Int’l Recog of Kosovo independence is of Armenia’s benefit

PanARMENIAN.Net

The international recognition of Kosovo’s independence
is of Armenia’s benefit

The resolution of the issue of Kosovo’s independence
should be postponed for undefined period so that the
representatives of Serbia and Kosovo are able to reach
understanding and a general consensus.
31.01.2008 GMT+04:00

Most probably the Kosovo issue is close to its
completion. The Kosovo Albanians are in a hurry and
one of the reasons may be considered the upcoming
Presidential elections in Russia and the USA. Another
reason for it is that Kosovo fears that the EU will
change its positions. The truth is, that the
government of the territory and the NATO
representatives have finally agreed upon the action
plan after the scheduled declaration of independence
of the Serbian province. However, as the experts warn,
the declaration of independence may cause war.

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ `The most dangerous thing is that
the Albanian issue for Europe is no joke. There are as
many unrecognized states as unrecognized geniuses
around us. And each of them represents a huge problem
at least for two totally successful countries.
Nagorno-Karabakh, Transnistria, Abkhazia, and South
Ossetia are only the territories we hear about every
day. But the sign from Pristine will give rise to
serious agitations among Kurds, who have been fighting
for their independent Kurdistan, more agitations in
Taiwan, deprived from China since long times and the
Serbian Republic, the constituent of Bosnia and
Herzegovina…’, writes the newspaper `Russian Germany’.

As the author of the article `Many years of frozen
conflicts’ (Le Monde) Daniel Verne supposes, the issue
of independence of the former Serbian province
conceals `virus’ which may have wide spreading.
According to him, `conflict defrosting’ which may
happen after Kosovo is granted independence, may cause
acceleration of the breakdown of the states (Moldova
and Georgia in particular).

In their turn the analysts of Stratford are sure that
the resolution of the issue of Kosovo’s independence
should be postponed for undefined period so that the
representatives of Serbia and Kosovo are able to reach
understanding and a general consensus. `Otherwise the
consequences may have the worst effect both for Europe
and the whole world,’ they say.

If the leader of Serbian radical party Tomislav
Nicolich wins in the Presidential election on February
3, Kosovo will definitely declare its independence
from Serbia within the next few days. If the current
President Boris Tadich wins, the Kosovo Albanians are
inclined to postpone the declaration of independence
by February 18, when the meeting of the Ministers of
Foreign Affairs of EU member states takes place,
Reuters informs.

The truth is that the head of government of Albania
Sali Berisha, while commenting on the agreement
between the Albanian government of the Kosovo
territory and NATO, refused the idea of the possible
establishment of the so called Large Albania in the
future. According to the Prime-Minister there is no
need for worries regarding this. Albania and Kosovo
are `two different realities’, emphasized Berisha
during his interview to AFR Agency in Tirana.

The Albanian Prime-Minister is sure that the
declaration of Kosovo independence will not become the
reason of destabilization of the situation in the
Balkans. Meanwhile Berisha doesn’t exclude the fact
that the official Belgrade will probably try to impede
the process of Kosovo’s sovereignty by all means.

Nevertheless, it should be mentioned that the
international recognition of Kosovo’s independence is
of Armenia’s benefit regarding the issue of regulation
of the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict. `If Kosovo’s
independence is recognized on the international level,
the Armenian party will automatically have more rights
on its own issues, since those who insist on Kosovo’s
independence will have to start considering the
independence of Nagorno-Karabakh as well. Any
recognition, even if it is one-party recognition, as
it used to be in 70’s, when several countries
recognized the independence of Taiwan, is of Armenia’s
benefit,’ says the member of ARF Dashnaktsutiun Vahan
Hovhannisyan.
«PanARMENIAN.Net» analytical department

Armenian Premier Likely Winner Of Presidential Election – Politician

ARMENIAN PREMIER LIKELY WINNER OF PRESIDENTIAL ELECTION – POLITICIAN

Mediamax
Jan 31 2008
Armenia

Yerevan, 31 January: Prime minister and leader of the Republican Party
of Armenia (RPA) Serzh Sargsyan is to gain 60-65 per cent of votes
in the 19 February presidential election, stated today RPA deputy
chair Galust Sahakyan in Yerevan.

