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TOL: Dark-Adapted Eyes

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  • TOL: Dark-Adapted Eyes

    DARK-ADAPTED EYES
    by Arpi Harutyunyan

    Transitions Online
    April 11 2008
    Czech Republic

    In a disputed corner of the Caucasus, some settlers have given up
    much of the modern world, including electricity, to stake a claim to
    a territory.

    This is the 10th in a series of articles from the TOL Special Report:
    Energy.

    Also see: THE BALANCE OF POWER

    IN DISPUTED TERRITORY BETWEEN ARMENIA AND AZERBAIJAN | Samvel
    Stepanyan, his brother, and their families - nearly a dozen people in
    all -- are the lone residents of Martiros, a village just outside the
    disputed territory of Nagorno-Karabakh. In this mountainous enclave,
    settled primarily by Armenians but surrounded by Azerbaijan and
    claimed by both countries, they live as people lived a century ago.

    Martiros, like many nearby villages, has been without electricity
    since the brothers brought their families here 10 years ago. At night
    they see by the light of an oil lamp or the fire in the stove, which
    they light with wood from nearby forests.

    They have no television, no radio, no computer, no refrigerator.

    Stepanyan's mother explains that the families stew their food,
    often making ghavurma, a dish of meat stewed in oil, so that it does
    not spoil.

    Stepanyan makes his living by farming and beekeeping. He used to
    have 50 hives, but this year he has double that. "I've managed to
    get about a ton of honey this time. It was a good year," he says. He
    sells the honey in Armenia, traveling along the single road that
    links that country with Nagorno-Karabakh, a passage that was won in
    the 1991-1994 war with Azerbaijan.

    Stepanyan's wife and two children live here only part of the time,
    staying in Armenia during the school term. Still, he says, life isn't
    so bad. "I feel very good here." It's only electricity that's lacking,
    he says.

    Martiros is one of about 20 powerless villages, many with just two or
    three families, here and in Nagorno-Karabakh. They account for about
    10 percent of the population of this disputed territory, about 340
    kilometers from Yerevan.

    Nagorno-Karabakh, populated largely by ethnic Armenians, declared
    itself an independent republic in 1991. No country, including
    Armenia, has recognized it. The settlements are part of an effort
    by the government of Nagorno-Karabakh to establish population in the
    district of Lachin, known as Kashatagh in Armenian, which was taken in
    the war with Azerbaijan and which links Nagorno-Karabakh and Armenia.

    Settlers received incentives to move there, including free housing,
    cows, and - where available - electricity. Many of the settlers come
    from Armenia but others are refugees, having been driven out of their
    homes in Azerbaijan.

    Lachin/Kashatagh is one of seven districts surrounding Nagorno-Karabakh
    that an international peace plan envisions being returned to Azerbaijan
    after the status of Nagorno-Karabakh is settled. No one has figured
    out when or how that will happen, however.

    The local government estimates that it will take about $700,000 to
    $800,000 this year to bring electricity to eight to 10 villages.

    Ernest Ghevondyan, the area's top administrator, has no firm data
    on the number of people who have left the region because of this
    problem, but said at a recent press conference, "In at least 40
    percent of cases people have left the settlements because of the lack
    of electric power."

    Stepanyan, 32, was the first settler in his village. He insists
    he will stay, even as the rest of the pioneers have given up. "Six
    families have lived for different periods in the village within the
    last 10 years, but we're the only ones left," he says, recalling his
    neighbors with a mix of warmth and regret.

    BEAUTIFUL ISOLATION

    It may be a difficult life, but the surroundings offer their own
    rewards. The 50-kilometer road from the seat of the local government,
    the town of Lachin/Berdzor, to Stepanyan's village crosses mountains,
    woods, and gorges. The road is rough, often impassable in winter,
    and an off-road vehicle is the best way to get around.

    As the route climbs the mountains, a panorama of vibrant greens and
    yellows opens up. Until, of course, evening - and unbroken darkness
    - falls.

    Nearby, in the village of Verishen, dim light beams out at night from
    the houses of the two families who live here, cut off from the world.

    Mobile phones don't work in Verishen.

