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  • ArmeniaNow - 03/24/2006

    ARMENIANOW.COM
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    SPECIAL INTEREST: PRINCIPALS SAY CLOSURE OF ORPHAN SCHOOLS WILL HARM, NOT
    HELP, VULNERABLE CHILDREN

    By Gayane Abrahamyan
    ArmeniaNow reporter

    Angry teachers have condemned a government decision to close secondary schools
    for nearly 1,000 orphaned and socially vulnerable children.

    Officials in the Ministry of Education and Science want to integrate children
    in the 12 special secondary institutions into mainstream schools. They argue
    that separate schools for orphans and other children who lack proper parental
    care simply isolates them from the rest of society.

    But staff in the schools insists that their children face special problems and
    that closure will damage their emotional and educational welfare.

    According to the government's decision, the special schools should be
    converted into regular secondary schools by the end of 2007. Special boarding
    centers would be created to meet the needs of children who were unable to go
    home.

    `These children are by no means deficient compared to their peers, they don't
    need special education; so why separate them from the society?! Implementation
    of this decision will integrate them into society,' says Louiza Gharibyan,
    representative of the Agency for Family Issues at the Ministry of Labor and
    Social Issues.

    Those in the schools in Yerevan hold a different opinion, however. They
    believe the realization of such reforms will be a disaster for children who
    already face great difficulties.

    `It will be the same with these schools as it was with the vocational colleges
    when they closed them and now spend huge sums to restore them,' says Simon
    Simonyan, Principal of the Yerevan Special School for Orphans and Children
    Deprived of Parental Care # 3.

    Simonyan believes there is still a need in this type of school and it will be
    possible to close them only in 10 to 15 years, when social conditions in
    Armenia have improved.

    `You will simply kick 1,000 children into the street by eliminating this type
    of school, for many here are on the edge of delinquency and need special
    attention and pedagogical work, something an ordinary school cannot provide,'
    he says.

    Samvel Mktrchyan, Principal at the Special School #7, thinks that the problems
    faced by these children will not disappear because of the entrance into force
    of this new law. They exist and need special attention, he says.

    `There is no need to develop theories, just look at the reality with an open
    mind. Children of this category cannot integrate into a group of well-off and
    indulged children; they will not go to ordinary school,' says Lazarian.

    According to Mktrchyan the main reasons for not going to a mainstream school
    are social and psychological.

    `Take the simplest situation: the pupil will not able to pay for textbooks,
    will not be able to pay for a party with the class, and will not be able to
    take part in buying a present for a teacher. This will isolate him from school
    and society even more, a bigger psychological complex will develop in him,
    more than it would if he had stayed in this kind of school,' Mktrchyan
    explains.

    A pedagogue for 50 years in School #3, Astghik Jamalyan believes the problems
    of the children's private life will also hinder their studies in an ordinary
    secondary school.

    `They will be teased in ordinary schools. Here with us almost all the children
    have family problems, they can imagine themselves in one another's shoes. In
    an ordinary school children from good families will constantly throw in their
    faces that someone's mother is an alcoholic or a dissolute person,' says
    Jamalyan.

    Ani, aged 10, is at a special school because her mother is a drunkard; she is
    doing well at the school and frequently flees from her home to the school.

    `I can't study anywhere else. What if my mother goes there drunk, what will
    the children say? Here everybody is like that: someone doesn't have a mother,
    the other lacks a father, no one looks at me askance; here it is better than
    at home, the teachers are both mothers and fathers,' says Ani.

    Anahit Muradyan, a senior specialist at the Agency for Secondary Education at
    the Ministry of Education, says everything should be done through the
    educational reforms to make children feel comfortable at school.

    `I am also concerned that those children will not feel comfortable in the
    ordinary schools after the restructuring, will not be psychologically safe and
    protected. But everything is being done in that direction and we need to
    create comfortable conditions for the children by all means,' she says.

    Gharibyan, the family issues representative, emphasizes that work should also
    be carried out to help children return to their families. But teachers at the
    special schools are confident that few of the children can go back home.

    `What family are we talking about? We have a child, for instance, who is a
    pimp to his own mother. While children of his age (YES?) visit his mother, he
    stands outside the door getting 500 drams from them. Shall we send him to this
    mother, or maybe to an alcoholic or drug addict?' says Zhanna Babayan,
    Educational Program Deputy Principal at School #3.

    Staying at school is also preferable for 12-year-old Yeranuhi. She
    explains: `My father is a drunkard, he beats me: he once threw me down from
    the second floor and I had to have stitches in my head. He beats me so much
    that I lose consciousness. They say this school will be closed. I don't know
    where to go. I will run away from home.'

    Mktrchyan thinks that the special schools offer the only means for children
    like this to get an education. He says: `Some children have left our school
    and have come back; it shows that they can't study in another environment.

    `The educational program here is the same as the one in ordinary schools, but
    the approaches to education are different. Here, there are not just teacher-
    pupil relations but more of a parent-child tie, we care for every single
    problem they have.'

    Principals of the schools plan to appeal to the National Assembly to hold
    hearings and debates about the proposed reforms. They want deputies to support
    the continuation of the schools.

    They believe that these approaches should be adjusted and fitted to Armenia's
    conditions, taking into consideration the national mentality.

    `Today the Ministry tries to wreck years of achievement, in order to meet the
    requirements of the education reform. I consider it a betrayal of both the
    nation and these children,' says Deputy Principal Babayan.

    GYUMRI'S NEW HOPE: RA WANTS TO REVIVE CITY'S SHAKEN REPUTATION AS HUB OF
    INNOVATION

    By Suren Deheryan
    ArmeniaNow reporter

    Every morning Robert Sargsyan and his nine coworkers show up at a makeshift
    building in Gyumri to conduct experiments and design sophisticated seismic
    equipment that was renowned in Soviet times.

    Sargsyan, 71, is director of Gyumri's special experimental technological
    institute, which since the 1988 Spitak earthquake has been located in
    two `domiks,' or small temporary shelters, heated by a wood stove.

