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  • Armenian-Turkish Cooperation: The Trafficking Of Armenian Women To A

    ARMENIAN-TURKISH COOPERATION: THE TRAFFICKING OF ARMENIAN WOMEN TO ANTALYA
    Ararat Davtyan

    http://hetq.am/en/hetq/laura-gagik/
    2009/ 08/24 | 16:21

    Feature Stories

    Laura Azaryan left for Turkey alone in 2001. There she married a
    Turkish man Oumit Ramazan Poujlu. In 2008, she telephoned her brother,
    Gagik Karapetyan and told him that they owned a casino in Turkey. She
    made a proposal to her brother; that he locate young, attractive
    girls in Armenia and send them to the casino to "wait on tables".

    Gagik, comprehending what his sister and her husband had in mind, the
    nefarious exploitation of the girls once they arrived, nevertheless
    gave his verbal consent to the plan.

    This is part of the descriptive file in the criminal case that has
    been launched against Laura and Gagik. The case is now being heard
    in the Aragatzotn Regional Court, Judge Souren Mnoyan presiding.

    Gagik Karapetyan, in his preliminary testimony, noted that after many
    years of living in Ukraine he moved back to Armenia in February,
    2008. Two months later his sister in Turkey made the proposal to
    round up girls in Armenia. He says that he told his sister that
    he didn't know where to look. His sister was persistent and Gagik,
    feeling ashamed, sought the assistance of Armineh, a family in-law.

    "It was May of last year. One day Gagik came to our house and said
    that his brother Roubo had opened a restaurant in the Ukraine. Gagik
    said that if he could find 4-5 good workers he'd turn the place into
    an Armenian restaurant and it would be a success. I told him it was
    great news and that I'd go as well," 51 year-old Armineh stated in
    court. It was through Armineh that Gagik met with 49 year-old Rima,
    who was supposed to work as a cleaner.

    "A day later Gagik said that we have to leave for Turkey; that
    his sister had a house and casino there where we could work. I was
    supposed to work in the bar as a cashier for $500 a month. Rima would
    be a dishwasher. This Gagik was a relation I trusted him. We left
    for Turkey," Armineh continues.

    Gagik paid for all the expenses. On May 31, 2008, he, along with
    Armineh and Rima, boarded a bus for Trabzon. From there they would
    travel to Antalya.

    "Laura and her Turkish husband were there to greet us when we
    arrived. They were very nice and hospitable. They took us to the
    sea-side and showed us around the town. Ten days later however,
    I had to return to Armenia to take care of some matters. Before I
    left I had asked Laura several times what bar would we be working
    at and why they hadn't shown us the place. Laura told me that the
    casino was quite far from where we were staying; that we'd start to
    work after I returned from Armenia," recounts Armineh.

    In her court testimony, Laura claims that she made no such proposal
    to her brother and she was quite surprised when he arrived in Turkey,
    let alone accompanied by two women.

    "Armineh is a relation but Rima was a total stranger. Armineh told me
    that Rima owed her $200 and asked if she could work a bit and make
    some money to pay off the debt. I told Armineh that Rima was sickly
    and that she couldn't work in the bar. Armineh persisted however
    and being a relation, I couldn't refuse. I told Armineh that Rima
    could stay and work sorting fruit in a factory we'd be opening in
    September. She could work and pay off the debt," Laura said.

    All the while, Rima told the court that after Armineh had left for
    Armenia, Laura had suggested that she work in their house for $300
    a month. "I did the laundry, the dishes and cleaned the house. I did
    it all. I worked there for six months but never got paid," says Rima.

    According to the criminal case file, when Laura found out that Rima's
    sister had two young, attractive daughters, she, along with her
    brother Gagik and husband Oumit, traveled to Armenia in June 2008
    to recruit the girls and that it was through Armineh that they got
    acquainted with 20 year-old Irina and 18 year-old Nvard.

    "Laura was trying to convince me and my sister to go to Turkey. She
    would always point out the poor living conditions here in
    Armenia. She'd always say how pretty I was; trying to butter me
    up. I had just graduated from high school and still didn't have a
    passport. Laura told me not to fret; that she'd wait for as long as
    possible. I turned her down but my sister was naïve. She trusted
    Laura and left," Nvard told the court examiner.

    "We really had a hard time back then. We had a $1,200 debt to pay
    off. I was studying in one of the colleges in Yerevan. It was the
    summer vacation, so I decided to go to Turkey for two months," says
    Irina, "Laura said we'd get paid $500 a month waiting tables in the
    bar, handing out tea. She even promised that I could return the next
    day if things didn't work out. Laura told my mom that she'd take care
    of me like her own child."

