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"I Believe That Justice Will Win"

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  • "I Believe That Justice Will Win"

    "I BELIEVE THAT JUSTICE WILL WIN"

    Azg/arm
    21 Jan 05

    About 250.000 Armenians living in Baku had to flee from the Azeri
    capital as a result of the massacres in Baku. The Armenians that
    greatly contributed to the construction of Baku were deprived of the
    right to live there and were left homeless. 311.000 of 500.000
    refugees from Azerbaijan still live in Armenia. Most of them live in
    the hostels, very often in hardship. Dozens of people fled from Baku
    live in the hostel of the second block of Nor Norq.

    Yevgenia Tsaturovna, 84, fled from Baku with her daughter and two
    grandchildren on January 18, 1990. Before that, she was hiding in her
    flat,but her neighbors warned her about the intrusion of the
    Azeris. "The Azeris were telling us to open the door, otherwise they
    would break it. I couldn't even take my clothes. They began beating
    and pushing us and threw out into the street," Yevgenia Tsaturovna
    remembers. The family thrown into the cold of the wintry and cold
    January street found shelter at the police department. Afterwards,
    they left for Armenia. When Yevgenia Tsaturovna settled down in
    Armenia her misfortunes didn't stop. Her daughter died of cancer when
    she was only 43. One of her grandchildren left for Russia.

    At present, Mrs. Yevgenia receives pension amounting to 3900 AMD and
    humanitarian aid from Paros benevolent organization. "They say they
    are going to deprive me of the aid from Paros. I don't know what I
    will do then," she says. The old woman is very ill, she can't even
    move. Lydia Amiriants, her neighbor, takes care of her. Lydia was also
    born in Baku and became a refugee. "We left Baku in 1988. My brother
    was a colonel and, seeing that the situation is becoming unbearable,
    helped me and my son leave the capital of the Azeris. They even didn't
    sell bread to us, knowing that we are Armenians," Lydia Amiriants
    says, adding that even after such an attitude and the massacres in
    Sumgait most of the people didn't believe that the Azeris will
    organize massacres in the capital, too. She said that already in 1988
    the Azeris ruined her house. "Itook the photo of its ruins and
    represented it to various instances. But they all just laughed at my
    efforts," she said, adding: "The justice hasn't won its victory yet,
    but I believe that otherwise, the life would lose its meaning."

    By Arevik Badalian
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