By Serj Tankian
The recent controversy over Hungary’s transfer of a convicted killer and his subsequent pardon and hero’s welcome in Azerbaijan have really worked to reinforce the international image of Azerbaijan as a nation with a despotic leadership that promotes nonsensical violence. Their only true ally besidesTurkeyis oil.
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Armeniadoesn’t have an ally in oil. Nor does it need such ecologically destructive, carbon-based allies. WhatArmenianeeds is a carbon neutral, ecologically sustainable, agriculturally diverse future as its ally.
This is why I have been so outspoken about the current attention being paid to mining, which is dirty and unsustainable, for its promise as a form of so-called economic development inArmenia.
True progress and a solution toArmenia’s economic, environmental, and social challenges will be based on a coordinated effort to support environmentally sustainable agriculture.
This would allow the country to produce all necessary food items, both for domestic consumption and for export. This is strategically important givenArmenia’s landlocked status and geopolitical isolation caused by hostile neighboring countries.
Governmental support through tax credits and other subsidies for programs that will contribute to sustainable development inArmeniawill create jobs and allow the youth of the country to remain in the country instead of going abroad for labor.
These views are consistent with points I have made at a forum hosted by Civilitas in 2011, in an interview on CivilNet.TV this year, and in a recent video statement expressing concern about unsustainable mining inTeghutForest.
Further development of mining within our small country is a dangerous and extremely short term solution to our economic woes. The long term effects can best be described by experts fromArmenia’s own National Academy of Sciences.
According to the head of the Center for Ecological-Noosphere Studies (CENS), mining has been disastrous forArmeniain terms of public health and the environment. Mine operators have failed to neutralize dangerous contaminants which have been absorbed by soil. The pollutants then pass from agricultural produce to humans, which is especially dangerous for children.
Furthermore, the head of the CENS Environmental Geochemistry Laboratory has stated that 57 percent ofYerevan’s population may be living in contaminated conditions due to ground pollution. The country’s rural fields are being irrigated with water flowing from contaminated sources due to mining operations, she explains.
Farm produce from all of the towns with significant mining operations, including Kapan, Kajaran, Alaverdi, and Akhtala, are laden with heavy metals including mercury, arsenic, and cadmium, according to CENS studies.
The risk was highlighted last month when mining waste poured out of a damaged pipeline belonging to one of the largest copper molybdenum mines in the country. This incident resulted in the release of toxic chemicals for hours into a river in southernArmeniathat is used to irrigate farmland.
Given the reality outlined above, I would urge Armenia’s government to re-consider its granted license to develop open-pit mines in and around Teghut Forest, which is one of the most biologically diverse forests in Armenia, and refrain from issuing further mining licenses to the detriment of our environment and sustainable development in Armenia.