Galust Sahakyan stated that results of the [opinion] polls conducted
by RPA prove Serzh Sargsyan’s rating constitutes 56 per cent today.

He also reminded that according to the recent Gallup poll, Serzh
Sargsyan’s rating has grown by 8 per cent recently.

Galust Sahakyan expressed confidence that Serzh Sargsyan is the only
candidate able to take up responsibility for the country’s life and
become a powerful president.

Turkey Slams Democratic Hopefuls For Armenia Genocide Remarks

TURKEY SLAMS DEMOCRATIC HOPEFULS FOR ARMENIA GENOCIDE REMARKS

Kathimerini
Jan 29 2008
Greece

ANKARA (AP) – Turkey has criticized US Democratic presidential
hopefuls for backing Armenian views that a century-old mass killings
of Armenians by the Ottoman Turks constituted a genocide. The Turkish
Foreign Ministry said in a statement over the weekend that remarks
by Democratic presidential candidates "for the sake of an internal
party struggle, offends the Turkish nation." The statement did not
name specific candidates.

ANKARA: Bayramoglu: Dink would say `justice done’

Today’s Zaman, Turkey
Jan 28 2008

Bayramoðlu: Dink would say `justice done’

Ali Bayramoðlu

Writer and intellectual Ali Bayramoðlu says slain Turkish-Armenian
journalist Hrant Dink would have said "The justice has been done" if
he had seen last week’s detentions of people, reportedly believed to
have close links to shadowy state networks, in connection with many
assassinations — including Dink’s own.

"We cannot accuse anybody without indictment or concrete evidence;
but Hrant was murdered as part of the ground laid by this entity. For
this reason, that entity is liable for his murder," Bayramoðlu says.
On Jan. 23 the country was awoken by the news that dozens of members
of a clandestine group had been detained in an operation called
"Ergene-kon."

Although some observers think that this operation will not result in
punitive action, as has been the case with many other past
operations, Bayramoðlu doesn’t agree: "If the evidence is
substantial, I think the media and public will back the government.
Therefore I do not think there will be any retreat from this point.
Quite the contrary, I think Turkish democracy took a strong step to
prove attachment to the principle of the rule of law."

For Monday Talk, he explained why he thinks as he does.

What did you think when reading the arrest reports on Jan. 23?

It is very important that this sort of operation was carried out. I
wasn’t expecting it, because we had every reason to be pessimistic
about legal, political or administrative determination considering
the fate of investigations opened in connection with the Dink murder,
some developments in 2007 and the unresolved Malatya massacre. It is
obvious that in 2007, some deep state elements cooperated with street
gangs and made their alliance known in public.

What else happened in relation to the connection between the state
and clandestine organizations?

In 2007, a military coup plot that was scheduled to take place in
2003 or 2004 was uncovered. We also witnessed antigovernment rallies
held to lay the groundwork for a military coup. The polarization
around Article 301, accusations of treason, murders in connection
with these accusations, physiological war attempts that sought to
undermine the political administration, democracy and social
stability — they all took place in 2007. The reality behind the
civil society organizations that emerged as the supporters of the
Feb. 28 process was revealed in the same year.

What do the gang connections point to?

Some point to the Susurluk case [the first to bring into the open the
fact that national intelligence units employ others to carry out
illicit operations] and some others to the entities that organize
some sorts of social resistance activity. For instance if you take a
look at who organized the anti-government rallies prior to the July
22 elections, you will see that those who were detained a few days
ago and their organizations were involved in these rallies. These
rogue elements abused the social sensitivity over secularism by
organizing these rallies.

