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The National Womb

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  • The National Womb

    New York Times
    Dec 10 2011


    The National Womb

    By ANASTASIA TAYLOR-LIND
    Published: December 10, 2011

    IN 2008, the de facto government in Nagorno-Karabakh, a disputed
    region in the southern Caucasus, introduced a `birth encouragement
    program,' which distributes cash payments to newlyweds for each
    newborn, with the aim of repopulating the region more than a decade
    after a devastating war.

    The conflict started in 1988 and escalated into full-scale war when
    the Soviet Union collapsed in 1991 and Nagorno-Karabakh's ethnic
    Armenians went to war with Azerbaijan, with backing from neighboring
    Armenia. The war left 65,000 ethnic Armenians and 40,000 ethnic Azeris
    displaced. The Muslim Azeri population never returned, and neither did
    many of the Armenians who had fled. While a cease-fire was declared in
    May 1994 and the violence abated, there has not yet been a peace
    settlement between Armenia and Azerbaijan.

    On Sept. 2, Nagorno-Karabakh celebrated 20 years of independence,
    though it remains unrecognized by the international community. Life is
    not easy in the republic. Unemployment is high, salaries are low,
    opportunities are few; the young continue to leave in search of better
    futures abroad.

    Since its introduction four years ago, the `birth encouragement
    program' has been credited for an increase in births, to 2,694 in 2010
    from 2,145 in 2007. The program pays each couple about $780 at their
    wedding, and then an additional $260 for the first baby born, $520 for
    the second, $1,300 for the third and $1,820 for the fourth. Families
    with six or more children under the age of 18 are given a house. These
    payments are quite substantial in a region where the average monthly
    salary is $50.

    Payments are being made efficiently, and the support is accessible to
    everyone. All of those I spoke to seemed happy and grateful for the
    money. However, there are questions, yet to be answered, about the
    long-term effects of encouraging so many young women to become
    mothers. In a region as economically deprived as Nagorno-Karabakh, is
    the solution simply to increase the birthrate? Without first improving
    education, infrastructure and employment opportunities for future
    generations, and raising the standard of living, the children of
    today's baby boom may grow up to leave in search of better lives
    abroad, just like the youths of today.

    Anastasia Taylor-Lind, a photojournalist based in London, is a member
    of the VII photo agency.

    http://www.nytimes.com/2011/12/11/opinion/sunday/the-national-womb.html

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