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Armenia Fund Experts Visit Tavush

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  • Armenia Fund Experts Visit Tavush

    The Armenia Fund
    PR Department
    Government Building 3,Yerevan- 0010
    Tel.: +(374 10) 52 15 05
    Fax: +(374 10) 52 37 95
    E-mail: [email protected]
    Web: www.himnadram.org


    Armenia Fund Experts Visit Tavush

    Yerevan, 2 October 2007. Armenia Fund Executive Director Vahe Aghabegians,
    businessmen Serjik Movsisian, Georgik Abrahamian and the Rural Development
    Program staff visited Tavush region's Khashtarak cluster on September 28,
    2007. The aim of the visit was to look into specific solutions for the
    economic facilitation component of the Rural Development Program.

    The main economic problem in the Khashtarak cluster and the border villages
    in general is their lack of access to markets. One of the Armenia Fund's
    solutions is establishing trading links with private sector entities with
    concrete demands. In this case, Mr. Alishian, who owns a food processing
    plant, expressed his interest in acquiring specific vegetables and fruits
    >From the cluster villages. During a constructive meeting with the mayors of
    the villages, they discussed potential ways of arranging such cooperation.

    "The main mission of the Program is to offer comprehensive infrastructural
    and economic support to the villages. The vital component of the Program is
    the creation of a dependable source of income for the village community
    members", says Executive Director Vahe Aghabegians. "Infrastructure alone is
    not a solution, there needs to be economic stimuli to maintain the system
    and make it work as a practical development tool."

    During this trip, Armenia Fund's working group also visited Azatamut
    community. While the other five villages in the cluster (Aknaghbyur,
    Ditavan, Lusahovit, Lusadzor, Khashtarak) possess cultivable land and offer
    a logically straightforward path of economic development, Azatamut does not.
    Established in the 1970s, the village housed the workers of a nearby
    factory. With the fall of the Soviet empire and the severing of trading
    bonds, the factory stopped functioning, leaving most of the community
    members unemployed. The village has no arable land and a significant part of
    the population earns its income from labor migration.

    Part of the village cluster concept is combining the economic resources of
    the villages into a single mechanism, thus multiplying the impact of the
    Rural Development Program economic facilitation projects. Azatamut community
    has the potential of housing a key part of the complex economic solution for
    the cluster including a milk collection center, a slaughter house, a fruit
    conservation point and other facilities which would serve the needs of all
    cluster villages.

    "I welcome Armenia Fund's new initiative. Our people need this kind of
    projects. Our people need to feel that there is help coming. Our people need
    to know that life will improve", says Ashot Amirjanian, the mayor of
    Azatamut.

    The community has 2,800 inhabitants. The village is located 153 km away from
    Yerevan and 2 km away from the Azeri border.

    "We have chosen border villages as the main focus of the Rural Development
    Program as they have vital strategic and economic significance for the
    future of the country. Integrating these communities into our country's
    economy will revive these villages and prevent hopelessness and emigration",
    says Mr. Aghabegians.

    ###

    Hayastan All-Armenian Fund
    Public Relations Department

    The Armenia Fund is a non-profit making organization established in 1992
    with the aim of facilitating humanitarian assistance and infrastructure
    development in Armenia and Nagorno Karabakh. The Fund has 19 affiliate
    structures worldwide.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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