.mysanantonio.com/life/food/article/Through-the-Grapevine-Oldest-winery-in-Armenia-968802.php

Two Armenian Pianists To Participate In European Piano Competition

TWO ARMENIAN PIANISTS TO PARTICIPATE IN EUROPEAN PIANO COMPETITION

PanARMENIAN.Net
January 26, 2011 – 19:56 AMT 15:56 GMT

Two Armenian pianists will participate in the European Piano
Competition.

The competition will be held in France on October 15-30 within the
framework of European Piano Program, the French Embassy in Armenia
told PanARMENIAN.Net

As part of the cultural program exchange organized by European Piano
Competition Association, Julien FAURE, a French pianist, will play a
recital at the French Embassy on January 27, 2011 with works by Liszt,
Chopin and Ravel.

Besides, a delegation of the competition led by founder Chairman of
the European Piano Competition and Coordinator of the European Piano
Program Ives Robert arrived in Yerevan to strengthen cultural ties
with the musical community of Armenia.

From: A. Papazian

It Is No Longer Possible To Resume Armenian-Turkish Process By Means

IT IS NO LONGER POSSIBLE TO RESUME ARMENIAN-TURKISH PROCESS BY MEANS OF ZURICH PROTOCOLS
By Ashot Safaryan

arminfo
2011-01-25 11:13:00

Interview of political expert Alexander Markarov with ArmInfo News
Agency

Mr. Markarov, the ruling coalition of Armenia has refused to vote
for Heritage Party’s Bill “On Recognition of the Nagorno-Karabakh
Republic”. What do you think Armenian diplomacy can refer to in this
case when it persuades its partners to recognize the NKR and doesn’t
do that itself?

The recognition of Nagorno-Karabakh is a trump. Armenia should not
hurry to play. Today this step will not contribute to the settlement
of the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict.

The basis for the NKR recognition as a subject of international law
is on the one hand de facto establishment and institutionalization
of the given state as an independent subject. On the other hand, one
can refer to the standards of international law, within the frames of
which Nagorno-Karabakh both withdrew itself from the Azerbaijani SSR
and proclaimed its independence. Azerbaijan has no legal, historical
or moral bases to recognize the NKR part of its territory.

What are the conflict settlement prospects in 2011 against this
background?

I think the Karabakh peace process will continue exclusively within the
OSCE Minsk Group format, and other international structures currently
acknowledge the given format as the most constructive one.

However, this does not prevent other organizations, particularly,
NATO from initiating resolutions containing formulations on
Nagorno-Karabakh.

NATO has repeatedly pointed out, including during the Lisbon Summit,
that it does not see its role in the conflict settlement. Moscow’s
role as a mediator in the peace process will be growing at the same
time. We see that Russia is more active in the Karabakh conflict
settlement, and this is proved by several meetings of the Armenian
and Azerbaijani presidents that were held through the mediation of the
Russian president. This is like a “side” branch in the peace process.

Within the frames of the trilateral format attempts are being made to
tackle some small issues. In particular, one of them is the agreement
on exchange of POWs and dead bodies reached in Astrakhan in October
2010.

Let’s pass to foreign policy – the Armenian-Turkish process. Will
Ankara shortly demonstrate willingness to continue the process of
normalization with Armenia in order to make the US president avoid
the word “genocide” once again?

In case of resumption of the Armenian-Turkish normalization process,
a new document will apparently be needed, as the Protocols signed in
Zurich seem to be out-of-date already. The Zurich Protocols undoubtedly
played their role – they demonstrated Armenia’s willingness to start
a dialogue without any preconditions, as well as the fact that in its
foreign policy Turkey turned out to be the hostage of its relations
with Azerbaijan. The Protocols showed Armenia’s willingness for talks
and our partners’ unwillingness to take political decisions without
looking at their allies.

The US president has recently said in his interview with Turkish
newspaper that the relations with Turkey are more important for
Washington than ever. Is this one more attempt to keep Ankara in the
zone of American influence?

Washington undoubtedly has had its vital interests in the region for a
long time, and Israel and Turkey were a rampart for extension of its
influence. Currently there are disagreements between the indicated
allies of America, and the Turkish foreign policy somewhat lurches
towards the Islamic world. The USA understands that its influence on
a strategic partner may reduce; therefore attempts are being made
to recover the interrelations and the influence on Ankara. Certain
disagreements between the USA and Turkey will continue but they
will not concern the bases of strategic partnership between these
countries. Along with it, one should not forget that Turkey perfectly
realizes that it needs the American support none the worse.

