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  • A Year of Memory and Pain: Servicemen slain in 2012 border ambush re

    A Year of Memory and Pain: Servicemen slain in 2012 border ambush
    remembered in Berd

    http://armenianow.com/society/features/45648/armenia_azerbaijan_border_deadly_violation_anniver sary_servicemen_berd
    FEATURES | 26.04.13 | 13:29


    NAZIK ARMENAKYAN
    ArmeniaNow

    Aram Yesayan's 21-year-old widow Meline Hovhannisyan
    By GOHAR ABRAHAMYAN
    ArmeniaNow reporter

    For a year now two-and-a-half-year-old Luiza has seen her daddy only
    in a photo. The little girl talks to the picture every morning, but
    memories of her father are fading away with each passing day. What
    grows instead is the need for paternal love and a sense of grief for
    the lost parent.

    `My daddy is gone to Yerevan to bring some juice for Luiza,' says the
    little girl as she hugs and kisses the portrait in a black frame.

    Enlarge Photo
    David Abgaryan's 25-year-old widow Asya Badalyan

    Enlarge Photo
    Arshak Nersisyan's mother Svetlana Poghosyan


    Luiza's father, Aram Yesayan, was one of the three servicemen who were
    attacked and killed by a larger group of Azeri commandos in a major
    border violation in April 2012. The attack occurred in the
    northeastern section of the Armenian-Azerbaijani border, not far from
    the town where the contract servicemen's families live.

    Many in this border area are convinced that at the cost of their lives
    25-year-old Aram Yesayan, 28-year-old David Abgaryan and 21-year-old
    Arshak Nersisyan prevented a great tragedy as the heavily armed
    infiltrators could have inflicted many more casualties and losses,
    including on civilians, unless they encountered the Armenian
    servicemen who engaged the enemy.

    The residents of the town of Berd in Armenia's Tavush province,
    serving in the army on a contractual basis, were going up to their
    military outpost for duty on that fateful night.

    Arshak Nersisyan's mother Svetlana Poghosyan tells about the incident
    in which her son was killed.

    `When a hand grenade was hurled at the car Arshak managed to get out
    and start engaging the enemy even though he had no weapon. An
    investigator later said he had been riddled with more than 60 bullets
    below his waist. When his body was found he still had his phone
    switched on, as he had phoned someone to warn of the attack. He had
    stones in his hand as he fought off the armed commandos. But what
    could he have possibly done with those stones?' the 44-year-old woman
    says, adding that ropes, masks and maps had been found at the scene by
    investigators, showing that the passing vehicle with Armenian
    servicemen wasn't the prime target of the attackers.

    `What they had on their mind was not the kids [the servicemen], they
    had come on another mission - either to capture the post or keep the
    village of Aygepar under fire, or enter Movses. They just stumbled
    into the guys... As they say, every cloud has a silver lining,' says the
    mother.

    Arshak got married only five months before he was killed. After a
    two-year compulsory military service he returned to his native Berd
    and enlisted for contract service, which is probably the most popular
    and highest-paid occupation in Armenia's borderline areas.

    His mother says he married a woman he was in love with in December
    2011 and before the woman's parents agreed to a wedding he had to run
    away with her and lived away for a few weeks. `They were a good
    family,' remembers Svetlana Poghosyan as she shows Arshak's room where
    everything remains unmoved since his death.

    The only addition is the black rimmed photographs of Arshak on the
    table that he himself had made. His military uniform and only tuxedo
    that he wore for a prom and later for the wedding are kept with care
    in a wardrobe. Arshak's 20-year-old widow returned to her father's
    house; although she frequently visits her deceased husband's family,
    she cannot speak about him, as she starts choking every time
    overwhelmed by a tide of emotions.

    Elsewhere in this town David Abgaryan's 25-year-old widow Asya
    Badalyan has had both the greatest loss and acquisition of her life
    during the past year.

    `We had been married for six years, but could not conceive a child. He
    was a very good and caring husband. Our only dream was of having a
    baby and when he learned that at last I was pregnant, he said he would
    go for his duty and then return and take me to Yerevan for a checkup.
    He went away never to come back again,' says Asya, who gave birth to a
    baby boy seven months after her husband's death.

    Asya's son was born on December 5, his father's birthday, and she
    named him David, too.

    `I will be both mother and father for David Jr. From now on my life is
    only for him, I will do anything for him to have all he needs, I'll
    always tell him of his hero father,' says the young mother.

    Another young woman, who lost her husband in the Azeri attack last
    year, works at a baker's shop in central Berd where she unsuccessfully
    tries to wrap her pain in the fragrance of pastries. But the place
    keeps constantly reminding her of her Aram, who also used to work
    there.

    It was at this pastry shop that 21-year-old Meline Hovhannisyan and
    her future husband Aram Yesayan met.

    `He was a chef, and I was making pastries. He was six years older than
    me. The first time he saw me he stared at me. He confessed his love to
    me. Then we had a relationship and eventually got married,' remembers
    tearful Meline.

    The red-cheeked, child-like looking woman already lives as a widow
    together with the large family of her late husband.

    `My husband liked my hair long, so I will never cut my hair. He was
    very strict, very jealous, but he was also very kind and exceedingly
    caring. I feel better in my husband's home than at my father's. This
    is my home and my child's home,' says Aram Yesayan's widow, who is
    raising his daughter Luiza today.

    April 27 will see the first anniversary of the three servicemen's
    deaths. Their families, as they have done many times during the year,
    will again walk up to a hilltop cemetery in Berd . . .




    From: A. Papazian
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