    Still, inside Artak Hovhannisyan's house, a small hut made of
    wooden logs with a gray plastered interior, a light bulb hangs from
    the ceiling. Attached via a wire to an accumulator - a device for
    storing electrical energy - the bulb provides barely enough light to
    distinguish other people's faces. From the corner of the room comes
    the sound of music as Artak's two teenage sons, Mikayel and Gor,
    listen the broadcast of a Karabakhi radio station. "There are only
    few radio stations you can listen to here. We get news from there,
    but we always try to save the energy, because there's no other way
    to recharge the batteries except the sun. And the sun isn't always
    bright enough," Gor says.

    In addition to their two sons, Artak and his wife, Asya, have a
    daughter, Ani, who is studying in Yerevan. Asya says Ani reads books
    day and night. "She would read secretly by the light of vegetable oil
    light at night. She loves languages, and now she's studying several."

    Artak adds proudly, "She wants to learn Chinese," vowing to do
    everything he can to make Ani's dream comes true.

    On the road outside, some of Artak's neighbors had taken the
    opportunity of a stranger's visit to recount a time years ago when
    cars were a rarity in this small gorge and Artak carried a sack of
    flour from Lachin/Berdzor to the village on his back. "It took me
    two days, because crossing about 45 kilometers with a heavy sack like
    that wasn't an easy thing," he says later, when reminded of it. "But
    what could I do? We only had enough flour left for two days."

    In the only other villager's house, a lamp burns. Karen Badalyan
    came to Verishen nine years ago - alone at first, then bringing
    his parents. He says life here suits him. He married a woman from a
    neighboring village and they now have two daughters, Hasmik, 6 and
    Lilit, 4. Hasmik attends school in the nearby village of Shalua.

    "This is my village. I love it very much," Hasmik declares.

    "Everything is good here. I love the air here, the wind. ... In the
    summer when it's hot I take my bike and go stand in the wind - it's
    so cool," she says.

    "Here it's better than in Yerevan. I can't sleep because of the noise
    of the cars when I go see my grandmother in Yerevan," Hasmik says,
    seeming not to miss conveniences like televisions or computers. Lilit
    had never seen a camera before visitors showed up with one.

    'THIS IS THE HOMELAND'

    Ofelya Manukyan opens the gate to her garden and invites a visitor
    in for coffee. At 43, she is thin and wrinkled, looking years older
    after a hardscrabble life. After inquiring after the visitor, she
    happily relays the news that last year another family had moved into
    her village, Himnashen, several kilometers from Verishen.

    "We get along; we keep animals, grow crops," Manukyan says. The family,
    Manukyan, her husband, and five of her seven children - two sons are
    in the army - live on about 20,000 to 25,000 drams ($65 to $80) per
    month. They raise sheep and cows and grow vegetables. The family shops
    in Lachin/Berdzor, about 45 kilometers away. "We buy food for 10 days
    at a time," Manukyan says. "We've adjusted ourselves to everything
    -- what else can we do? But we want our children to live properly,
    have light, and watch TV."

    Next door, Yura Khachatryan's family moved to Himnashen nine years
    ago. One of their three sons married here and has a child. The people
    here acknowledge that life in villages is difficult and boring,
    especially when there is no electricity. But they persevere.

    "This land needs to be tended," Khachatryan says. "My children have
    to plant trees, harvest crops, and have children here to understand
    this is the homeland and it needs to be kept," Khachatryan says,
    switching on the oil lamp with care.

    Meanwhile, a few kilometers away, two families create a lonely
    outpost in the village of Vazgashen. Among the residents is Samvel
    Gyulzadyan an architect who, driven to hold on to the land, moved
    here from Yerevan.

    "We came here with friends in 1994," he says. "There was nothing
    in the ruined houses, neither windows, nor doors. We began to build
    everything gradually, grow vegetables." The villagers say the houses
    were left by fleeing Armenians and Azeris.

    Gyulzadyan no longer practices his profession, and he doesn't know
    if he ever will again. For now, he says he is content with his new
    life, tilling the soil. More than electricity, he says, he and his
    family crave contact with the outside world. "Don't forget, we need
    to talk to you," he says, allowing visitors to take his photograph
    in exchange for the promise of a return visit.

    photo: Villages, still bearing the pock mocks of the Nagorno-Karabakh
    war, have settlers but rarely electricity.

    Arpi Harutyunyan is a reporter for ArmeniaNow, an independent,
    online weekly.
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