    While the earthquake damaged the original building and some of its equipment,
    the collapse of the Soviet Union cost it its glory and its main customer.

    `Our specialty is already in our blood and even during these difficult years
    we didn't plunder or sell the property belonging to the institute,' says
    Sargsyan, who has 50 years of experience as a designer of seismic
    equipment. `Instead, we tried to survive by continuing to implement our
    ideas.'

    Only a few similar scientific and technological facilities remained in Gyumri
    after the earthquake. These, Sargsyan says, have been struggling to
    survive `with a hope for tomorrow.'

    That day may come within a couple of years under a government-backed plan to
    build a technology and research facility, or `technopark,' in the city.

    The project, approved earlier this month, aims to rebuild the city's former
    production and technological potential as well as provide jobs for highly
    skilled specialists in the Shirak region.

    `The program of the establishment of a technopark in Gyumri is important from
    several aspects-such as the social aspect, employment, use of local scientific
    potential, as well as in terms of developing small and medium-sized
    enterprises,' Armen Gevorgyan, Armenia's deputy minister of Trade and Economic
    Development, told ArmeniaNow.

    It would become Armenia's second such facility after Yerevan's ViaSpher
    Technopark, which was set up six years ago and today incorporates 12 companies
    under its roof working in such fields as microelectronics, vacuum
    technologies, and natural energy.

    Unlike the Yerevan technopark, which was established largely due to the
    efforts of American and European companies, the Armenian government is at the
    vanguard of the Gyumri project.

    `Establishing a technopark is an expensive pleasure. However, for this purpose
    the government is ready to assist as far as possible both financially and
    organizationally,' Deputy Minister Gevorgyan said, urging local authorities
    and scientists to make an active contribution to the program.

    There were 38 factories and scientific institutes in Gyumri before 1988,
    producing machines, tools, furniture, construction materials and food. These
    accounted for 7 percent of Soviet Armenia's production and employed 21,000
    people.

    Today, according to the official statistics, 48 small factories operating in
    Gyumri employ 780 people.

    Plans call for transforming the old Soviet-era company, Analitiksark 1, into
    the new technopark. Analitiksark 1 still produces specialized devices used in
    shipping and submarines.

    The technopark will be funded through the government-owned New Investments
    Company, which provides venture capital to new firms, as well as private
    sources. The initial phase of the technopark will cost $200,000, with future
    costs still being worked out.

    According to New Investments Company deputy director and program manager Gagik
    Karapetyan, the technopark will act as a business innovation center for the
    purpose of developing small and medium-sized enterprises that will provide
    specialized equipment, as well as offer information, expertise and other
    services to small companies.

    Investors in the project expect the technopark will be ready in 2008, the 20th
    anniversary of the earthquake that killed at least 25,000 people in the Shirak
    region. They hope it will mark the beginning of the revival of science in
    Gyumri.

    That would be good news for Robert Sargsyan's technology institute, which at
    its peak employed 130 people. During the Soviet era, it was second only to a
    similar facility in Moscow for design and production of seismic devices. Its
    reputation was burnished not only on its seismographs, but production of
    submarine detection devices.

    Today, it designs seismic monitoring systems for nuclear power stations and
    water reservoirs in Armenia and abroad.

    Showing a number of devices created jointly with his colleagues, Sargsyan
    said: `Gyumri has a scientific potential not for writing articles but for
    turning out production. If the technopark is created it will be an amazing
    thing. We still have a lot of ideas that have not got off the drawing board
    yet and which will ensure competitive production.'

    NAMES AND NEIGHBORS: TERRITORIAL TENSIONS REFLECT THE LEGACY OF SOVIET POLICY

    By Aris Ghazinyan
    ArmeniaNow reporter

    Recent events in the Armenian populated regions of Georgia - the murder of 23-
    year-old Gevorg Gevorgyan in Tsalka (a province of Kvemo-Kartli) on March 9
    and subsequent unrest in Akhalkalaki (the Samtskhe-Javakhetia province) - have
    exacerbated ethnic tensions.

    The situation has always been strained, but a major clash between Georgians
    and Armenians in Tsalka and nearby villages on May 9 last year left more than
    30 people injured. Following numerous incidents in 2005, units of Georgia's
    internal troops moved into the region temporarily. Currently, representatives
    of organizations representing Armenians in Georgia are preparing another plea
    for autonomy to the authorities in Tbilisi.

    `There will be only three autonomous areas in Georgia,' Prime Minister Zurab
    Nogaideli stated unequivocally during a visit to Yerevan immediately following
    the previous such appeal in April 2005. `They will be Abkhazia, Adjaria and
    Tskhinval.'

    Thus, the authorities of modern Georgia adhered to the principles of Soviet
    national policy on the issue of the political-administrative division of the
    country.

    `Soviet Georgia occupied a territory of 69,700 square kilometers, which
    corresponded to only 0.31 per cent of the territory of the USSR,' political
    scientist Sargis Zoranyan, a member of the Board of the Soviet of Armenian
    Intellectuals `Vernatun', told ArmeniaNow.

    `Still, there was a factor that put this republic in a special position: the
    presence of autonomous entities per square kilometer of territory. The total
    combined territory of the Abkhazian ASSR (8,600 sq. km), Adjarian ASSR (2,900
    sq. km) and South Ossetian Autonomous District (3,900 sq. km) measured 15,400
    sq. km, or 22 percent of Georgia. None of the union republics of the USSR
    objectively could compare with Georgia in this respect.'

    All three autonomous areas were formed nearly simultaneously during Stalin's
    period in charge of national policy in Soviet Russia. He had an immediate
    influence on the formation of socialist autonomies in the Sovietized republics
    of the Caucasus. The Abkhazian ASSR was formed first on March 4, 1921 and
    joined the new Georgia in December of that year. Next came the Adjarian ASSR
    in June 1921, followed by the South-Ossetian Autonomous District in April
    1922. The USSR was formed in December 1922; Georgia, along with Soviet Armenia
    and Azerbaijan, joined the new state as one of the three components of the
    Transcaucasian Soviet Federative Socialist Republic. Meanwhile, its
    administrative borders remained unchanged.

