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Residents Still Living The Spitak Earthquake

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  • Residents Still Living The Spitak Earthquake

    ARMENIA: RESIDENTS STILL LIVING THE SPITAK EARTHQUAKE

    EurasiaNet.org
    Dec 6 2013

    December 6, 2013 - 3:39am, by Gayane Abrahamyan and Anahit Hayrapetyan

    Twenty-five years ago, a massive earthquake turned northern Armenia
    upside down. Many survivors who still call the area home have had a
    tough time putting the trauma behind them.

    Gyumri, Armenia's second largest city, bore much of the damage on
    December 7, 1988, when a 7.0-Richter-scale earthquake struck the
    region, with the epicenter in Spitak, 52 kilometers to the northeast.

    The quake grabbed headlines worldwide and killed at least 25,000
    people in the region. Thousands more were maimed and hundreds of
    thousands left homeless.

    "The earthquake in Gyumri continues," said City Council member Levon
    Barseghian. "For 25 years, we are living over and over again what
    happened within 41 seconds."

    A stagnant economy, combined with failed governmental promises,
    has hindered the ability of many to rebuild their lives. The city
    has lost nearly half of its population since 1988. Labor migration
    is the main reason why, locals say.

    Today, Gyumri includes new buildings and residential districts, along
    with a Russian military base. Yet, the Shirak Region, of which Gyumri
    is the capital, has the country's highest poverty rate at 46 percent,
    a rate that exceeds that in other regions by at least 11 percent,
    according to official statistics.

    The lingering presence of semi-ruined housing helps make memories
    of the 1988 quake hard to forget. Communist authorities promised to
    restore Gyumri within two years; however, in the three years before
    the Soviet Union collapsed in 1991, the government managed to build
    only 5,628 apartments. Various international and Armenian foundations
    have built 20,770 apartments since 1988, according to official data.

    The Armenian government also has made attempts. In 2009, the state
    launched a new program, which allotted 80 billion drams (some $200
    million) to the construction of more than 2,000 apartments; 433 more
    will be ready next year, officials say.

    Frustration with the slow pace of rebuilding runs bitter and strong
    in Gyumri. Not long after President Serzh Sargsyan first came into
    power in 2008, Prime Minister Tigran Sarksian pledged that housing
    for homeless families in the earthquake-affected zone "will finally
    be resolved by 2013."

    "Where is that ... solution?" mockingly asked 43-year-old Rita Babaian,
    a mother of three who lives in one of the remaining shanties, known
    as domiks.

    Babaian claims that, during one of his campaign stops for the 2013
    presidential vote, President Sargsyan responded to her question that
    the work would take "just a little longer." "A little longer - until
    when? A new apartment comes, or death?" Babaian said.

    The domic shanties, ad hoc housing seemingly assembled from scrap
    metal and other scavenged materials, remain the starkest symbol of
    the quake's legacy. Wrapped in cocoons of smoke from wood-burning
    stoves, Gyumri's numerous shantytowns are estimated to house about
    3.7 percent of the city's 121,500 inhabitants.

    One shanty dweller, 60-year-old Rita Grigorian, says she was promised a
    new, permanent place to live, but that promise has gone unfulfilled for
    25 years and counting. "We have lost hope," said Grigorian, curled up
    in bed from the cold and damp of the temporary, 10-square-meter metal
    shelter in which she lives alone. "When they gave these temporary
    houses, they told us to get along with them for two years."

    Grigorian knows her number for a new residence by heart -- N1112,
    which was supposed to come up for a new flat in 2011. The government
    puts such delays down to technical difficulties.

    "There are currently 433 homeless people on our lists [for housing]
    who have documents [certifying them as earthquake victims], but there
    are 3,500 more not on waiting lists," said Albert Margarian, who
    heads the regional urban development department that is overseeing the
    reconstruction. "Many among them have just returned to Armenia [from
    work abroad] and missed the registration deadlines, many others have
    missing documents. Their housing issue will be solved in the future."

    While the housing muddle may not reflect well on the government,
    officials contend that they have learned the lessons of the 1988
    quake. In rebuilding, new construction regulations should ensure
    that buildings in Gyumri, Spitak and the nearby town of Vanadzor can
    withstand quakes that reach a magnitude of nine on the Richter scale,
    claimed Sergei Nazaretian, an advisor to the director of the northern
    branch of the National Center of Seismic Protection.

    Eighty-eight residential buildings in Gyumri that survived the 1988
    earthquake "are dangerous" and "urgently need fortification," he
    added. The buildings house some 7,000 people, Nazaretian said, but
    no work has been done to strengthen their fortifications since 2007.

    Margarian attributed the delay to a lack of governmental funds.

    Earthquake-safety techniques now are taught in schools, with
    training exercises held on each anniversary of the 1988 quake. Over
    the past two years, the Red Cross also has instructed some 15,000
    schoolchildren and 60,000 residents of Gyumri and 14 nearby villages
    about emergency-response techniques and first-aid skills.

    In Gyumri's shantytowns, though, residents tend to be dismissive
    of safety measures. "Unemployment and poverty are more terrifying"
    than another earthquake, said Babaian. "The earthquake comes and ends
    right away, while, this way, we are slowly dying."

    Editor's Note: Gayane Abrahamyan is a freelance reporter and editor
    in Yerevan.

    Anahit Hayrapetyan is a freelance photojournalist based in Yerevan
    and Berlin.

    http://www.eurasianet.org/node/67839

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