Regarding domestic policy: the recent personnel replacements have
caused a wide public response. Are they capable to improve the activity
of the given ministries?

The necessity to improve the work of certain spheres is doubtless,
indeed. But it is another question whether the appointment of the
new ministers will contribute to improvement or not. In general, if
in this case the system is ineffective, the personnel replacements
cannot change the content of the personnel policy of the authorities.

At the same time the competition between the Armenian authorities and
the opposition has become the reason why the authorities are ready
to make positive changes. And the recent personnel replacements in
the government may be also watched like an evidence of these positive
tendencies. Improvement of the system will weaken the opposition to
a certain extent, as there will be fewer reasons for criticism.

Does this criticism lead to real competition between them, as elections
are in the offing?

The competition between the Armenian authorities and the opposition
leads to readiness of the former to make positive changes. As for the
opposition, it is trying to get crystallized and come forward not as
the force which is functioning on the negative basis, but the force
which is trying to present its positive proposal to the society.

The Armenian National Congress seems to be distancing itself from the
other oppositional forces more and more, particularly, from Heritage
and ARFD, which ANC has never considered opposition. What is the
reason of such “estrangement”?

To all appearances, the Armenian National Congress is currently trying
to monopolize the oppositional niche hopefully to become the only
authority in case of the power change in Armenia. I do not mean that
it will come to power; the point is that any opposition tries to set
itself up as a future power. So, based on this, they remote themselves
from other parties which currently appear in the parliament as an
opposition: these are both ARFD and Heritage. Along with it, I must
say that ANC, as a non-parliamentary opposition, has quite a great
chance to become parliamentary opposition after the regular election.

The remoteness of the Congress is called to show the water-parting
which exists between the parliamentary and non-parliamentary
opposition, as well as to demonstrate the fight between these forces
for electorate.

From: A. Papazian

Flour Prices In Armenia Are 40% Lower Than Growing Wheat Prices

FLOUR PRICES IN ARMENIA ARE 40% LOWER THAN GROWING WHEAT PRICES
Aram Gareginyan, ArmInfo

arminfo
2011-01-25 11:17:00

Interview with Director of Mancho Group LLC Ivan Mosoyan

All goes through the mill… but for how much? A week ago Director
of Manana Grain LLC Gurgen Nikoghosyan told us that the wheat prices
in Armenia~Rs regions have redoubled since the summer 2010. Why then
haven~Rt the flour prices followed suit?

How much behind are the flour prices from the wheat prices?

Formerly, we bought wheat in Poti for $200-220. Today, it costs $400.
In other words, in the last six months the price has redoubled. Half
a year ago flour prices averaged $21-22 per 50 kg, today, they are
$28-29. Considering the rise in the wheat prices, they should have
been $42-43.

There has been no grain export from Russia for five months already
and a week ago Ukraine said that in 2009 it produced 19.4% less grain
than in 2009. How risky might this be for us in terms of prices?

Russia~Rs ban and the situation in Ukraine have certainly influenced
the wheat market. As you may know, today Ukraine~Rs grain market
is not fully open. They have export quotas. For wheat the quota was
500,000 tons, now, it is 300,000 tons. We don~Rt know how much wheat
will be sent to Armenia. We haven~Rt received any Ukrainian wheat yet.

There are certain procedural difficulties. According to the law,
you can load a ship with as much wheat as the quota allows but at the
port you are faced with new problems: your ship remains loaded and you
have to pay demurrage. We have received no wheat import permission
from Ukraine yet but are actively working towards this end. Nobody
wants to import wheat from as far Kazakhstan or Bulgaria, especially
as the Ukrainian wheat is better. The Kazakh wheat is also good ~V
as good as the Russian one ~V but its transportation cost is as high
as $60-80 per ton. In terms of price it would be more profitable
for us to import wheat from Ukraine, Bulgaria or even Romania and
Hungary. But the best wheat is produced in Russia and Kazakhstan,
followed by Ukraine, Hungary, Germany and Bulgaria.