    Objectively, the Georgian Soviet Socialist Republic was a Soviet mini-empire
    outlined by with Stalin's blue pencil. This circumstance explains the presence
    of three autonomous entities within such a small area.

    However, proceeding from the logic of the formation of Soviet autonomous
    areas, another one should have been created on the territory of Georgia - the
    Armenian autonomy.

    `The fact of a 200,000-strong Armenian population concentrated in the
    territory of, in particular, Akhalkalaki and Bogdanov (now Ninotsminda)
    regions, constituting more than 90 per cent of residents, objectively
    presupposed the formation of a new national autonomous area,' Zoranyan says.

    Georgia was the only republic in the USSR where 200,000 members of one
    national group were living closely together without autonomy. Why?

    `The presence of a fourth autonomous area in Soviet Georgia, of course, would
    have accentuated even more the artificial nature of the formation of this
    republic within the borders outlined by Stalin. This could in no way
    correspond to the aspirations of the ideologues of Soviet national policy,'
    says Zoranyan.

    `However, the main reason for the inadmissibility of forming an `Armenian
    autonomy' on Georgian territory was not that. It was linked closely to Soviet
    methods of resolving the issue of `Armenian lands' in the South Caucasus.'

    Each autonomous entity with a dominant ethnic group in the USSR included an
    ethnonym in its official title; `the iron rule of Soviet democracy' was
    supposed to apply throughout the Union, regardless of the status of the
    entity - whether it was a Union republic, an autonomous republic, an
    autonomous region, or an autonomous district.

    `The only Union republic in which this `iron rule' did not operate was
    Azerbaijan,' says the political scientist. `The autonomous Armenian areas
    there - Nakhichevan ASSR and Nagorno Karabakh Autonomous District - did not
    contain the ethnic name, otherwise the removal of Armenian lands from Armenia
    would have been clearly stated.

    Had the Soviet `iron rule' been applied in those cases, then there would have
    been an `Armenian Autonomous Republic' (Nakhichevan) and an `Armenian
    Autonomous Region' (Nagorno Karabakh) and an `Armenian Autonomous District'
    (Javakhk in Georgia) immediately bordering Soviet Armenia. The reduction of
    Armenian territory by the Bolsheviks would have been apparent.

    If Georgia and Azerbaijan have officially rejected the legacy of the USSR, say
    political scientists, then why do they remain the most ardent adherents of
    Soviet territorial policy?

    STRUGGLING FOR ANSWERS: PARENTS ASK WHETHER A FIGHT AT SCHOOL KILLED THEIR
    SON

    By Zhanna Alexanyan
    ArmeniaNow reporter

    The death of a teenager following a fight between youths from Russian and
    Armenian sections at a Yerevan school has raised questions and passions among
    parents and students.

    Eduard Vardanyan, a 10th grade student at Yerevan school #7, died on March 9.
    Ten days earlier, he had suffered blows to the head after trying to separate
    students who had come to blows during a break from lessons.

    Eduard, 17, was knocked over during the melee on February 27 and classmates
    say he was kicked in the head as he lay on the ground. The principal and other
    senior teachers at the school have denied that he was involved, however, and
    have upset the boy's parents by blaming his death on alleged poor health.

    Eduard continued to attend school for a week after the incident, but his
    health declined dramatically on March 8 and his parents rushed him to
    hospital. Surgeons could not save him and he died the next day.

    Naira and Hovhannes Vardanyan say their son had not told them any details of
    the fight at the school, although they were aware of it. He had come home with
    bruising around his eyes and had been complaining of headaches.

    `I thought it would pass. It is difficult to conclude from bruising to the
    eyes that something serious has happened,' says the father.

    Eduard was known at school as a modest, well-organized and clever boy, a keen
    sportsman who was physically strong, but not a fighter. He wanted to be an
    army officer after graduation and was planning to go to Russia in the summer
    to enter the Military Academy.

    The parents say the management of the school have sought publicly to blame
    their son's death on poor health. Naira says that, as a sportsman, Eduard
    underwent compulsory annual medical tests and was always healthy.

    `My child has been playing sports for more than 10 years and has never had
    health problems. They tell us now that our child had poor health and died from
    an illness. My child has already passed away, let them not play with his
    honor,' she says.

    A preliminary medical investigation concluded that Eduard died from a brain
    deficiency. The doctor told his parents that he suffered a haematoma.

    `We were unaware of the illness and even if my child had a deficiency, it
    never bothered him before. Let them say at least that the beating on his head
    contributed, that a haematoma has developed and has bled,' the mother
    complains.

    The day after the incident, boys who had been involved in the fighting were
    brought for questioning to the juvenile department of Kentron community police
    station. The local prosecutor has opened a preliminary criminal investigation.

    Eduard's parents say that they did not seek an inquiry by law-enforcement
    bodies.

    After the surgery, when Eduard was in coma yet, his relatives agreed to write
    and sign a note saying that their son had a congenital defect (disease), thus
    they did not have any complaints. His aunt now feels pangs of conscience for
    writing such a note.

    `When the investigator told us to write that we wouldn't lodge any complaint,
    we were confused feeling completely at a loss. I don't know why I signed it,
    but now I am conscience-smitten. Disease still needs to be proved,'- says the
    boy's aunt, Nune Isahakyan.

    `I don't want to complain as I know what country I am living in. Nothing will
    change with my complaint and my child will not return. I don't want to cause
    pain to anyone else,' says Naira.

    `I am anxious about the spreading of rumors about my child's health, since
    everybody knows what has really happened. The school is responsible for that.'

    Victoria Rukhikyan, the principal of the school, bases her opinion of Eduard's
    health on the preliminary conclusions of the doctor.

    `When I visited the hospital the child was in coma. Doctor Gaboyan said his
    illness had a hidden character,' she says. The principal insisted that, before
    coming to the hospital, she had not known that Eduard had had any connection
    with the brawl at the school.

    She is not convinced even now that he was there during the fight or that he
    was beaten up, saying: `That's a matter for investigation.'