One of those detained had filed a lawsuit against Hrant Dink. Another
who frequently appeared at Dink’s hearings was also detained…

We already knew them as members of groups that point to certain names
as targets and create the proper environment to take action. They
become public through their organizations. Back then, there were
suspicions and concerns because of the inability and reluctance of
the administration to deal with their increasing legitimization. For
this reason, I may say that it was a surprise. An operation of this
sort now implies the police and intelligence units have been working
hard and the prosecutor took a brave step, because [there was]
substantial evidence to ensure their detention.

Is bravery required to do this?

This is not easy, we have to admit that. The arrestees include
retired generals. We are now seeing the tip of the iceberg — even
this small part of the iceberg tells a lot about the last two decades
in this country. In other words, this is the story of what happened
in the Southeast, the political assassinations, the country’s
transformation associated with the European Union bid — and it goes
back to the ’80s.

Are the early versions of these gangs related to Gladio?

The statist and military guardianship system is very strong in
Turkey. If you pay attention, you will notice that there were
different methods to address the Gladio entities established in the
1950s to contain communism. The crackdown on these entities was
ensured via liberalization and democratization in Spain and in Italy.

Is Turkey going through a similar process now?

Turkey has not yet gone through a phase that will ensure greater
civilian rule in the state and further discussion of the military
domination in the political system. We were suffering from a very
authoritarian rule while Italy and Spain were making headway. We had
a military coup in the 1980s. The coup’s impacts have been felt
through the 1990s. The [President Turgut] Özal era in the 1990s may
be called a civilian rule. In the aftermath, we had to deal with the
Refah (Welfare Party, RP) crisis; but there has never been a
clean-hands operation. There was no attempt to make the system more
civilian.

Former Primer Minister Bülent Ecevit and former Prime Minister
Süleyman Demirel made occasional references to organizations of this
sort…

I recall Ecevit’s references to these types of entities; Demirel
implied another type. Ecevit faced an assassination attempt; Özal
almost died after being shot — none of these incidents were
resolved. Therefore there is an entity we know little about. We say
that there is a deep state entity assigned to deal with terrorism;
this sort of attempt was made in different countries and we call it
Gladio.

Does it still exist in Turkey?

This entity is still alive in Turkey under the title "special
forces." There should be a distinction between intelligence
activities and operational actions. The intelligence agents provide
intelligence and espionage; the others carry out the operations. We
all know that there is no distinction between these two in the
Turkish military establishment. JÝTEM [the Gendarmerie Intelligence
Group Command — the existence of which is denied by officials] was
an entity that relied on this sort of work. The existence of many
vague points in this security element’s legal structure points to
there being a Gladio-like entity in our country as well. This is a
serious problem. We have no information about the relationship
between the state and this entity. We do not know if there is any
relationship between the state’s legitimate elements and this
clandestine enterprise; but no matter what, the latest arrests show
that we are now facing an organization able to turn the country
upside-down. This is the visible part of Turkish Gladio; the visible
part of the iceberg.

Is the government taking a big risk with this operation?

Of course. Dealing with problems of this sort requires taking risks
but it should be recalled that what the government has done is to
facilitate the job police are doing. There is a well-working
intelligence system in Turkey. This system addresses the situation
with the support of a brave prosecutor. We are not talking about an
operation carried out by the government alone; this is an operation
launched by the police and lawyers under the support of the
government. If the evidence is substantial I think the media and the
public will back the government. Therefore I do not think there will
be any retreat from this point. Quite the contrary, I think Turkish
democracy took a strong step to prove attachment to the principle of
the rule of law.

What would you say about the allegations that the operation was
staged to proceed with lifting the headscarf ban?

This is a step taken by a state eager to become a really legitimate
one after eliminating its Gladio. You have to dismiss allegations
that claim connection between the operation and the headscarf issue.
Even these people’s detention is a huge step, without seeing any
evidence yet. But I don’t think it is a good move for the Justice and
Development Party (AK Party) to resolve the headscarf issue in
Parliament with the support of the Nationalist Movement Party (MHP).

