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  • Hailstorm Hits Armenian Farmers Hard

    HAILSTORM HITS ARMENIAN FARMERS HARD

    Institute for War and Peace Reporting, UK
    IWPR Caucasus Reporting #690
    June 5 2013

    Protesters say they face financial ruin after hail defence system
    fails to save crops.

    By Marianna Ghahramanyan - Caucasus CRS Issue 690

    Farmers in the Armavir region, Armenia's breadbasket, fear that
    emergency government assistance following a disastrous hailstorm will
    not save them from bankruptcy.

    Hail fell for just half an hour on May 12, but that was enough
    to devastate orchards and vegetables across an area of 170 square
    kilometres belonging to more than 12,000 farmers.

    Asatur Hayrapetyan, a resident of Nor Armavir, one of 46 villages
    badly hit by the storm, told IWPR that although he saved some of his
    cherry harvest, the fruit was so damaged that he was unable to sell
    it at market in the capital in Yerevan.

    He said cherries were selling at between 800 and 1,000 drams or 2-2.50
    US dollars a kilogram, but he had failed to find buyers even at 300
    drams a kilo.

    "We gathered whatever was left as best we could and took it to market,
    but even at that low price no one wanted to buy it. They wouldn't
    even pay pennies," he said.

    He said his cherry and peach trees and grapevines were totally
    destroyed.

    "Nothing was left but the bare branches. I'll probably have to chop
    it all down to have something to burn this winter," he said.

    Armenia has a hail defence service which uses propane to make loud
    bangs that are said to disrupt the formation of hailstones. The
    emergencies ministry said that the network of 69 stations in the
    Armavir region was put into action, but it did not have the coverage
    to protect the whole area from damage.

    "The apparatus is automatic and our hail defence stations fired around
    50,000 [sonic] shots at the clouds," Robert Hovsepyan, director of the
    agency which operates the stations, told A1+ television. "However,
    because the number of anti-hail stations is limited, and the hail
    was very heavy, it was impossible to prevent damage completely."

    He said another 170 stations would be needed to provide full protection
    to the country's crops in the event of light hail. In a heavy storm,
    the agency could give no guarantees.

    Hrant Bagratyan, a former prime minister and now a member of parliament
    for the opposition Armenian National Congress, said the poor harvest
    would inevitably affect the already weak state of the economy.

    "In total, it will reduce the level of agricultural production by
    three or four per cent, and cut gross domestic product by 0.6 to 0.8
    per cent," he said.

    On May 20, farmers demanding compensation from the government blocked
    the main highway connecting Armavir with Yerevan, and several smaller
    roads.

    "Our village has lost everything - 4,000 tonnes of apricots and 3,000
    tonnes of grapes," protestor Arthur Lazarian told the news website
    www.tert.am. "They have promised us an answer, and the head of the
    regional administration has come and seen with his own eyes that
    there's nothing left."

    Two days after the protest, Prime Minister Tigran Sargsyan, accompanied
    by the agriculture minister and the head of the central bank, came
    to the region to meet farmers and discuss their problems.

    The government announced it would exempt the residents of the 46
    villages worst-affected from land tax, while areas that had suffered
    some crop losses would be partly exempted. There would also be
    reductions in the amount villagers have to pay for water, and farmers'
    debts to lending institutions could be temporarily frozen if need be.

    Sargsyan also called for hail defence stations to be installed in
    every village in the Armavir region. The 50 new stations will cost
    around 350 million drams, around 850,000 dollars.

    The poorest villagers will also receive financial compensation and
    free seeds for next year's planting.

    But Hayrapetyan, the farmer from Nor Armavir, was doubtful he would
    benefit from these measures.

    "I don't expect anything good from these talks. I have no hopes," he
    said. "We want them to declare the village a disaster area, so that
    some help can come in from outside. The biggest region, the one that
    feeds Armenia, the one that produces a good harvest, is now starving.

    If there is no help, the village's population will just leave."

    He said that land taxes were minimal compared with the losses the
    farmers had suffered, and that the residents likeliest to receive help
    were those who had sold most of their land and were thus registered
    as living in poverty.

    Hayrapetyan said he had debts of 2.5 million drams and had been
    counting on a profit of five or six million when the harvest came in.

    Now that his crops had been destroyed, he had no way of making the
    interest payments.

    Arayik Martirosyan, a resident of the village of Aknashen who said he
    lost two-fifths of his crop, worth around 600,000 drams, was similarly
    sceptical about promises of government assistance.

    "Even if they do something, we're living in Armenia. Everyone knows
    how things work here, and what happens before anything reaches the
    farmers. I have no expectations," he said. "I'm just lucky I didn't
    take out any loans."

    Marianna Ghahramanyan is a reporter for Armnews TV in Armenia.

    http://iwpr.net/report-news/hailstorm-hits-armenian-farmers-hard



    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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