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Armenia's Tycoons Cut Donations To Armenia Fund Charity

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  • Armenia's Tycoons Cut Donations To Armenia Fund Charity

    ARMENIA'S TYCOONS CUT DONATIONS TO ARMENIA FUND CHARITY

    Asbarez
    Dec 9th, 2009

    YEREVAN (RFE/RL)-Armenia's leading oligarchs have all but stopped
    funding a pan-Armenian charity that has been implementing large-scale
    infrastructure projects in Nagorno-Karabakh, it emerged on Wednesday.

    The Hayastan All-Armenian Fund said only two Yerevan-based
    entrepreneurs have made donations exceeding $100,000 this year. One of
    them, Samvel Aleksanian, contributed $200,000 to its 2009 fund-raising
    campaign that will mainly benefit the war-ravaged Karabakh town
    of Shushi.

    The year-long campaign attracted almost $16 million in contributions
    and donation pledges from Armenians around the world. Roughly $5.3
    million of that was donated by Russian-Armenian businessmen during
    a recent fundraising gala in Moscow attended by President Serzh
    Sarkisian.

    Armenia Fund collected $4 million and $1.7 million in Europe and
    Armenia and Karabakh respectively. The rest of the sum was raised
    among Armenian Americans during its annual telethon broadcast from
    Los Angeles on November 26-27.

    Armenia Fund officials said the 2009 campaign netted no donations from
    wealthy Armenian tycoons such as Gagik Tsarukian, Hrant Vartanian
    and President Sarkisian's brother Aleksandr. Tsarukian donated $2
    million to the fund last year.

    Barsegh Beglarian, another tycoon who owns Armenia's largest
    fuel-importing company, gave only 15 million drams ($39,000) in 2009.

    The sum paled in comparison with the contributions of several ethnic
    Armenian businessmen based in Moscow. One of them, Samvel Karapetian,
    contributed $1 million to the Shushi reconstruction program.

    The Karabakh-born Aleksandr Sarkisian has also refrained from
    supporting the ongoing construction of a heart clinic in the
    southeastern Armenian town of Goris financed by Hayastan. The
    controversial businessman, who has allegedly invested millions of
    dollars in real estate in California and Britain, represents Goris
    and surrounding areas in Armenia's parliament.

    Incidentally, Armenia Fund has received a $100,000 donation to the
    hospital from Lebanon's Prime Minister Saad Hariri, a fact emphasized
    by the fund's executive director, Ara Vartanian. "We still lack money
    to finish the project," Vartanian told a news conference.

    Armenia Fund has also failed to attract any donations this year from
    prominent Armenian-American philanthropists such as Kirk Kerkorian,
    Louise Manoogian-Simone and Hirair Hovnanian who financed a large
    part of its charitable activities in the past. Vartanian insisted
    that the reason for that is purely economic.

    "Those two benefactors have not given donations for the past two
    years," he said. "The explanation given by them during our meetings was
    very simple: the economic crisis. So this is not a question of trust."

    According to Vartanian, the Armenian president's and prime minister's
    offices donated roughly $8,000 each during this year's fundraising. In
    addition, he said, former President Robert Kocharian gave his one-month
    state salary of 320,000 drams to Hayastan. "When Robert Kocharian
    was president, he did the same thing," added Vartanian.

    He also said that the fund received no money from Kocharian's
    predecessor Levon Ter-Petrosian.
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