    The heads of educational sections at the school, the deputy principal for
    educational issues and the chairperson of the trade union at the principal's
    office share her opinion. All are unanimous that they attended the scene of
    the fighting very quickly and had not seen Eduard there.

    `He had not been beaten up, we didn't see him lying on the ground, and
    children didn't tell us about that,' said Valentina Baghdasaryan, the head of
    the educational section.

    Eduard's classmates and their parents were anxious about the teachers'
    position. They want the principal to organize an open meeting to share details
    of the incident. They also point the finger at students in the Russian 10th
    grade class, who they say frequently initiate disruption.

    `Open discussion will help to calm passions. Their friend has died and it has
    left a deep psychological imprint on the children's minds. We don't want our
    children to face injustice at this age and to be broken,' said one parent.

    During a meeting of parents and students attended by a representative of the
    prosecutor's office and the head of the education agency at the municipality,
    Eduard's classmates recounted how they saw him being thrown to the ground and
    kicked. But they say they did not see who was responsible.

    DELIVERY PROBLEMS: NEW LAW ON DISTRIBUTION OF NEWSPAPERS RAISES CONCERNS ABOUT
    CENSORSHIP

    By Arpi Harutyunyan
    ArmeniaNow reporter/special to IWPR

    Armenian journalists are sounding the alarm over legislation that requires
    newspaper delivery companies for the first time to apply for licenses.

    Local activists say that the legislation, introduced by Armenia's parliament
    last year in the form of an amendment to existing laws on mail service and tax
    regulations, is in fact a hidden form of state censorship.

    "The journalistic community and public organisations of Armenia are trying to
    stop this law,' Boris Navasardyan, chairman of the Yerevan Press Club, told
    IWPR. `Otherwise, we will have to admit that it is one more mechanism for
    secret censorship."

    The legislation stipulates that firms pay 11,000 US dollars per year in order
    to receive licenses for the right to deliver newspapers. This requirement will
    bankrupt many small independent delivery companies, say observers, and place
    the country's newspaper distribution service firmly in the hands of two state-
    connected enterprises, Haipost, Armenia's postal service, and Haimamul, the
    main kiosk vendor.

    Haipost, as a self-financing closed joint-stock company, is nominally
    independent. However, since all of its shares belong to the state, it is
    considered to be closely linked to the government.

    Haimamul for its part is fully independent, though its origins indicate close
    state ties. The firm was established in 1939 as Soviet Armenia's sole concern
    handling newspaper subscriptions and delivery. Today it is the largest single
    distributor, and with about 400 kiosks and 7,223 subscribers, one of the few
    that reaches all the country's regions.

    Rather than censoring the newspapers outright, say media professionals,
    government officials can instead pressure these two companies to prevent
    publications with offending content from reaching the public, especially in
    rural areas.

    "I have the impression that the Armenian government is doing all it can, and
    even what it cannot, in order to reduce newspaper dissemination as much as
    possible,' said Hakob Avetikyan, editor in chief of the daily Azg. `They want
    to reduce the amount of undesirable information to the public."

    The critics point to a number of incidents where Haimaimul failed to
    distribute certain publications. In October, 2002, for example, 4,600 copies
    of the Aravot opposition newspapers disappeared from Haimamul's kiosks.

    Aravot editors' say that the incident was tied to an article that was critical
    of Hrach Abgaryan, former adviser to Armenia's Prime Minister Andranik
    Margaryan.

    Members of the Yerevan Press Club and other public organisations say the new
    legislation violates human rights and have sent a letter to parliament
    demanding the law be changed. IWPR has learned that the opposition United
    Labour Party has thrown its weight behind the initiative.

    Press club officials say that the laws violate Article 10 of European
    Convention of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms, Article 19 of Universal
    Declaration of Human Rights as well as Article 24 of the Armenian
    constitution, guaranteeing the right to free expression.

    "If we are members of the Council of Europe and if we speak about European
    integration, freedom of speech, and freedom of the press, then we should
    reject licensing of the media," said Armen Davtyan, director of the Blitz
    independent media distribution company, who compared the situation with
    licensing of press distribution in Armenia to that in authoritarian Belarus.

    The new legislation comes into force just as a number of small, independent
    companies have sprung up to challenge Haipost and Haimamul's near-monopoly
    over distribution.

    Last year, for example, the US-funded Eurasia Foundation and George Soros'
    Open Society Institute awarded grants to five companies under a programme to
    support alternative distribution channels and improve delivery to rural areas.

    Eurasia officials say that very few of Armenia's daily newspapers reach the
    country's villages, where much of the population resides. Some remote towns do
    not receive a single newspaper, they say.

    "Our aim was to create stable companies that would lead to the weakening of
    the monopoly of Haipost and Haimamul and become alternative companies in the
    newspaper market," Alisa Alaverdyan, Eurasia's external relations coordinator
    said.

    Now, however, because of the new legislation, these enterprises are under
    threat of closure. Tax officials have paid several visits to the heads of the
    Blitz Media Company, one of the new distributors, demanding that they either
    suspend their activities or pay for a license.

    "I pay annual 1,500 dollars in income tax, and according to what I know, other
    small organisations that work in this sphere pay approximately the same
    amount,' said Blitz director Davtyan. `There is no logic in this fixed sum of
    11 thousand dollars for the license.'

    Haikaz Simikyan, head of the Simikyan distribution company in Vanadzor with
    700 subscribers, one of the five firms to receive Eurasia Foundation and OSI's
    grants, said it's likely to close if they pay the license fee.

    "This amount is absurd,' said Simikyan. `We won't have any income under such
    conditions.'

    Eurasia Foundation officials agree that the law comes at a very untimely
    moment. "As a result of [our] programme, the circulation of some newspapers
    grew significantly,' said Marina Mkhitaryan, Eurasia's programme
    coordinator. `[This continued] until the distribution companies encountered
    problems with taxation bodies because of their lack of licenses."

    Government officials for their part defend the legislation by saying that it
    in no way restricts the dissemination of the news. Delivery is being licensed,
    not subscription, they say, and the law will strengthen the distribution
    system and regulate deliveries, especially to rural areas.