And what is the cost value of Ukrainian wheat for the moment?

In the last 7-10 days the CIF price of Ukrainian wheat at the port of
Poti has grown from $345-350 to $385-390. Georgia~Rs railways have
also raised their tariff – from $23 to $26 per ton. Add $18-20 per
ton for bringing the wheat from Ayrum (the Armenian-Georgian border)
to Yerevan and at least $60 for customs clearance and VAT. And as a
result you will get $510-520.

Wheat is cleared at 32% with VAT and customs duty inclusive?

No, at 20% (the duty exclusive) if imported from the CIS and at 32%
if brought from other countries or having no certificate of origin.

Do you import feed wheat as well?

Yes. Today the prices of feed and milling wheat in Ukraine are almost
the same. The difference is just $10 against $50-60 a couple of months
ago. Some two months ago we could import feed wheat at $295-300 per
ton, today, the price is $435-440.

Iran has become one more supplier for us. We are the only company who
imported 12,000 tons of wheat from Iran at the beginning of this year.
The first batch was 4,000-5000 tons of third grade wheat. But when
the batch came it turned out that it was feed wheat. They in Iran
have different grade system. When I saw it I sent my representative
to Iran and he picked the best wheat they had.

How much is Iranian wheat?

The purchase price is $260 per ton. Add transportation costs to and
from Julfa and customs clearance and you will see that it is cheaper
than the Russian one.

Why then aren~Rt flour prices growing?

We expected that flour prices would gradually grow.

Our Government gives high priority to this problem and we are trying
to decide what minimum profitability we can work at. But at some moment
we will no longer be able to work at a loss. We must always have wheat
in stock for producing flour. We are forced to buy wheat at higher
prices, so, perhaps, this month we will fix a price that will ensure
our profitability and ability to import wheat on a constant basis.

10% rise in wheat prices will not have any impact on flour prices.
Flour begins to grow in price from the 15-20% level. We will keep the
flour prices for as long as we can and then we will let them go for as
much as 20%. Generally, flour and bread prices do not fluctuate much.
They try to keep the bread price ~V they even can ~Sblow~T air into
bread but when the price goes up they go back to the initial weight.

We allowed raising flour prices only after the New Year holidays. Only
now we are coming closer to the wheat prices. Today, 50kg of high
grade flour in Armenia costs almost $30 or 10,500-11,000 AMD. First
and second grade flours are 500 AMD and 1,000 AMD cheaper.

What share does the local wheat have in your flour production?

It is so small that it is not even worth mentioning. People gather it
the way they can, mill it the way they can at small flourmills. Since
the arable plots in Armenia are small, the quality of the Armenian
wheat is not equally high. One plot can produce very good wheat while
another one – wheat that can hardly be used as fodder.

Do you import finished flour?

Presently, we are negotiating with a number of organizations. If the
difference between wheat and flour prices becomes big enough we will
consider importing flour. Our key concern is the terms of delivery
rather than the price. We import flour only when we see that our
country needs bread. Besides, each local flourmill employs several
dozens of people. If we import flour they will lose their jobs.

What grades of wheat are imported into Armenia?

We have no clear grade system on the local market. Here we can use the
same wheat for making bread and confectionary. Our company imports
mostly wheat of third grade because if it turns out to be of fourth
grade it will still be milling wheat while if we buy fourth grade
wheat it may prove to be fodder.

Mancho Group produces confectionary as well. Did the rise in egg
prices in late 2010 influence the cost of your confectionary?

By the New Year egg prices grew but then they dropped again. These
fluctuations were caused by changes in the demand-offer ratio. If the
problem was in our hard food the rise in egg prices was quite logical.
Formerly, we bought eggs at 8-10 per egg, today, at 45-50 AMD. If
poultry farms buy food at a price that is 1.5 times higher than before,
the price should grow but it is for farmers to decide for how much.

Today, confectionary business is not very profitable. Confectioners
are just trying to stay afloat.

Can the National Seed Growing Development Program reduce the country~Rs
dependence on wheat import?

One can farm seeds only when one has arable land. Our lands need
amelioration and regular irrigation. You know how much our harvests
depend on rain. Seed wheat is very expensive. If feed wheat costs
over $300 per ton, seed wheat may cost almost $1,000. And you can~Rt
just sow it, you should first prepare the soil.