    Irina also tended to believe in Laura since she got a phone call from
    her Aunt Rima in Turkey, saying that everything was OK and that there
    was nothing to worry about.

    During questioning in court, Rima claimed that every time she made
    a phone call Gagik was watching over her like a hawk and that she
    couldn't utter a word about what was really happening. Rima also
    claimed that Gagik would slip her some pills, allegedly headache
    medicine, that would leave her in a "drunken stupor".

    Nuneh, born in 1985, also believed Laura's promises of easy money and
    a better life in Turkey. Nuneh, along with Irina, left for Antalya
    in the company of Oumit Poujlu on August 8, 2008. Laura, on the other
    hand, remained in Armenia. On her return to Armenia, the Turkish border
    guards noticed that her visa had expired so they deported her. In order
    that she could once again enter Turkey she entered into a sham marriage
    with a man named Azaryan and officially had her last name changed.

    Irina recounts, "Laura and Oumit took care of the visas and travel
    expenses. After arriving in Antalya they treated us well for the first
    four days; they showed us the sites, the sea. Later they invited us
    out to a casino-bar, which was really a night club. We were seated
    around a large table in the presence of some scantily clad older
    Turkish women. They were there to entertain the customers. Oumit and
    Gagik told us right there that we'd be doing the same thing."

    The criminal case file reads, "...threatening that they would leave
    them alone, hungry and without passports in a foreign land, depriving
    them of freedom of movement and any possibility to return to Armenia,
    Oumit Poujlu and Gagik Karapetyan, in prior agreement with Laura
    Azaryan, forced the girls to perform belly dances and perform the
    wishes of clients; to sit on their laps, allow them to be kissed
    and to place their hands on intimate body parts. This took place
    in the "Melody" and "Kartila" night casino-bars in Antalya. These
    establishments belonged to others."

    "...There was no other alternative. We were forced to work in these
    bars and entertain the clients, however disgusting the work. We get
    the clients to drink up. The daily minimum we'd make off the drinks
    was about $200. It all went to Oumit and Gagik. We never got paid a
    dime. They'd even get angry when the daily take was low."

    Nuneh testified in court that, "We'd eat once a day and sleep on the
    floor. They generally wouldn't let us leave the house, fearing that
    we'd get picked up by the police and give them away. They'd lock us
    inside the house and take us to the bar by car."

    "You can't imagine the state I was in. I held back my tears and put on
    a fake smile for the customers; so that they wouldn't complain. The bar
    owners weren't satisfied with how Rima was working. Gagik then began
    to threaten me and even slapped me around a few times, saying I wasn't
    pulling my weight and wouldn't get anything to eat. We showered with
    cold water. Gagik said heating the water used up too much electricity.

    Irina remembers that, "From day one Gagik tried to butter me up, saying
    that he was in love with me. He even proposed that we live together
    and said that if I didn't agree to marry him he'd throw me from the
    10th floor...They had taken my passport and only handed it back when I
    went to work. They said it was just in case authorities from Istanbul
    came. If only just one policeman had shown up. But no one ever came."

    During court interrogation Gagik stated, "I'm a 40 year-old man and
    never in my life would I allow myself to do such things. Irina didn't
    get along with me because I would make comments about her cleaning." He
    added that he proposed marriage as a joke. Laura, Gagik's sister,
    testified that she was in Armenia and knew nothing about what was
    going on.

    "I telephoned my husband and asked if the girls had adapted and if
    they were all-right. He said they were OK. They travelled around
    there for more than a week. I gave them a place to stay. I'm not the
    person that usually does that. I'm also upset that my husband took
    the girls to the sea-side. I asked my husband on the phone whether
    he wasn't embarrassed of what the neighbors would say; that he left
    our building with these girls in tow and drove off to the beach? I
    told him to send them back to Armenia immediately," Laura testified,
    arguing her innocence in the matter and denying any involvement in
    any sexual exploitation of the girls.

    "About 10-15 days after the girls left, Irina secretly called me from
    Turkey and said that Laura had tricked them and that they were engaged
    in some pretty 'inappropriate' work, recounts Armineh, who is included
    in the case as a witness. "I immediately went to see Laura who said
    nothing of the kind was taking place and that it was all a pack of
    lies. She phoned her husband Oumit and conversed in Turkish with him,
    but I could make out that she was angry with him for giving the girls
    phone access. I directly went to the police and informed them about
    the entire matter."

    According to the time frame presented by Armineh, the police had been
    informed about Laura and her Turkish operation no later than August
    25, 2008. However, on September 3, 2008, she was able to cross the
    Armenian border at Bagratashen and make her way to Batum. Her Turkish
    husband Oumit was waiting for her there and for the "cargo" she was
    bringing - Lilit, born in 1979, and her 8 year-old daughter.
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