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The Armenia Fund Launches Veterinary Service Improvement Initiative

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  • 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: http://www.himnadram.org/

    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.


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    The Armenia Fund
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