    Tamara Ghalechyan, spokesperson for the Ministry of Transport and
    Communications, said that the high license fee will help weed out the field
    and assure that only companies that can provide the best services will be
    involved in newspaper delivery.

    "The state is establishing a regulating mechanism for companies which are
    responsible for organising subscriptions,' Ghalechyan said.

    Many do not buy this explanation, however. `What sense is there in
    subscription, if there is no delivery?' asked Blitz distribution company head
    Davtyan.

    Haipost officials guarantees that the company's 904 post offices will deliver
    all newspapers in a timely manner, even those to far-flung regions. "We
    deliver newspapers to subscribers even in the most remote villages," said
    Haipost spokesperson Astghik Martirosyan.

    Martirosyan supports the new legislation whole-heartedly. "If the state
    believes that we need such a law, this means that we indeed need it," he said.

    Interestingly, despite the benefits that their company will allegedly reap,
    Haimamul officials say that they are opposed to the law. "The number of
    newspapers is already very small and they do not reach residents in the
    regions,' said Haimamul executive director Arshaluis Manukyan.

    `Laws like this will lead to the total isolation of rural residents from any
    information, since companies with small budgets will be unable to pay and will
    have to halt their activities," he said, calling the legislation "the product
    of a morbid imagination'.

    This article first appeared on the website of the Institute of War & Peace
    Reporting at www.iwpr.net. Seda Muradyan, IWPR's Armenia coordinator, also
    contributed to this report.

    INSECURE FREEDOM: SURVIVOR OF STALIN'S PURGES MUST WAIT FOR A PLACE TO CALL
    HOME

    By Vahan Ishkhanyan
    ArmeniaNow reporter

    Evelina Gevorgyan is laying cards to read her fortune, although it is a
    pastime she no longer believes in.

    `My future was foretold long before, I was to be a great singer. But Article
    58 was stuck on my back. Who would allow me to follow a singing career?' she
    says.

    Article 58 of the Criminal Code of the Russian Soviet Federative Social
    Republic made anti-Soviet propaganda an offence, for which she was convicted
    and sentenced to four years in prison in 1942. It was article 67 in the
    equivalent code of Soviet Armenia.

    Evelina, now 86, lives in a company watchman's room measuring only 3.5 square
    meters. Her work and life are contained in this one room, even smaller than
    her KGB cell. But that's fine, unlike many she does not remember the Soviet
    Union fondly.

    `I rejoiced greatly when the Soviet Union collapsed. True, I now live in such
    a small room but let it be so, only do not let the Soviets return.'

    Her father Yervand Gevorgov, a merchant and agronomist, was a member of
    Yerevan's elite - his stores were located in the present Kirov park, and his
    house stood on the site of today's Poplavok jazz restaurant, a favorite
    hangout of Yerevan's new elite and middle class residents.

    In 1924, he was shot dead by a Cheka official without trial. Later, when
    Evelina was in jail, the investigator said to her fiancé who had come to find
    out why she had been arrested: `You know whose daughter she is?'

    It was written in the verdict passed on Evelina - `social status - from former
    dispossessed kulaks'. From the early years of Soviet rule until the late 1930s
    those who had owned property were considered kulaks. Their property was
    confiscated and they were exiled. Evelina's social origin was already
    considered to be a criminal offence.

    On March 8, 1942, on international women's day, Evelina, a 22-year-old student
    at music college, was arrested in one of Stalin's regular purges. She met the
    people with whom she was accused of plotting anti-Soviet propaganda for the
    first time only when she was brought to court.

    She was sentenced to hard labor felling trees in the Urals region, but World
    War Two, so misfortunate for so many, proved Evelina's salvation.

    `We were supposed to go to Sukhovo-Bezvodniy, near the town of Gorky. Had they
    taken me there, I would not have survived. We were lucky, the Germans were
    shelling those areas and we were spared the task of cutting trees for 12 hours
    a day.'

    Instead, they were taken to Baku and then to Krasnovodsk by steamship: `We
    disembarked in a cemetery and each of us chose a tombstone to sleep on. Then a
    convoy came at night and they made us line up in five rows,' she recalls.

    `They were to take us to the distribution point and they warned us that anyone
    who could not walk would be gunned down on the spot. There was an Armenian
    girl there, Asya, who could barely walk from pneumonia. Two Armenian thieves,
    Pavlik and Mukuch, said they would carry my things so that I could prevent an
    Armenian girl being killed. I helped her to walk, stopped her from falling to
    the ground.

    `We reached the distribution point but Asya died. Before she went, she asked
    me to write a letter to her sister in Leninakan saying that she was no longer
    alive. Asya was serving a second term in prison and had spent five years in a
    concentration camp. When she was released, she rented a home in Kirovakan. One
    of her neighbors wrote a report about her saying that every time the Germans
    occupied a city or town Asya was playing the piano out of joy.'

    They were taken on to Tashkent by train, 120 prisoners in each carriage. An
    epidemic of cholera was decimating their numbers. Evelina says: `People were
    dying all the time. Suddenly, the train would stop in the middle of a desert
    to throw out the dead. They left the bodies lying there, there was no time to
    bury them.

    `A German woman next to me died from cholera, she stayed beside me, dead, for
    half a day until they came to throw her out. I wonder how I didn't contract
    the disease. In the afternoon they gave us fish to eat and we were terribly
    thirsty. At night they gave us water with worms in it.

    `On the ship, in a space partitioned from us, had been German prisoners. They
    were given only fish, without water, and they were dying from thirst. A German
    woman and I gave them water.'

    Of about 5,000 prisoners on the train, only 1,700 made it to Tashkent. They
    were placed in the same barracks in the penal colony, working next to
    political prisoners and criminals.

    `A Cheka official was asking in the colony - what article? You would say `58'
    and he would give you a dim look, while another would say `226' (theft) and he
    would smile `well done! It's good that it is not political'.'