From: A. Papazian

Armavia Stops Flights To Georgia

ARMAVIA STOPS FLIGHTS TO GEORGIA

ArmInfo
2011-01-26 08:14:00

ArmInfo. The National Air Carrier of Armenia “Armavia” has suspended
its flight to Tbilisi.

Spokesperson of Armavia Nana Avetisova says that the flights are
unprofitable. The last flight was carried out Jan 13. “As a rule,
we stop flying to Georgia in the winter. Last year we did the same,”
says Avetisova.

From: A. Papazian

Amulsar: "Infertile Mountain" As A Means Of Livelihood

AMULSAR: “INFERTILE MOUNTAIN” AS A MEANS OF LIVELIHOOD
Aram Gareginyan, ArmInfo

ArmInfo
2011-01-26 06:10:00

Somehow this mountain got the name Amulsar, which translates from
Armenian as “infertile mountain”. There is plenty of treeless mountains
around, so why be so choosy about that particular one?

Anyway, there are no trees on it, but there is gold ore below.

It’s going to take 3 – 5 years before Lydian International from
Britain, through its Armenian subsidiary, Geoteam, starts to mine it.

But the mountain has already become a workplace for drivers, laborers
and technicians from the three surrounding villages – Gndevaz and
Saravan of Vayots Dzor province and Gorhayk of Syunik. The rural
municipality of Saravan includes three villages – Saravan itself,
Saralandj and Ugedzor. Hence, at least partial solution of rural
unemployment in five remote villages, 170 – 180 km away from the
capital city, Yerevan.

>>From Gndevaz, Geoteam employs around 20 people. “They work at the
probe laboratory and the exploration camp”, says the head of Gndevaz,
Hayrapet Lazarian. “When the year begins, we hold a meeting, where
the general director of Geoteam, Hayk Aloyan, lays out the action plan
for the year. Camp manager assembles a list of vacancies, and people
can apply, stating professional abilities they possess – in welding,
electrical repairs or whatever. The company recruits them according
to its needs. Some have already specialized – say, as drilling machine
or probe lab operators”. Well, what have been electricians or welders
doing in a village before Geoteam came? “Most have been employed on
a local poultry plant, which has closed down temporarily. I’m glad
our people have another job opportunity at home”.

The territory explored by Geoteam falls within the boundaries of
Gndevaz, Saravan and Gorhayk municipalities. A distant land of little
agricultural value is out of any demand. Its yearly rent rate was
defined at 700 dram (about $2) per hectare by the State. Geoteam rents
it for 6 thousand dram per hectare in all the three municipalities.

“Within our administrative borders, Geoteam rents a little above
430 hectares. The overall entry to our municipal cant’ be called
unbelievably high. But for us, it changes a lot. One can always make
a good use of that money, even though a lot has already been done”.

>>From the outside, Gndevaz looks relatively well – in part, due to
contributions of its wealthy natives. One of them, Ashot Arsenyan,
owns the mineral water plant of Jermuk, one of the most recognizable
Armenian trademarks. That assistance secured a constant gas supply
from as far back as 1997, and helped to improve irrigation channels
last year. “We are most thankful to the people whose efforts made that
possible. But unemployment still remains our primary concern. Luckily,
the resort town of Jermuk is nearby, providing us some occupation –
both through the mineral water plant and hotels”. On top of that,
apricot, the trademark of Armenia, could be called staple commodity
for Gndevaz. There, they ripen in September, long after the majority
of the crop in the lowlands of Ararat valley is harvested and
marketed. Therefore it meets no competition, both at home and abroad.

“We’ve been exporting it successfully to Moscow, and we think about
expanding our orchards”. Truly, one can call apricot another kind of
gold on the foot of Amulsar.

>>From Gndevaz, we drive across the mountain to our next destination,
the village of Gorhayk in the neighboring province of Syunik. The
village is not as well off as Gndevaz, but its municipality head,
Arustam Arustamyan, has got vision and projects for the future,
both connected with Geoteam and standalone ones. Geoteam has been
partnering with Gorhayk for 5 years. “When they came to start working
in 2006, we first offered them warehouse premises”, he said. “Then we
assembled the residents of the village and agreed with the company
on the process of employment and the enlistment of our people. From
then on, we started to work closely together”. The first assistance
provided by Geoteam to Gorhayk, even before the exploration started,
was the 600 000 dram’s contribution to Gorhayk’s 3 mln AMD co-founding
of the World Bank’s Municipal Water and Wastewater Project.