Why is that?

Because this is an issue exploitable by anybody. The
ultra-secularists may abuse it, and so do the hard-line religious
people. In the future the headscarf may be banned everywhere based on
the new article or it may be freed in every state institution. What
needs to be done is simple: the Higher Education Board (YÖK) could
have resolved this because the ban is based simply on its directive.
I do not think it would be right to resolve it via a constitutional
change. Constitutions should be concise and inclusive of fundamental
rights and freedoms. Other laws should support this and fill the
voids. If you insert details of this sort in the Constitution, you
will find a lot of dossiers before the Constitutional Court.

How do you think the government made this operation while it remains
ambivalent to abolish Article 301?

The government holds different considerations with regard to Article
301 [of the Turkish Penal Code (TCK)]. These were related to the
pre-election period; the issue of gangs is completely different. The
government is also one of the targets of clandestine enterprises. The
administration is aware that there is a problem with regard to the
implementation of Article 301 [widely considered to restrict freedom
of speech]. The mindset currently in effect will show its impact even
if you abolish Article 301, because the existence of these gangs is
the real reason for the abuse of the article. If they did not exploit
this legal mechanism that extensively, there would not have been such
an acute problem. As for the government, yes, there is some sort of
contradiction.

What kind of contradiction?

The government is ambivalent between democratic and reformist
tendencies and its own conservative tendencies. A number of AK Party
figures, including the prime minister, initially give conservative
reactions. But some time later they agree on a democratic option. At
the end, their philosophy is based on reason and pragmatism. The
government has been lucky because of its pragmatism. But it should
also be recalled that this government has conservative and statist
reflexes. Former Justice Minister and current State Minister Cemil
Çiçek’s views on Article 301 are very well known. It was he who
accused the Armenian symposium’s organizers of inflicting harm on the
country. This politician is a part of this government. There is a
government with liberal pragmatism; its conservatism stems from its
conservative character, its liberalism from the conjectural dynamics
and the spirit of the time.

What would Hrant Dink have thought if he knew of the current
detentions?

He would say, "My revenge has been taken." We cannot accuse anybody
without indictment or concrete evidence; but Hrant Dink was murdered
as part of the ground laid by this entity. For this reason, that
entity is liable for his murder.

Do you think this entity is going to be eliminated?

In 2003 and 2004, three out of four generals were eager to stage a
military coup; only one was not and he stopped the others. Where do
we stand now, are there any coup planners? What do the people
arrested today represent? Or what do their commanders represent? What
kind of connections do they have with officials in the state? We have
to ask these questions first. Of course the structure of the state is
changing, but that does not mean a civilian authority has been taking
over. But at least there is this feeling that an extensive operation
will be carried out to deal with the illegal entities within the
state.

Ali Bayramoðlu
He teaches sociology, humanities and Turkish cultural history at
Kültür University in Ýstanbul. A regular writer for Aksiyon
newsweekly and daily Yeni Þafak, he is also the moderator of a news
program on Kanal 24 television. He is the author of two books
published in 2001: "28 Þubat/Bir Müdahalenin Güncesi" (Feb. 28/Diary
of an Intervention) and "Türkiye’de Ýslami Harekete Sosyolojik Bir
Bakýþ 1994-2000" (Looking at the Islamic Movement in Turkey
1994-2000). He also co-authored "Bir Zümre, Bir Parti: Türkiye’de
Ordu" (A Class, A Party: The Military in Turkey) with Ahmet Ýnsel.

28.01.2008

YONCA POYRAZ DOÐAN

Location Of New Republic Hospital Was Chosen

LOCATION OF NEW REPUBLIC HOSPITAL WAS CHOSEN

KarabakhOpen
26-01-2008 14:56:05

Karabakh-Open.com has learned from the ministry of town planning
that the location of the new building of the Republic Hospital has
been chosen. It will be located behind the Republic Polyclinic. The
project has not been completed yet, we learned from the ministry.