    They worked on looms making cloth, but one day Evelina contracted
    jaundice. `Suddenly I had an acute pain, I fell and they carried me out on a
    stretcher. I was losing consciousness, I was in a very grave condition,' she
    says.

    `There was a doctor, Abazov, he had been the people's commissar (minister) for
    healthcare in Turkmenistan. He had been in jail for 16 years and it was not
    known when he would be released. For prisoners like him there was an order
    from Beria - unless a special instruction was issued, you were imprisoned for
    life.

    `Abazov said `you are a political prisoner, I won't let you die'. Seven or
    eight people in the infirmary, who were also suffering from jaundice with me,
    died. But he didn't let me die. They placed us in the same barracks as people
    convicted of criminal offences so that they would abuse us, but some of them
    treated us well.

    `A thief name Lena slept next to me in the barrack, she had a wooden leg and
    she suffered from syphilis. She had been robbing trains. She would come to the
    hospital and ask me what I needed; I would ask for boiled potato and a pillow
    and she would bring them to me the next day.'

    It was not as terrible in the camp as after being released from it. Political
    prisoners like Evelina did not have the right to live in 39 cities, including
    Yerevan. For some time she lived at her mother's home in Dilijan, then a
    relative appealed to a senior government official to let her return to the
    city.

    `I was one of the few former political prisoners allowed to stay in Yerevan,'
    she says. Evelina continued her education, but as a fourth year student she
    was expelled as a decadent, under Article 58 again. With the help of an uncle,
    she got reinstated at college and completed her studies, but she did not enter
    the conservatory later.

    `It was better in the concentration camp, people had peace of mind. It was
    terrible later on, you didn't have the right to go anywhere, article 58 was
    always written on your back.'

    In 1951 when thousands of Armenian families were being expelled to the Altai
    area, Evelina had her trunk packed and was waiting for the authorities to come
    for her. But exile passed her by. She married a persecuted man like herself
    and gave birth to a son in 1955.

    In 1957, Evelina Gevorgyan and five people convicted together with her were
    acquitted.
    She sang for ten years in the state choir, also in the Opera chorus and from
    1975 she worked as a comptroller in the hall of a chorus company. She sold her
    home in 1984 to give her son an opportunity to leave Armenia.

    For years she lived in a rented apartment, but when the years of economic
    crisis struck she could no longer afford to stay there. In 1993, she was given
    the small watchman's room at the Chorus Company, where she lives and works as
    the watchman of the building.

    All she possesses now are her photographs and some kitchen utensils. The room
    is so small that it is impossible to lie down flat, and when Evelina wants to
    get some rest she places a chair under her feet and lies on a narrow ottoman.

    Under the law for victims of repression, those who need housing are eligible
    for a plot of land and a preferential loan for 25 years of up to 5 million
    drams (about $11,000) to buy an apartment or build a house. However, changes
    in the legislation mean no land has been allotted in Yerevan since 2003 and
    none has been available outside the city either since December last year.

    Victims of Soviet oppression are also entitled to lump-sum compensation of
    12,000 drams (about $26) from the State. In 1996 it was 6,000 drams.

    `This compensation is formal, we suggested that it be 12,000 drams at least
    every year,' says Anahit Gevorgyan, head of the department for elderly affairs
    at the Ministry of Labor and Social Affairs. `We had also suggested that the
    government make 300 million drams available in loans, but they don't do that.'

    There are 570 loan applications from repressed people at the Ministry of Labor
    and Social Affairs, of which 311 are considered well founded. Evelina is 233rd
    on the list.

    Since 2002, loans have been issued to 165 people, including only 42 last year.
    The government allocates 100 million drams annually for this program and
    Evelina can expect to get her loan only in 2010 when she will be 90.

    `Are they mocking me? What shall I be in four years?' she says.

    IN THE SCRUM: ARMENIA JOINS THE PACK OF RUGBY-PLAYING NATIONS

    By Suren Musayelyan
    ArmeniaNow reporter

    Last year Armenia provided a sensation in the rugby world with a series of
    seven victories in seven matches that immensely increased the nation's world
    rating and lifted it from Division C to Division B of the European Rugby
    Association (FIRA-AER).

    Currently 33rd in the 62-nation world rugby rankings (http://wrr.live555.com),
    Armenia is the fifth strongest team among former Soviet republics after
    Georgia, Russia, Ukraine and Moldova.

    Gagik Panikyan, the President of the Rugby Federation of Armenia, is full of
    hope that rugby will become a popular and well developed sport in Armenia one
    day. But for now he says: `This sport is being developed in Armenia only at
    the cost of the great enthusiasm of its fans.

    `But the team cannot survive on enthusiasm alone. I am sure that rugby can
    have a good future in Armenia and it will be a pity if the team that has
    achieved serious success in the international arena within a short period of
    time will not be able to continue its performances.'

    Armenia's team mainly consists of Diaspora Armenian rugby players from France,
    but it is the Federation's objective to grow local rugby talent for future
    national teams.

    After Armenia beat Luxembourg away 39-12 last autumn to qualify for Group B,
    the host nation's Federation website wrote in its report: `No miracle happened
    in Luxembourg. Despite their good performance Luxembourg could not oppose a
    very professional team of Armenia.'

    Rugby was first brought to Armenia during the second wave of Armenian
    repatriation in the early 1960s by a compatriot from France, Jacques Aspikian.
    Ironically, Armenia's sporting bureaucrats then proved more `zealous' in
    pursuing the Soviet ideological line that rugby was a `bourgeois game' than
    their colleagues in neighboring Georgia, to where Aspikian moved to lay the
    foundations of the future Georgian rugby school, now the strongest among post-
    Soviet countries. Georgia qualified for the last rugby World Cup in Australia
    in 2003.

    But rugby still found its way in Soviet Armenia and a Yerevan rugby team
    played in the USSR championships beginning from the 1966-67 season.

    The collapse of the Soviet Union and the political, economic, and social
    difficulties that followed appeared to put an end to the sport in
    Armenia. `The future of Armenian rugby seemed all but hopeless then,' says the
    federation's press attaché and executive committee member David Petrosyan.

