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The Geopolitics Of Sheep In An Armenian Region - Moscow Times

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  • The Geopolitics Of Sheep In An Armenian Region - Moscow Times

    THE GEOPOLITICS OF SHEEP IN AN ARMENIAN REGION - MOSCOW TIMES

    http://www.tert.am/en/news/2013/03/28/iran-armenia/
    12:45 ~U 28.03.13

    Moscow Times paper has published a remarkable article relating to the
    Armenia's government intention to lease thousands of hectares to Iran
    that will be used as grazing pastures for Iranian livestock.

    The author of the article James Brooks voices opinion that this
    project may bring as many as 10,000 Iranian shepherds to Armenia.

    "Iran's Ambassador to Armenia, Mohammad Reisi, offers to rent thousands
    of hectares of mountain pastures to provide grazing land for Iranian
    sheep. With the grazing leases, he has estimated that Armenia could
    increase its livestock fivefold. Within a decade, he says, Armenia
    could be exporting 2 to 3 million sheep a year to Iran. Sounds good to
    me. After all, not too many people are lining up to invest in Armenia,
    a small, landlocked nation, with poor relations with two of its four
    neighbors. What's more, to the east, Armenia's borders with Azerbaijan
    are closed. To the west, Armenia's land borders with Turkey are still
    closed," Brooks writes.

    The author says the sheep would largely graze in Armenia's southernmost
    region, Syunik. Long and as narrow as 30 kilometers wide in some
    places, Syunik is Armenia's lifeline to Iran. But it is strategically
    vulnerable, sandwiched between two territories of Azerbaijan.

    "Although Syunik is Armenia's second-largest region, it is also one of
    its least populated. With 15 percent of Armenia's land area, Syunik
    has less than 5 percent of Armenia's people. The population dropped
    in the late 1980s after ethnic fighting forced an Azeri minority to
    flee to Azerbaijan and northern Iran," Brooks writes.

    "Without a large local population to draw on, the Iranian sheep
    project would mean importing Iranian shepherds and possibly their
    families. Depending on the age of slaughter - for lamb or mutton -
    an annual export of 2.5 million sheep could mean an Iranian flock of 5
    million sheep in southern Armenia. Given the region's steep terrain,
    it would be hard for one shepherd to watch more than 500 sheep. So,
    back-of-the-envelope calculations point to as many as 10,000 Iranian
    shepherds. Where would the shepherds come from?" the author says.

    The article informs that the memorandum of understanding was signed
    between Syunik and the neighboring Iranian region, a place with a
    name that sounds ominous to many Armenians - Eastern Atrapatakan,
    or Eastern Azerbaijan. With a population 20 times that of Syunik,
    Eastern Atrapatakan is a keystone for the northern Iran's Azeri
    minority, about 17 million people.

    "The Iranian sheep deal could come with as many 10,000 ethnic Azeri
    shepherds, their families, and their watchdogs. But there is another
    wrinkle: Over the past 20 years, the withdrawal of Armenian shepherds
    from the mountain pastures has allowed the nation's wolf population to
    surge. Armenian authorities now pay a $275 bounty for each wolf shot.

    So it stands to reason that Iranian shepherds would carry rifles to
    protect their flocks from wolves and other predators. In a nutshell,
    Armenians say, the Iranian sheep deal would mean several thousand
    ethnic Azeri men, most of whom are armed with rifles, infiltrating
    into a strategic area," Brooks writes.

    "I remember how the Azerbaijanis were quietly taking control of
    Syunik during the Soviet years. We have liberated it. And now, we
    want to give it to them again? Can't we really understand that it
    is the same Azeris - citizens of Iran - who would be coming back to
    Syunik with their families, and so the blood we shed for those lands
    would turn out to be for nothing?" Brooks ends the article quoting
    Armenian environmentalist Silva Adamyan as saying.

    http://www.themoscowtimes.com/opinion/article/the-geopolitics-of-sheep-in-an-armenian-region/477592.html#ixzz2OlPV0xTh

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