“Afterwards they helped to restore the municipal hall, which had
been standing uncovered for 7 – 8 years – its roof had been blown
off by the wind. Geoteam also assisted us in acquiring equipment for
our healthcare center”. Here the company rents for exploration 1026
hectares, at the same rate of 6 000 AMD per hectare.

Today, you can easily tell Gorhayk from other villages of Syunik:
it’s the only village in the whole province to arrange regular street
sanitation. “We’ve been doing it for three years, and people couldn’t
get accustomed to it for a long time. Now they have incorporated
the idea that they can have the same facilities that are available
in cities. Garbage is collected weekly, and this is quite enough –
part of our household waste, for example, vegetable peelings, is
used as a livestock feed”. The assistance of Geoteam also included
renovation of 18-km road from Gorhayk to Amulsar, used by a dozen
of neighboring villages, and rehabilitation of 4 km of roads within
Gorhayk. If employment in Gorhayk is as big a concern as in Gndevaz,
here too it’s been significantly eased.

During the drilling season, from early spring to late fall, the
company employs 35 – 37 people from Gorhayk, mainly young people. “We
are happy to have them stay at home and not leaving to find a job
elsewhere. University students from our village, who major in geology
or mining, get full tuition scholarships from Geoteam. We have both
those who initially entered those departments and transferees. It’s
good for them to master a profession with which to be employed at
home. People will definitely return home if they see opportunities for
a decent life. Last year, three families, who had left for Russia,
resettled at the homes they had abandoned. Years ago, one couldn’t
have imagined it”.

Arustam Arustamyan has a whole set of plans to improve the life
of Gorhayk. He thinks of upgrading the quality of pasturelands,
seeding alfalfa along with feeding livestock on natural pastures,
and of rehabilitating a small cheesemaking factory located on Amulsar,
to process milk on the spot.

Our jorney ends at Saravan. High organizational skills and personal
efforts of the village head, Simon Babayan, helped the people to
manage some of their difficulties on their own – in some cases,
on do-it-yourself basis, which proved to be cost effective.

>>From Saravan, Geoteam recruits 16 – 17 people. Here too selection was
made to support the young and not-yet-married. “Livestock breeding is
not very popular today, and young boys, returning home from military
service, preferred to move to urban areas. Today, they get a monthly
salary of 120 – 130, up to 200 thousand drams”. Saravan, Saralandj and
Ughedzor don’t yet have students attending geology or mining courses,
but here too Geoteam offered to cover tuition fees of geology students,
which has considerably raised interest towards these disciplines. To
complete the picture, here territory occupied by Geoteam on a rental
basis totals 1563 hectares, on the same conditions.

Neither Saravan, nor Sarlandj or Ughedzor had any industrial units
before. “The main occuation is livestock farming. Opportuinites are
multiple – plenty of rich alpine meadows. But that doesn’t attract
too much people these days”.

With the assistance of Geoteam, Babayan plans to improve the drinking
water system, not in Saravan alone. The village of Ughedzor, with
the highest location of the three, is abandoned in winter – the trail
leading to the village gets completely cut off. Living in summer is
little better, with a lack of access to drinking water. Pipes that
were laid to Ughedzor five decades ago, have almost completely rusted
through. “We keep patching them up, which results in a jumble of
different pipes. Some are plastic, some are asbestos, some iron and
cast iron. As to the road condition, nobody ever wants to reach the
village, even to collect taxes. Nobody wants to break his car: there
is 7 km of a very poor road, of which 2 km with no paved road at all”.

The village has 35 families, and produces some five tons of quality
milk yearly. Last summer the villagers have agreed with Ashtarak-Kat,
one of the leading Armenian dairy producers, about milk collection.

But the process is hampered for the same reason – they’re too hard
to reach”.

Geoteam hasn’t mined a single ton of gold ore yet. Still, neighboring
communities started to collect their share. The most valuable part
of it is perhaps the shortest road to work – not to Yerevan. And not
abroad. But to the next mountain. In that case, is it really infertile?

From: A. Papazian