    The Rugby Federation was registered in Armenia in 2002 and the nation joined
    the European Rugby Association. Its appeal for assistance was heard by
    compatriots in France, home to a half-million strong Armenian Diaspora, and a
    team was formed to participate in two rugby sevens tournaments. As a result,
    by 2003 Armenia was already 20th out of 39 European sevens teams.

    Success in the full 15-player game soon followed, with victories over Israel,
    Norway and others. Armenia's game against Israel in the town of Abovyan last
    year was the first international rugby match to played on Armenian soil
    (before that, Armenians had played their matches in France).

    Petrosyan says Armenia has a good `bank of players' in the Diaspora, in such
    rugby countries as France and Argentina. There might also be potential players
    in England, Australia and the United States. However, the Rugby Federation of
    Armenia is aware that, although help from Diaspora players is essential,
    Armenian rugby will only enjoy real success if things go well at home.

    `Rugby now needs a push from the outside to achieve results and to popularize
    it in Armenia. After that, it will be a lot easier to grow local players,'
    Petrosyan says.

    `Rugby has no state financing because it is not an Olympic sport. But
    potential sponsors in Armenia and Diaspora should at least understand that,
    for now, rugby is the only team sport in which Armenia is able to achieve
    considerable success in the international arena.'

    The Federation is constantly searching for ways to get funding and to
    popularize rugby in Armenia, in particular through reviving its official
    website this month. Visitors can find out about rugby in Armenia at
    www.armrugby.am.

    Besides, according to Petrosyan, efforts are being made to show major rugby
    competitions, including the World Cup next year, on Armenian television. `In
    that case more people will be able to appreciate the whole beauty and dynamics
    of this game,' he says.

    Petrosyan also advocates rugby as a game to be included in the so-called list
    of army and police sports.

    `Unfortunately, the army, police, and security services in Armenia don't care
    about rugby. However, rugby is a sport that requires players to have good
    physique and to display endurance, agility, vigor, team spirit, fighting
    skills and a certain set of moral qualities. This makes rugby popular among
    army and police structures in many countries,' he says.

    Armenia's next opponents in FIRA-AER Division B are the national teams of
    Slovenia, Hungary, and Lithuania. Its next home match will be against Slovenia
    on May 13. The Rugby Federation is currently seeking sponsorship for the
    national team to play its home matches in Armenia.

    Matches:
    Hungary v Armenia (April 29, 2006);
    Armenia v Slovenia (May 13, 2006);
    Lithuania v Armenia (June 4, 2006).



    BOLLY HYE: INDIAN DREAM FACTORY PLANS FILM IN ARMENIA

    By Julia Hakobyan
    ArmeniaNow reporter

    A well known Indian film director plans to bring Bollywood to Armenia.

    Mukesh Bhatt says that he is so captivated by Armenia's picturesque gorges and
    alpine vistas that he intends to shoot a movie here.

    He arrived in Armenia with a group of Indian businessmen to take part in the
    Armenian-Indian business forum. Bhatt says friends and colleagues in India had
    advised him to visit Armenia and upon arrival he feels he has found a unique
    atmosphere.

    `I found something very valuable- a devotion to traditions and goodwill to
    other nations,' says Bhatt in a press conference this week.

    Bhatt, who has produced 45 films in Bollywood, the Indian Hollywood, plans to
    start filming in Armenia next year. He says that the movie will be a love
    story, a favorite theme of Bollywood.

    He does not rule out casting Armenian actors in the film, which he assures
    will attract a flow of tourists to the country. He reminded his audience of a
    popular saying in India: `Tourism follows wherever Bollywood goes.'

    Indian movies were very popular in Armenia during Soviet times, when they were
    shown as a result of the good political and cultural relations between Soviet
    and Indian authorities. Now Bollywood produces some 1,000 movies a year, with
    some gaining popularity also in the West.

    Armenian Deputy Foreign Minister Armen Baiburdyan shares the Indian
    filmmaker's opinion about the possibility of Bollywood boosting tourism in
    Armenia. Taking into account that India's population is about 1.1 billion
    people, and that another billion in the world are fans of Indian movies, he
    says there are real prospects for a movie made in Armenia to draw tourists to
    the country to see it themselves.

    The possibility of boosting tourism in Armenia through cinematography was
    raised earlier in March during a press conference held by the new owners and
    directors of HyeFilm, the Armenian movie company. It was privatized last year
    by the Cafesjian Foundation, which promised to invest $20 million over ten
    years to revive film production.

    Ruben Gevorgyants, chairman of the Armenian Union of Cinematographers and the
    new chairman of HyeFilm says he welcomes his Indian counterpart.

    `We discussed with Indian colleagues their idea of shooting a movie in
    Armenia. Making movies in other countries' studios is widely practiced all
    over the world and we will be glad if our studio and country attracts
    international film directors,' Gevorgyants told ArmeniaNow.

    `HyeFilm has already got experience of cooperating with Russian and Iranian
    film directors, who have shot movies in Armenia.'

    Last year, HyeFilm's new directors told journalists that they were negotiating
    with German investors over the possibility of a joint project to make a film
    of `Forty Days of Musa Dagh', the novel by the Austrian writer Franz Werfel
    about the Armenian Genocide in Ottoman Turkey.

    The budget was supposed to be about $35 million. But Gevorgyants told
    ArmeniaNow that, so far, the project is not ready to proceed, and it is
    possible that the Bollywood company will become the first international studio
    to work with the revived HyeFilm.

    The Armenian-Indian business forum was organized by the Armenian Ministry of
    Foreign Affairs and the Armenian Development Agency. It brought to Yerevan 17
    representatives of leading Indian industries, including diamonds, IT,
    pharmaceuticals and metallurgy, in search of better relations with Armenian
    partners.

    Currently, trade turnover between Armenia and India is worth only about $15
    million, but officials of both countries say this has the potential to at
    least double. Besides trade, India and Armenia cooperate in the spheres of
    education, science and culture.

    The expansion of economic cooperation will be discussed at a sitting of the
    Armenian-Indian Intergovernmental Commission for Economic Development to be
    held in Yerevan this year.

