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Wastes Dumped In The Debed River Preventing Restoration Of Tchotchka

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  • Wastes Dumped In The Debed River Preventing Restoration Of Tchotchka

    WASTES DUMPED IN THE DEBED RIVER PREVENTING RESTORATION OF TCHOTCHKAN ORCHARDS

    Larisa Paremuzyan

    14:13, April 17, 2015

    Tchotchkan, a village of 2,000 souls in Armenia's northern Lori
    Province, once boasted 900 hectares of peach and grape orchards.

    Today, according to village agronomist Sergey Cherchinyan, only 40
    hectares remain.

    Tchotchkan residents Hengel Siradeghyan and Yurik Galstyan believe
    that the orchards must be restored if villagers are to live relatively
    normal lives.

    75 year-old Siradeghyan became involved in gardening after Armenia
    regained its independence in the early 1990s and has established an
    orchard measuring 1.3 hectares.

    Mr. Siradeghyan has four sons, of which three have permanently left
    for Russia. The youngest goes and comes for work. Thus, the pensioner
    must take care of the orchard by himself.

    When he first planted fruit trees, neighbors thought he was a bit
    crazy. Now, he says, people come to him to buy trees to start their
    own orchards.

    Last year, the irrigation water problem in Tchotchkan was resolved
    and the two men thank Mayor Argady Tamazyan for the effort.

    "They provide water but look at this tree here. It's pretty weak. I've
    pruned the dried out bits. It's because we use water from the Debed
    River in which waste has been dumped by the Akhtala mining company
    to irrigate the orchards," said Mr. Siradeghyan. "The water, when it
    comes, resembles a milky soup. It's fairly thick. We have to use it."

    Mr. Galstyan also complains that his fruity trees are also drying up
    from using water from the Debed River.

    Mr. Siradeghyan points to 8-10 stunted trees as we walk through his
    orchard. He claims it's due to the Debed River water.

    "It's not only our villagers who consume the fruit. It's sold in the
    markets in Alaverdi and Vanadzor. Who knows if we are selling poisoned
    fruit or not?" he noted.

    Mr. Siradeghyan says he doesn't even use nitrates as fertilize because
    the trees get enough harmful material from the river water alone. He
    says his trees, which he only irrigates once or twice, give better
    fruit than his neighbor who irrigates four or five times.

    He says last year's crop amounted to 2-3 tons of fruit and that he
    couldn't sell it all. He went to the village of Tzater and bartered
    it for wheat, potatoes, oil and cheese.

    "I can't sell 800 kilograms of peaches per day in Alaverdi. Thus,
    I barter what I don't sell for items to stock up for the winter," Mr.

    Siradeghyan said.

    The two men are upbeat about the future. They say that the old orchards
    are being restore and that the only impediment are the toxic wastes
    being dumped in the Debed River by the Akhtala mining company.

    http://hetq.am/eng/news/59697/wastes-dumped-in-the-debed-river-preventing-restoration-of-tchotchkan-orchards.html




    From: A. Papazian
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