The construction of the new hospital has been under consideration for
many years. Recently the president has held a special consultation
and instructed to choose the location and work out a project.

"Serge Sargyan’s Honors Are Poisonous For Me"

"SERGE SARGSYAN’S HONORS ARE POISONOUS FOR ME"

A1+
24 January, 2008

Today the RA First President Levon Ter-Petrosyan began his pre-election
campaign in Charentsavan and ended in Meghradzor. Ter-Petrosyan’s
gathering in Hrazdan was rather crowded. According to various sources,
about 4-5 thousand people were participating in the gathering.

According to Ter-Petrosyan’s proxies head of the Kotayk Region
Kovalenko Shahgeldyan and his son Mayor of Charetsavan made attempts
to hinder the gathering.

They warned people not to participate in the gathering.

In his speech the First President noted: "6 months ago Serge Sargsyan’s
people offered me to become the director of Mathenadaran. It would be a
great honor for me to head Mathenadaran, but I will not accept anything
that Serge Sargsyan offers me, his honors are poisonous for me".

Heads of political powers Aram Sargsyan, Stepan Demirchyan, Mikael
Hayrapetyan, Khachatur Sukiasyan and others supporting the RA
presidential candidate accompanied him during the visits.

Economic Platforms Of Campaign Programs Of Presidential Canditates I

ECONOMIC PLATFORMS OF CAMPAIGN PROGRAMS OF PRESIDENTIAL CANDITATES IN ARMENIA LACK SPECIFICS

armradio.am
2008-01-23 17:02:00

ArmInfo. The economic platforms in the campaign programs of
presidential candidates lack specifics and terms of implementation,
Chairman of National Center of Applied Economy Sergey Bagratyan told
journalists at a meeting organized by the Club of Economic Journalists,
Tuesday.

He said the specialists of the Center have arrived at the
above conclusion after studying the campaign programs of 4
front-runners. Thus, he said the program of Prime Minister Serzh
Sagrsyan is based on the idea of second-generation reforms. However,
the program does not reveal the content of the reforms. The candidate
proposes creating the best conditions for business and investments,
but he does not specify how, the analyst said.

The presidential candiate from ARF Dashnaktsutyun Party Vahan
Hovhannissyan proposes raising the role of the state in the country’s
economic life, which is characteristic to socialists. He comes out
for restiriction of monopolies and increase of the business activity
of large sections of the population.

However, he does not explains how to do this either. The candidate
comes out for equal ecoomic development in Yerevan and regions,
S. Bagratyan said.

Candidate from National Unity party Artashes Geghamyan proposes raising
the country’s competitiveness as compared to the neighbor-states. He
proposes reducing crediting interests and believes the country must
not fully cover the import. A. Geghamyan also proposes easing the
tax burden for businessmen, however, he does not say how to replenish
the budgetary loss from the reduction of taxes, the specialist says.

Levon Ter-Petrosyan, the presidential candidate, the first president
of Armenia, (on public initiative) proposes more open and transparent
economic policy of the country, especially when privatizing or selling
the state property. He proposes also equal distribtuion of the tax
burden. (Exclusion of protectionism is in question).

It Is Partisan, If High Politics And The Centrality Of Geographical

IT IS PARTISAN, IF HIGH POLITICS AND THE CENTRALITY OF GEOGRAPHICAL LOCATION CANNOT SERVE TO TRUMP INTERNATIONAL LAW AND THE CUSTOMARY PRACTICE OF ITS APPLICATION AS IT REFERS TO ISSUES SUCH AS SELF-DETERMINATION AND SOVEREIGNTY, ARMENIAN PARLIAMENTARIAN SAID IN PACE

arminfo
2008-01-23 14:26:00

ArmInfo. It is partisan, if high politics and the centrality of
geographical location cannot serve to trump international law and the
customary practice of its application as it refers to issues such
as self-determination and sovereignty, the leader of the Heritage
party Raffi Hovannisian said in his speech at PACE session, as he
told ArmInfo correspondent later.

