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  • Abandoned Armenia faces extinction

    Abandoned Armenia faces extinction

    By Jeremy Page
    One in three has left the impoverished state of Armenia since it gained
    independence and the young are leading the rush

    The Times/UK
    November 13, 2004

    SVETLANA SIMONYAN wants her children to come home. Her daughter,
    Narine, was the first to leave Armenia, moving to Russia with her
    husband in 1998. Artur, her eldest son, headed for Volgograd in
    2000. His brother, Armen, followed in 2002 â~@~T the last of the
    Simonyan children to join a decade-long exodus that has made Armenia
    one of the worldâ~@~Ys fastest disappearing nations.

    â~@~They couldnâ~@~Yt find work. They just couldnâ~@~Yt afford to
    live here,â~@~] said Mrs Simonyan, wholives with her disabled husband
    in the village of Sasunik, a former state grape farm an hourâ~@~Ys
    drive from Yerevan.

    She does not blame her children. They were just three of an estimated
    one million people â~@~T a third of the population â~@~T who have left
    Armenia since it gained independence from the crumbling Soviet Union.

    But she, like many Armenians, worries that the relentless outflow
    threatens the existence of the state that her people struggled for
    so long to create.

    â~@~If there are no systemic changes in Armenia, we could face a
    catastrophe,â~@~] says Vardan Gevorgyan, a sociologist. â~@~We will
    not disappear as an ethnic or cultural group in the world, but we
    will cease to be an effective republic.â~@~]

    Already more Armenians, four million, live outside the country than
    inside after successive waves of emigration going back centuries. They
    send back more than $1 billion a year â~@~T nearly double the
    Governmentâ~@~Ys entire budget.

    The extent of the demographic crisis, however, depends on which
    statistics you believe. And that depends on your politics. This
    year, the results of a 2001 census recorded a population of 3.2
    million. â~@~Iâ~@~Yd like to take those numbers at face value,â~@~]
    says Vartan Oksanyan, the Foreign Minister. â~@~Emigration numbers
    have dwindled. The economy is doing better. There are more jobs.â~@~]

    But opposition politicians and many sociologists put the real
    population as low as 2 million. They say that the discrepancy is
    due to the number of emigrants still registered as Armenian citizens
    because they are living illegally abroad.

    The village of Sasunik is a perfect example. Hajkaz Gulanyan, head
    of the local government, says that its official population is 3,300,
    but in reality it is just 2,400. Over the past five years a quarter
    have left â~@~T some to Germany and the Netherlands but most to Russia,
    which Armenians can enter without visas.

    â~@~It may sound a little harsh, but it seems we are a nation
    of emigrants,â~@~] he says over coffee in his dilapidated
    headquarters. â~@~Personally, I donâ~@~Yt think you should live
    just where you can find work and food to eat. You should stay in
    your homeland.â~@~]

    The exodus is especially painful for Armenians because of their long
    history of suffering.

    In the past century alone, between 500,000 and 1.5 million Armenians
    were killed by the Turks and up to 200,000 Armenians died in the Soviet
    Army in the Second World War. Tens of thousands more were killed in
    the war with Azerbaijan in the early 1990s. Also, an earthquake in
    1988 claimed more than 25,000 lives.

    Most of todayâ~@~Ys émigrés are young, male and educated, the ones
    the country needs to survive. The result is a vicious demographic cycle
    â~@~T fewer marriages, a lower birth rate and an ageing population
    which exacerbate the poverty that drives people away. Roughly 56
    per cent of the population are female, compared with 51 per cent in
    1979. Half the population lives on pensions and government handouts.

    â~@~Our most important resources are our human resources, and today
    we are losing them,â~@~] says Hranush Kharatyan, the Governmentâ~@~Ys
    adviser on demography. â~@~If nothing changes, we expect a disaster
    in the next 40 to 50 years.â~@~]

    She says that the only solution is to eradicate government corruption.
    â~@~Young people must be free to develop businesses, to become
    government officials and to know that if there is a trial, it will be
    fair,â~@~] she says. Only then will emigrants start to return for good.

    There are examples of successful â~@~repatriatesâ~@~], such as the
    Foreign Minister who left America in 1992 with a masterâ~@~Ys degree in
    international law and diplomacy. â~@~There was an inner force within
    me to return to Armenia, to be here in historic times. I wanted to
    be present at its creation,â~@~] he says. Two years later, his wife
    and two children joined him. â~@~Weâ~@~Yre here to stay,â~@~] he says.

    But for the moment, that is the luxury of successful émigrés. Back
    in Sasunik, Mrs Simonyan has a visitor. Hamlet, her husbandâ~@~Ys
    nephew, has taken a holiday from his job in Moscow to see his wife
    and children, who stayed behind.

    He would like to come back, he says. It is tough living in Moscow,
    where Caucasians are often abused by police. But it is still better
    than Sasunik, where people scrape by on $500 a year from growing
    grapes. He can earn four times that in Moscow. â~@~What can I
    do?â~@~] says Hamlet as he plays with his children in a house with no
    electricity, no gas, and running water for only an hour a day. â~@~
    Itâ~@~Ys Armeniansâ~@~Y destiny to live outside their homeland.â~@~]

    --Boundary_(ID_RWdBu21CfpNzTHfPxlL7nA)--
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