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Nicosia: Parents told no new Melkonian class this year

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  • Nicosia: Parents told no new Melkonian class this year

    Parents told no new Melkonian class this year
    By Jean Christou

    Cyprus Mail
    June 18 2004

    PARENTS who believed they had registered their children for the
    first year at the Melkonian Educational Institute (MEI) were shocked
    yesterday when they were told no such class would be operated from
    September this year.

    Troupia Samonian told the Cyprus Mail yesterday that she had enrolled
    her primary school-age daughter for the first year of secondary school
    at the Armenian school weeks ago but when she went yesterday with
    another parent, they were told that no children were being registered
    for the new school year.

    Parents were also told that entrance exam dates for graduates from
    the Armenian Elementary Nareg in Nicosia, Larnaca, Limassol, scheduled
    for yesterday and today had been cancelled.

    The New York-based Armenian General Benevolent Union (AGBU), which
    plans to close the 78-year old school in June 2005, despite fierce
    opposition, had invited parents to enroll their children for day school
    in September. The advertisement in early May said registration would
    take place from May 19. Those who recently contacted the school were
    told their children could not be registered because they had missed
    the deadline. However, no deadline was specified in the advertisement.

    Samonian was one of the parents who registered early, but she said
    when she went to MEI yesterday she was told there would be no class
    for her daughter to attend.

    "I registered three weeks ago and I sat back thinking my daughter
    would be attending school in September,' she told the Mail yesterday.
    "I was totally surprised that they had changed their minds again."
    She said that she was not even informed of the situation until she
    visited the school yesterday.

    Samonian said that when she asked to see the principal, she was
    instead directed to Gordon Anderson, the representative of the AGBU
    in Cyprus. He told her there would be no registrations for the school
    year but recalled that there had been an advertisement telling parents
    they could enroll their children for the new school year.

    "He remembered but it was all changed," she said. "I asked why
    parents were not informed and why no one had bothered to call about
    the changed decision. This concerns our children`s futures and we
    didn't know about it."

    Samonian said all she managed to get out of them was a lot of "blah
    blah blah". 'The only conclusion we can draw is that they plan to
    close down the school at all costs," she said.

    Anderson told the Cyprus Mail that they had decided not to run the
    first-year class from September because so few parents had applied
    to register their children. Asked why parents had not been informed
    that the class would not be run, he said: "It's not my responsibility."

    However sources told the Mail that the teachers were also in the dark
    about what was going on so they could not have informed the parents
    there would be no class.

    "They have backtracked and now are not accepting anyone," said a
    member of the school's alumni, who are trying to fight the closure
    decision. The alumni believe the AGBU wants to get its hands on the
    property, worth £40 million and sell it to developers.

    "It was a nice little trick," said the alumni member. "They are also
    in the process of shutting down the school's website and plan to fire
    the local board over the summer. Verbally they are saying one thing
    but they are doing another."

    Yesterday, seven parents from the Armenian primary school in Larnaca
    wrote to the Education Minister asking for his intervention and
    enclosing a letter to the AGBU asking why their children were being
    denied an Armenian education.
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