To note, Raffi Hovannisian made a speech in PACE after Lord
Russel-Johnston’s report on future status of Kosovo. ‘Each of us might
have our own national historical narratives, our political positions,
but we cannot allow ourselves to live in a Europe, in a world, where
we say nothing has to do with anything else. Everything is connected
with everything else and we must allow ourselves to realise the role
of politicians and diplomats, of citizens of Europe, who apply the
same rules and criteria across the board. This is a very European
thing. It is a human imperative as well’, – Hovannisian said in his
speech. He also added that ‘In this report by way of example, the
constitutional foundations and juridical underpinning of Mountainous
Karabakh are impeccable. What we say here today is "no" to partisan
polemic presentations, "no" to applications of multiple standards and
"yes" to the principles and precepts presented in these drafts as duly
amended and ultimately to a connection between democratic standards
and ultimate political status’, – Hovannisian concluded.

To note, Raffi Hovannisian’s speech caused displeasure of the
Azerbaijani delegation. In particular, parliamentarian Ganira Pashayeva
said that "such opinions and explanations impact adversely on very
sensitive peace negotiations being carried out between Azerbaijan
and Armenia on the Nagorno-Karabakh problem. There is no similarity
between the Kosovo problem and conflicts in the CIS countries’.

Glendale: Armenian Voters Lash Out At Dais

ARMENIAN VOTERS LASH OUT AT DAIS
By Jason Wells

Glendale News Press
Jan 23 2008
CA

Council’s move on ordinance to change absentee ballots draws a room
full of upset residents.

CITY HALL – A strong rebuke from the Armenian-American community
that came laced with accusations of discrimination and bigotry did
not stop the City Council Tuesday night from introducing an ordinance
that would prevent municipal campaign offices from handling absentee
ballot applications.

An overflow crowd at council chambers produced more than a dozen
speakers who called the move a thinly veiled attempt to keep
first-generation Armenians out of the elections system as some on
the council pander to "hateful malcontents" in the community.

While applications for absentee ballots are currently attached to the
back of every sample ballot issued through the city clerk’s office
to each registered voter, campaign workers have been able to issue
their own that, instead of a return address to the city clerk, come
back to them.

As campaign offices receive the absentee ballot applications, they have
72 hours before they must hand them over to the city clerk, who issues
the actual ballot. During that time, candidates have historically
considered the requester as a strong potential supporter, and often
follow up with the voters after the absentee ballots have been issued.

In expressing support for the ordinance, Councilmen John Drayman,
Frank Quintero and Dave Weaver agreed with other proponents – like the
League of Women Voters of Glendale/Burbank – who argued that removing
campaign offices as the midpoint would streamline the process and
eliminate the potential for any future mishandling.

advertisement

The ordinance, which will come before the City Council next week
for a confirmation vote before it takes effect, would put Glendale’s
process in line with the city of Los Angeles.

But the response from mostly the Armenian-American community did
little to move the three council supporters of the change.

"It is unfortunate that so many speakers chose to take that tact
with their presentation because I don’t think it does them any good
really. It just creates a negative situation," Quintero said.

Drayman also took issue with accusations of discrimination that were
widely circulated in a form e-mail to the council members even before
Tuesday’s meeting.

In the hundreds of letters sent through the Armenian National Committee
Glendale Chapter’s website, the group said the proposed change would
create significant confusion among local, state and federal elections
and prevent nonprofits from educating and assisting voters – and would
affect Armenian-Americans so much so that a vote for the ordinance
would be "a vote for discrimination."

"This isn’t about racism, maybe about difference of opinion," Drayman
said. "I think there is something fundamentally wrong with using
absentee ballots as an electioneering tool."

But Zanku Armenian, a board member for the Armenian National
Committee Western Region, argued that the council’s intention was
not to streamline the process, but to take steps to limit the growing
influence of the Armenian-American vote.

"It’s a solution looking for a problem," he said.

His organization was not alone in that assessment.

