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Armenia Fast-Track Projects Work and Bring Results

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  • Armenia Fast-Track Projects Work and Bring Results

    ENP Newswire
    June 8, 2009 Monday


    Armenia Fast-Track Projects Work and Bring Results



    A package of three projects for Armenia was approved under the
    Fast-Track Facility in late February as an immediate response to the
    global economic and financial crisis: US$ 25 million for a Lifeline
    Road Improvement Project (LRIP), US$ 8 million and US$ 2 million for
    additional financing for the Social Investment Fund III (ASIF III) and
    Rural Enterprise and Small-scale Commercial Agriculture Development
    (RESCAD) Projects.

    The Bank and the Government managed to design, negotiate, and complete
    all the loan arrangements within seven weeks of receiving the
    request. The Government then prepared and bid 25 different contracts
    in a record time of three months. Implementation is now underway, and
    results are already being seen on the ground, providing much-needed
    jobs during this time of crisis . . .

    'I heard about the project not long ago, and am very glad that I was
    immediately hired to do work on the project,' said Artem Hakobyan,
    from the village of Meghrashat. 'I am not only building the road that
    will link our village to the town, but I am also able to stay employed
    for the coming months, and sustain my family.'

    Akhuryan is a community of villages, including Meghrashat, outside of
    the city of Gyumri in the Shirak region of Armenia. Despite being in
    close proximity to the main highway and to Gyumri, the second largest
    city in the country, Akhuryan's villages are almost isolated - roads
    connecting them to the city and the main highway had been left in
    desperately poor condition since the devastating earthquake of
    1988. As a result, the villagers are often forced to live a
    self-sustained life, having minimum contact with the city or other
    parts of the country. The produce they sometimes risk to take to the
    city market to earn a day's living would spoil on the barely drivable
    roads, where seven km per hour was the maximum travel speed.

    With the Lifeline Road project already under implementation, by
    November this year Akhuryan's villagers will be connected to the city
    and the main highway, via safe, speedy, modern roads. In addition, the
    community members have been actively involved in the works - over 400
    people are currently employed as community workers on the roads in
    Akhuryan.

    Like Artem, Spartak Lazarian from the Village of Haykavan, was
    unemployed before the launch of the project - agricultural produce was
    the only source of sustaining his family. 'Renewed roads will allow us
    to take our produce to the market quickly and in a better state,' said
    Spartak. 'Besides, young people will be more inclined to go to the
    city for their education, and even seek employment.'

    Works under the Lifeline Road project have started in all of the
    planned seven regions of Armenia, and the number of people employed in
    community works is growing day-by-day. An estimated 7,650 people per
    month will be involved in the community works. By November, a network
    of over 100 km of roadways will connect 39 rural communities and some
    71,000 people to main highways and towns.

    The additional financing for RESCAD will add seven rural communities
    to the original 134, to scale up the Community-focused Economic
    Development (CED) component. Of these seven communities, two will
    benefit from gasification, and five from water supply system
    improvements. Works on the ground in all these seven communities will
    already start next week.

    Moreover, the additional financing has made it possible to cover the
    gap created by the exchange rate fluctuations. Otherwise, 35 out of
    the overall 134 communities would have been left out of
    implementation. As a result, works are already underway in all 35
    communities. By the end of the year, all of them will have their
    priority infrastructure - drinking water, gasification, irrigation,
    and sewerage - built or their income generating projects -
    agricultural machinery, rural bus service, milk collection coolers,
    flour mills - completed.

    Vahagnadsor is a small isolated village community of 365 people in the
    Lori region of Armenia. A community settled around a former rail
    station, Vahagnadsor lacks agricultural lands, and has no means of
    income. The village school building for 64 students dates back to
    1930, and is virtually in ruins. Works have already started under the
    additional financing for ASIF III, to rehabilitate the building with
    the direct involvement of villagers, giving them jobs for the
    medium-term, as well as the satisfaction of building the school for
    their own children.

    Owing to the additional resources, it is now possible to add 32
    micro-projects in 24 communities, for social and economic
    infrastructure rehabilitation ranging from renovation of schools with
    heating, specialized schools, sports facilities, community centers,
    and potable water in homes, to the rehabilitation of irrigation
    systems. Work has started in 16 communities, the other 16 soon to
    complete the tenders - already generating 68,000 job days of the
    86,000 overall job days planned.

    [Editorial queries for this story should be sent to
    [email protected] ]

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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