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We arrived at our hotel near
the lakeside just too late to witness what must have been a spectacular sunset over the
water. We had dinner with the Mayor of
Cholpon-Ata who offered us sheeps head and sheeps eyes and much toasting with
vodka. After a good nights sleep at our
hotel, clearly a remnant of the Soviet era, we set off bright and early for the offices of
ARIS, the Community Development and Investment Agency. ARIS is an independent agency
established by the Kyrgyz President in 2003 with a mission to assist in poverty reduction
in rural areas. Kyrgystan is a poor country
with GDP per capita similar to that in Ghana and Cambodia and corruption is a big problem. Through ARIS, communities are directly involved in
decision-making and we saw with our own eyes how the programme has helped them mobilise
their own skills and talents with capacity to undertake local development increased
significantly. Corruption is minimized by a system of open voting
when decisions are taken, e.g. on prioritizing projects, and there are information
meetings and annual accountability and reflection meetings. All residents of territory
covered by the Ayl Kanesh (village parliament) have membership of the Local Investment
Union. There are arrangements to ensure women, young people and excluded groups have to be
included in the membership of the Village Investment Committee.
After a very hospitable lunch prepared in a
villagers own home, the drive to the second irrigation scheme took us over bare,
rocky, mountains, where nothing grew. Suddenly we dropped down into a river valley which
was a veritable Shangri-La. Everywhere we went we were offered food and tea but I will
never forget the clotted cream and strawberry jam together with doughnut-like bread that
we were offered at Dontalaa village. This was the last the place you expected to have a
clotted cream tea! The strawberry jam was the most delicious Ive ever tasted with
small, whole, firm strawberries. Our last project was a visit to a new
health station at Konurolon village, staffed by this local nurse. There seemed to be a great emphasis on anti- and
post-natal care and encouraging breastfeeding.
I was much taken with this poster showing a
mother breastfeeding her baby whilst her husband did the ironing! The outside privy,
whilst of the traditional type, was clean and private. I was not surprised that DfID had decided to channel its funding through ARIS, which is model for genuine community empowerment. I felt that development projects in the United Kingdom seeking to work with disadvantaged communities could learn a great deal from the approach. We took away with us Best Practice Handbooks and an impressive document entitled Womens Realities, Stories from Experience which gave the stories of women who had taken the lead in various village micro-projects. This included the story of Apple Village where the maths teacher and mother of five, who had divorced her husband as a result of his domestic violence, had the idea of cultivating fruit and vegetables so that the village of 250 families could eat more healthily. Another tale of was of a teacher whose
personal story involves a forced marriage to a husband who is not against my public
work. She was the driving force behind
the construction of the village sports hall. She
says with
ARIS social mobilisation, residents of the village began to understand that by joining
forces we can change our lives. The projects give genuine
responsibility to villagers with whom project workers work side-by-side, not taking over,
as is so often the case in similar ventures in the UK. The rest of our
visit
According to the Electoral
Commission, Ak Zhol, the political party of President Kurmanbek Bakiev, polled 47.9% of
the votes and consequentially received 70% of the parliamentary seats. The main opposition
party Ata
Meken
received 8.29% of the popular vote but was
disqualified from receiving any parliamentary seats as they did not receive 0.5% of the
vote in each province. This was a new hurdle introduced late in the process by the
Electoral Commission. A small number of seats
were allocated to the Social Democratic Party and the Communist Party on the basis of
5.05% and 5.12% of the vote respectively. A
minimum threshold
is 5% and there is a widespread belief that manipulation took place to exclude Ata Meken Head of
Central Election Committee flees for her life
I have to say that Nazir was particularly
effective in bringing out the lighter sides of peoples personality - including
getting the Deputy Speaker of the Parliament to sing us a song at the dinner she hosted! Mental health services
in Kyrgystan
Postscript
A Kyrg
loo, will these be a thing of the past on my next visit?!
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