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Khosrov Forest In Danger: Should "Matagh" Meals And Campfires Be Ban

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  • Khosrov Forest In Danger: Should "Matagh" Meals And Campfires Be Ban

    KHOSROV FOREST IN DANGER: SHOULD "MATAGH" MEALS AND CAMPFIRES BE BANNED?
    Kristine Aghalaryan

    hetq
    18:10, July 18, 2012

    Varantsov Barseghyan, who runs the Khosrov Forest National Reserve,
    told Hetq that the repair of an 8 kilometer vehicular road is vital
    to allow for fire fighting equipment to get into the forest.

    It seems that many local residents use the sprawling 24,000 hectare
    reserve in Ararat Marz as a convenient spot to prepare matagh; a
    pagan/Christian ritual of animal sacrifice. The slaughtered animal
    is then prepared and eaten.

    Barseghyan told Hetq that large sections of the reserve have already
    been destroyed by fires left by careless picnickers and that the
    last such fire was caused by an instructor from Yerevan's College
    of Engineering.

    "He killed the rooster and left the fire smouldering when he left. The
    damage was extensive," Barseghyan said.

    But the road has been a cause of concern for Armenian environmentalists
    who argue it will just add to the numbers visiting the reserve and
    causing damage.

    Today, a number of nvirp0nmental NGO reps and the First Deputy
    Environmental Minister visited the site for a first-hand look.

    The activists argue that campfires should be banned in the reserve
    altogether.

    An OSCE specialist in wild fire prevention, who has been invited to
    Armenia to study the occurrence of fires in Khosrov, noted that the
    reserve is really not prone to large-scale wild fires and that the
    last incident was in the 1960s.

    When I asked Director Barseghyan if this was the case then why was
    there a need for the road he simply answered it was a government
    initiative.

    400,000 AMD has been spent to repair the road.

    Narineh Hovsepyan from the Elitar tourist agency was also in the
    reserve guiding a group of Germans to Havouts Tar, an 11-13th century
    walled monastic complex in the Azat River valley.

    She said that European tourists come to the reserve to enjoy the
    virgin environment.

    "These tourists say that instead of building a road, the government
    should be spending the money to clean up the garbage and to stop
    people from coming into the reserve to slaughter their animals for
    a family barbecue."

    Hovsepyan added that unlike many Armenians, these people would rather
    walk through nature softly then trample through it in cars.

    But people have been coming to Havouts Tar for centuries to make
    sacrifices in the name of their faith. It would be almost impossible
    to deprive them of this tradition.

    Many of the activists requested that Barseghyan produce the permit
    documents for the roadwork.

    He evaded their request.

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