    Meanwhile, Indian businessmen are concerned only by the lack of a direct
    flight from India to Armenia. The Armenian authorities promised to promote the
    opening of a service between Delhi and Yerevan soon.

    SPORT ROUNDUP: GYMNASTS END A 20-YEAR MEDAL DROUGHT

    By Suren Musayelyan
    ArmeniaNow sports reporter

    GYMNASTICS

    Armenia had its last medal-winning gymnasts in major international
    competitions in the early 1980s (Edward Azaryan, Artur Hakobyan), at about the
    time when Harutyun Merdinyan was born. This year, the 21-year-old gymnast from
    Yerevan and his teammates have ended this barren period with medals at two
    World Cup venues, in Iran and in France.

    Merdinyan won silver in the season's second World Cup tournament in Lyon,
    France (March 18-19) that drew nearly all of today's strongest gymnasts. He
    ranked second in the pommel horse event behind Romania's Ilie-Daniel Popescu.

    Earlier this month, in Tehran, Merdinyan won gold for the pommel horse. Vahagn
    Stepanyan, 22, from Yerevan, came 2nd in this event and on the floor and 3rd
    on the rings and parallel bars.

    Armenia's Gymnastic Federation Secretary General, Garnik Saroyan, told Hayots
    Ashkharh daily that Stepanyan missed the Lyon competition because of military
    duty in the Armenian army. But he adds that both athletes are getting ready
    for the European championships in Greece in May.

    A1 Plus quoted Armenia's legendary gymnast Albert Azaryan, now President of
    the Gymnastics Federation, as saying of the result in France: `We have been
    waiting for this success for a long time. We have won medals after our sport
    school was recently fitted out with new equipment to international standards.'

    WEIGHTLIFTING

    Australia's Aleksan Karapetyan, affectionately dubbed the Big Gorilla, and
    successfully defended his Commonwealth Games 94 kg weightlifting title in
    Melbourne on Tuesday, March 21, Agence-France Presse reports.

    Karapetyan, born in Armenia, totaled 350 kg with his closest rival,
    Australia's Simon Heffernan, lifting 332kg. Scotland's Thomas Yule took the
    bronze medal with 326 kg.

    `My father and son were watching so winning in front of them felt great,' the
    35-year-old said afterwards. `I had promised my son that I would win gold.'

    The veteran lifter has yet to make up his mind whether to go for a third
    successive gold at the next Games in New Delhi in 2010.

    `If I am not injured then maybe I will compete in 2010. But at the moment I am
    just happy to have given my country a gold medal,' Karapetyan said.

    FOOTBALL

    The Armenian national team lost to 3-1 to Germany's U-21 side in a friendly in
    the German town of Alhen on Tuesday, March 21. Aram Hakobyan opened the score
    for Armenia early in the first half, but the Germans equalized before half
    time, then scored twice in the second half.

    Armenia did not play its full-strength side in the match. The Football
    Federation of Armenia explained that footballers based in Armenia were not in
    sufficiently good shape for the game, since the national championships gets
    underway only in April.

    This is Armenia's third straight defeat this season following losses to
    Romania and Cyprus, both by 0-2, in an international tournament in Cyprus last
    month. Meanwhile, before Armenia left for Germany, the Football Federation
    officially confirmed Dutch trainer Henk Wisman in his position as head coach.

    According to the FIFA World Rankings for March, Armenia is in 109th place,
    between Thailand and Indonesia, among 205 listed nations, slipping back one
    position from February. For full rankings, visit
    http://www.fifa.com/en/mens/statistics/index/0,25 48,All-Mar-2006,00.html

    (Source: the Football Federation of Armenia)

    CHESS

    Armenia's grandmaster Levon Aronyan is sharing the fifth spot with three chess-
    players in the continuing 15th Amber Rapid and Blindfold Chess Tournament at
    the Fairmont Monte Carlo Hotel in Monaco, which runs from March 18-30. After
    five rounds, he has 5 points and is fifth among 12 chessmen together with
    Alexander Grischuk (Russia), Peter Heine Nielsen (Denmark) and Veselin Topalov
    (Bulgaria), a point behind the leader, Hungary's Peter Leko (Aronyan is 4th in
    blindfold chess with 2.5 points, and shares 5th place with three other chess-
    players with 2.5 points in rapid). In previous rounds, in rapid, he beat
    Holland's Loek Van Wely (with white), drew with Bulgaria's Veselin Topalov
    (with black), beat Hungary's Peter Leko (with white), lost to Denmark's Peter
    Heine Nielsen (with black) and lost to Ukraine's Vassily Ivanchuk (with
    white); in blind, Aronyan lost to Van Wely (with black), beat Topalov (with
    white), drew with Leko (with black) and with Nielsen (with white), and drew
    with Ivanchuk (with black).

    In Round Six Aronyan plays Francisco Vallejo from Spain with black in blind
    and with white in rapid. For more news and results visit the Armenian Chess
    Federation's website: www.armchess.am or the tournament's official website:
    http://amber.quinsy.net

    Meanwhile, the leaders in the ongoing Armenian championship after seven rounds
    are Artashes Minasyan (5.5 points) among men and Nelli Aghinyan (6 points)
    among women.

    Ten chess-players are participating in the men's championships, of whom seven
    are grandmasters. A1 Plus reports that the winner will receive 1.5 million
    drams (about $3,300), with 900,000 and 500,000 drams respectively for second
    and third. The champion will be included in Armenia's national team for this
    year's Chess Olympiad in Turin, Italy.

    The women's championship also has ten competitors and the winner will receive
    300,000 drams.

    FIGURE-SKATING

    Armenia's ice-dancing pair Anastasia Grebenkina and Vazgen Azroyan finished
    25th among 30 participants in the World Championships in Calgary, Canada in
    the compulsory dance event on Tuesday, after which the Armenian pair withdrew
    from further contest and was not among participants in the original dance
    program on Thursday. For all results and standings visit the official website
    of the 2006 World Figure Skating Championships at
    http://www.isufs.org/results/wc2006/
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