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  • Lomaia: no chance of an Armenian-language university in

    The Messenger
    Thursday, August 23, 2007, #161 (1428)

    Lomaia: no chance of an Armenian-language university in Samstke-Javakheti

    By Ana Kvrivishvili

    Minister of Education and Science Kakha Lomaia rejected a Yerevan
    proposal to open an Armenian university in Samtskhe-Javakheti, a
    Georgian province with a large ethnic Armenian population.

    "Our citizens, the ethnic Armenians living in Akhalkalaki,
    Ninitsminda, and other regions can wholly satisfy their educational
    needs in Georgian universities," Lomaia told journalists on August 22.

    Last week, the Armenian Minister of Education and Science Levon
    Mkrtichian said he would push for a new Armenian-language university
    in the province when he meets with Lomaia in Yerevan. He had
    previously proposed the project in talks with Georgian Prime Minister
    Zurab Noghaideli.

    The Armenian Embassy in Tbilisi confirmed the initiative, but said
    they would reserve comment until the two education ministers had a
    chance to talk about it in person.

    Susana Khachaturian of the NGO Shushanike, which advocates for ethnic
    Armenian women's and education rights in Georgia, told the Messenger
    that university applicants who don't speak Georgian-like many of the
    ethnic Armenians in the impoverished Samtskhe-Javakheti province-have
    little hope of getting a higher education.

    "For them, it's impossible to pass the national entrance exams,"
    Khachaturian said.

    Head of the Union of Armenian Youth of Georgia, Mikhail Avakian,
    agreed that some ethnic Armenians face hurdles in education.

    "Georgian-speaking Armenians have no problems at all...Russian and
    Armenian-speaking Armenians, however, have a lot of difficulties
    getting an education," Avakian told the Messenger.

    Khachaturian said she would welcome an Armenian-language university in
    the province, but that it would be more helpful in integrating ethnic
    Armenians if the Georgian government opened it, rather than Armenia.

    Education Ministry spokeswoman Keti Chkhobadze, however, reiterated
    Minister Lomaia's statement that there would be no serious discussion
    between Tbilisi and Yerevan about opening an Armenian-language
    university in Samtskh-Javakheti.

    Instead, the ministry is planning to create Georgian-language prep
    courses for ethnic Armenian, Ossetian and Azeri university applicants.

    "Ethnic minorities in our country will have everything they need to
    learn Georgian. The courses will be free, plus applicants taking the
    courses will get scholarships of GEL 100," Chkhobadze said.
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