Grace Yoo, executive director of Korean American Coalition, said the
impact of the change would dampen participation among her constituents,
who rely on volunteer assistance at every stage of the voting process.

"You’re basically going to disenfranchise my voters," she told the
council. "Your actions really are significant."

For their part, Councilman Bob Yousefian and Mayor Ara Najarian –
who have opposed the proposed changes from the start – agreed with
others who asserted the ordinance was in response to unfounded charges
of voter fraud.

"There isn’t one shred of proof," Najarian said. "If we lose one
voter because of the change of this process, that’s too much.

He and Yousefian argued the move would limit voter participation and
infringe upon the rights of candidates and their voters, especially
considering the limitations of the city clerk’s office, which typically
uses an influx of volunteers to temper greater staffing needs during
municipal elections.

But supporters of the change, including the three council members
who supported the ordinance, said resources for the city clerk could
and should be increased if it means campaign offices do end up having
less of an impact.

"With enough funding, and enough resources, anything is possible,"
City Clerk Ardy Kassakhian said.

City Manager Jim Starbird also assured the council that if the need
presents itself, he and Kassakhian would develop a plan to address
the need for greater resources, which could involve the allocation
of more funds in the future.

The Armenia Fund Launches Veterinary Service Improvement Initiative

PRESS RELEASE
The Armenia Fund
Contact: Hayk Petrosyan
Tel: + (3741) 56 01 06 ext. 107
Fax: + (3741) 52 15 05
E-mail: [email protected]
Web:

January 23 2008

The Armenia Fund Launches Veterinary Service Improvement Initiative

Yerevan, 23 January, 2008. After a period of research and coordination with
its partners, The Armenia Fund Rural Development Program is pleased to
announce the launch of an initiative aimed at revitalizing the veterinary
services in the six border villages of Tavush region. These communities are
included in the Program’s pilot Khashtarak cluster. The project will be
realized by the Strategic Development Agency NGO with the support of the
Swiss Agency for Development and Cooperation and Izmirlian Foundation.

The current state of the veterinary services in the communities concerned is
inadequate for a place where cattle breeding practice and the associated
dairy production are considered the main cornerstones in the regional
economic revival plan. The local veterinarians lack the equipment and
medicine stock necessary for performing anything but the state sponsored
quarterly vaccinations. When a need arises, the farmers are on their own in
the quest to find a running vehicle, get to the regional center of Ijevan,
buy the medicine and take it back in time so that the veterinarian is able
to help the animal. A delay in any of these actions often results in the
medicine being too little too late to save the life of the animal from an
otherwise mundane disease. Another important issue hindering the normal
development of the veterinary practice is the fact that the veterinarian is
seldom paid and provides most of the services as a "neighborly favor". This
means that to sustain himself, the veterinarian needs to look elsewhere for
income, making the veterinary practice merely a philanthropic hobby.

The implementation of the initiative will tackle all these issues by
creating a working mechanism. Apart from providing in depth trainings both
to the veterinarian and the farmers, this mechanism will ensure that the
veterinarian has his own stock of medicine and up to date professional
equipment. After an initial support period of a year, the enterprise will be
sustained via monthly payments made by the community members. These monthly
payments constitute a fraction of the sum a villager spends each time he
travels to the city to get medicine for his cattle. This monthly fee will
also ensure that the veterinarian has normal income and can concentrate on
his profession as a main means for living.

This project is also remarkable for the fact that it will come to life
thanks to a three way collaboration between The Armenia Fund, Swiss Agency
for Development and Cooperation and the Izmirlian Foundation. This kind of
channeling of resources to the focus area is one of the core tasks of the
Rural Development Program and the key to its success.

"We believe that it is only through uniting the efforts of all the
organizations and individuals we can produce feasible results and a long
lasting change in the lives of people in the border communities", says Hayk
Petrosyan, the coordinator of The Armenia Fund Rural Development Program.

###

The Armenia Fund

http://www.himnadram.org/