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Clean Armenia: Government-Backed Countrywide Campaign Tackles Trash

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  • Clean Armenia: Government-Backed Countrywide Campaign Tackles Trash

    CLEAN ARMENIA: GOVERNMENT-BACKED COUNTRYWIDE CAMPAIGN TACKLES TRASH
    NAZIK ARMENAKYAN

    ArmeniaNow
    02.06.10

    The new trashcans - required and provided by the municipality - can be
    seen in front of offices, shops, cafes and restaurants in the center
    of Yerevan.

    Authorities have signaled the start of a new countrywide campaign aimed
    at promoting cleaner environments in cities and towns across Armenia.

    First events under the Clean Homeland program were staged in Yerevan
    last weekend with the help of activists of a youth movement, Miasin
    (Together). Officials promise Clean Homeland will be an ongoing
    ampaign encompassing all locations in Armenia.

    Littering is common in Yerevan and elsewhere in the country. Despite
    calls from city authorities and environmentalists many residents still
    continue to dump waste in undesignated places spoiling the sanitation
    of the town and creating public health risks. Sparse green zones
    and water basins, such as Hrazdan Gorge, are particularly vulnerable
    to littering.

    The first mention of the campaign was made on May 17 when at a
    government meeting Prime Minister Tigran Sargsyan said he had received
    a letter from the Miasin public movement calling for a "clean Armenia."

    Miasin, a pro-government youth group, was set up in February 2008 amid
    the turbulent post-election times to show support for Serzh Sargsyan,
    the current president and leader of the governing Republican Party
    of Armenia (RPA).

    Premier Sargsyan, who joined the RPA last November, last month urged
    all state departments to take part in the campaign.

    "The program starting in Yerevan will later spread to all provinces of
    Armenia," the premier said, adding that the ecology minister would be
    in charge of providing detailed information regarding the activities.

    While the issue of littering has been raised at the government level,
    authorities in Yerevan continued to stay busy throughout the spring
    months, implementing various activities to spruce up the city - from
    installing public and individual dustbins for businesses, to planting
    and pruning trees, asphalting streets and painting lampposts.

    A year after Yerevan's municipal elections won by the RPA, many
    residents in the capital, especially its central part, acknowledge
    the work being done by the Republican mayor.

    "Well, slowly their work is becoming visible. There are even places
    where they got yards asphalted as well. Of course, they sobered up
    only after the city's green had been destroyed, but it is better late
    than never," says Aram Arakelyan, a 65-year-old resident of Yerevan.

    A total of 125 hectares of forest areas of common use will have been
    created in the city this year under the Green Yerevan program announced
    by Mayor Gagik Beglaryan. Of these areas, 100 hectares will be in the
    city's southeastern Erebuni district, 15 hectares in northwestern
    Ajapnyak and 10 hectares in southern Shengavit. For this purpose,
    the municipality plans to have up to 14,000 meters of irrigation
    networks installed in these three districts alone. Another 20,000
    meters of irrigation water networks are expected to be installed in
    other districts of the city under the 2010 programs. The networks
    will take care of nearly 840 hectares of green areas.

    Bus stops in Yerevan have been visibly revamped this year. According to
    the Yerevan Municipality's Information and Public Relations Department,
    the work on bus stops is implemented by a company called A.D.V. Media
    S in accordance with a contract signed with the municipality's
    Yerevantrans Company.

    A.D.V. Media S Director Artur Karapetyan says the company has several
    groups and while some of them monitor the situation on the bus stops
    and clean them, others provide repairs whenever it is necessary.

    Under a new program, 370 new bus stops will be added to the 298
    already functioning in Yerevan.

    Asphalting of streets began in Yerevan after the end of a long period
    of spring rains. The mayor's office says nearly one million square
    meters of roads and other territories in the capital will be asphalted
    this year. About 60 percent of the project will target streets and
    the rest yards near residential buildings.

    A total of 12 organizations have contracts with the municipality to
    implement refuse collection in Yerevan. In recent weeks new trashcans
    have emerged in the city center. Those are provided to offices to
    use to dump their waste, which will be regularly removed by the
    refuse collection service. While these trashcans are provided for
    free, offices are responsible for their condition and will have to
    compensate their damage.

    "Companies in charge of collecting garbage in different parts of the
    city organize their work themselves and try to make it as effective as
    they can," Mayor's Office utilities department head Gagik Khachatryan
    explained to ArmeniaNow.




    From: A. Papazian
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