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Tbilisi: Study Tour In Armenian Border Regions

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  • Tbilisi: Study Tour In Armenian Border Regions

    STUDY TOUR IN ARMENIAN BORDER REGIONS
    Mariam Betlemidze

    The Messenger
    May 3 2010
    Georgia

    Farmers and local government representatives from Kvemo Kartli and
    Samtskhe-Javakheti have travelled to Armenian regions aiming to
    strengthen cross-border cooperation and establish links and contacts
    with local Civil Society Organisations (CSOs) and Local Governments
    (LGs) from Armenia.

    Shirak and Lori in Marzes province in Armenia were visited on March
    29-30 as part of the Poverty Reduction and Confidence-Building in
    Border Areas of Georgia and Armenia by Strengthening Civil Societies
    in Sustainable Rural Development (STAGE II) project study tour.

    "The project provides opportunities to facilitate poverty reduction
    owing to its design. The activities planned within the project envisage
    the growth and reinforcement of NGO/civil organisations' capabilities,
    which is automatically reflected in the economic condition of the
    relevant community population," states Ketie Kheladze, STAGE II
    project manager.

    According to the baseline survey carried out by ACT the share of
    unemployed people in border regions is higher in Georgia than in
    Armenia. In both countries the largest portion of employed people
    works mainly in the state sector. It is worth noting that the share
    of households with a high income in Armenia's border region is 23%
    higher than in Georgia's border regions.

    "Having started to work on cross-border cooperation we have once
    again realised that there is a need for joint work on the more precise
    identification of common problems of rural development that can best
    be solved cross-border, or at least require cross-border cooperation,"
    says Martin Tonoyan, Head of the Agriculture Department at the Shirak
    local authority. This idea is shared by many in the Georgian bordering
    regions.

    During the study visit participants got acquainted with the work
    of three Armenian Civil Society Organisations (CSOs) - the Shirak
    Competitiveness Centre (SCC), the Yerevak NGO and Spitak Farmers
    Association (SFA). Thus they could observe best practices and learn
    lessons from their counterparts.

    "It was interesting to see that local government here experiences
    similar problems. The need for development projects and programmes
    is high in both countries and we could build a win-win partnership
    in this regard," said Nodar Sabiashvili, Bolnisi Council Chairman.

    In Shirak the tour participants visited the Shirak Competitiveness
    Centre's milk collection centre project and met with the Jrarpi
    Farmer's Union and the HATM Project - an Armenian-American Housing
    Company. Thus participants got acquainted with local entrepreneurs
    and farmers' methods of work.

    In Lori Georgian CSOs and LG representatives attended a legal
    consultancy workshop organised by the SFA in the Spitak Cultural
    House and saw the Spitak Farmers Association's Spitaki Handicrafts
    Centre, greenhouse, bio-humous production and goat and buffalo
    breeding centres.

    "Having seen all these we may assume that in some respects our
    work may be more productive and they can learn from us, but in some
    spheres their experience and advice are essential for us. What we
    have seen here during the site visit may be a source of inspiration
    for organisations in developing proposals for micro projects to be
    submitted for a CARE/STAGE II grant or any other potential donor,"
    said Marine Bzhalava, President of Women and the World.

    In the nearest future the participants of the study tour will also have
    a chance to deepen their knowledge of Improved Responses to Economic
    Development and Rural Livelihood Problems in Bordering Regions of
    Georgia and Armenia at a joint workshop to be organised on May 13-14,
    in Tbilisi.

    "Such activities could be fruitful for both coun¬tries, as the
    bordering regions of Georgia and Ar-menia have substantial potential
    to form a rather at¬tractive investment zone. For this to happen
    we should continue our work on the harmonisation of fields of law,
    transportation and tax systems and in the good governance sphere which
    should create a common in¬vestment environment," says Kote Khmaladze,
    economic expert and the Head of the Regional Economic Devel¬opment
    Department of the Ministry of Regional Development and Infrastruc¬ture
    of Georgia.

    According to the evaluation of STAGE I participation of the
    local population in decision-making increased due to the project's
    activities: the village associations held meetings with the population
    to get acquainted with their problems. Within a year a third of the
    population has participated at least once in the problem resolution
    process. The increased membership of residents in local associations
    is considered one of the indicators of this growth.

    The project is financed by the Austrian Development Cooperation and
    Cooperation with Eastern Europe (ADC) project and implemented by CARE
    Osterreich and CARE International in the Caucasus along with partner
    organisations the Civil Development Agency (CiDA) in Georgia and
    Centre for Agribusiness and Rural Development (CARD) in Armenia. The
    project started on May 1, 2009 and will last till October 31, 2011.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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