Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

ANKARA: Life Inside Armenia's Fallen City (Gyumri)

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • ANKARA: Life Inside Armenia's Fallen City (Gyumri)

    LIFE INSIDE ARMENIA'S FALLEN CITY

    Journal of Turkish Weekly
    March 25 2015

    Anadolu Agency
    25 March 2015

    Gyumri was once a thriving trading point between east and west. A 1988
    earthquake, poor Soviet rebuilding and a closed border with Turkey
    have kept it in the shadows since then. AA talks to people in Gyumri,
    just 15 minutes from the Turkish border.

    "I don't want Gyumri to be known for this," says Arsen Vardanyan.

    The young man is walking through the dilapidated streets of Armenia's
    second city, Gyumri, a once-renowned town which still bears the scars
    of a devastating earthquake which struck in 1988.

    Arsen, 24, is a law graduate who volunteers with the A. D. Sakharov
    Armenian Human Rights Center.

    Named after the nuclear physicist-turned-human rights activist and
    Soviet dissident, the center is just a 15-minute drive from the Turkish
    border, a frontier which has remained closed for more than 20 years.

    Arsen was born three years after the 6.8 magnitude earthquake which
    killed around 25,000 people and left hundreds of thousands homeless.

    The effect on this ancient city in Armenia's northwest further damaged
    its legacy as a trading point for centuries between east and west.

    Gyumri has seen better times. Once it was home to Armenia's first
    opera house and some of its unique black-and-red limestone buildings
    can still be seen.

    Since then, Soviet planning, the earthquake and the closed border
    have seen Gyumri - a two-hour drive from the capital, Yerevan -
    become resentful of its second-city status.

    Although 27 years have passed since the earthquake and there has
    been some reconstruction, the city - home to around 146,000 people -
    still looks abandoned in parts, with run-down houses and streets.

    Ashot Mirzoyan, a local architect and urban planner, claims that
    late-Soviet plans to reconstruct the city were too costly.

    According to Mirzoyan, who is manager of a NGO called the City Research
    Center, Gyumri's economy is based mainly on trade with Turkey although
    the border has been closed since 1993.

    The Armenian occupation of Nagorno-Karabakh - a disputed territory
    between Azerbaijan and Armenia - led to the closing of the frontier
    with Turkey, which sides with Baku in the drawn-out dispute.

    Although sources differ, Azerbaijani writer Arif Yunusov in 2007 put
    the number of Azerbaijanis killed in the 5-year war at 11,000 people.

    Figures quoted in an Austrian newspaper report in 2013 claim that
    724,000 Azerbaijanis were displaced due to the conflict. Thousands
    of Armenians were also forced to flee their homes.

    Political ties between Ankara and Yerevan remain frozen owing to the
    Karabakh conflict as well as the legacy of killings during the First
    World War, which the Armenian diaspora and government describe as
    "genocide" - a description which Turkey refutes.

    Another Gyumri resident, Harutyan Filyan, sits inside the Cathedral of
    the Holy Mother of God in the city center. Speaking in Turkish he says:
    "We want the opening of the border."

    "We could just cross the border in 15 minutes instead travelling
    around 400 kilometers," he adds.

    According to the 54-year-old, people in Gyumri have an "aggressive"
    mentality; one reason for this is the 1988 earthquake and the other
    are high-profile killings committed by some Russian soldiers based
    in the city.

    Russia has its 102nd Military Base in Gyumri since Armenia's
    independence in 1991. Ostensibly there to protect the Turkish-Armenian
    border, violent incidents have soured relations between local residents
    and the 5,000 or so troops stationed there.

    In January, Valery Permyakov, a Russian conscript, was accused of
    killing seven members of an Armenian family; the shootings triggered
    a huge outcry across the country.

    That was not the first such incident; in 1999 two drunken soldiers
    killed two locals and injured many others when they started shooting
    in the city.

    - Opening the border

    An attempt was made to implement a protocol agreement between Turkey
    and Armenia in October 2009 in Zurich, but this eventually failed.

    The deal would have begun moves to open the border and establish
    official relations.

    Seyran Martirosyan, head of a local human rights center which helps
    Gyumri earthquake victims, says that not too much meaning should be
    read into the protocols.

    "The protocols were the result of the pressure on both sides,"
    Martirosyan says, adding: "The communities should be involved in this
    kind of process and they [negotiators] did not get our opinions."

    Martirosyan believes opening the border would make the city teeming
    once more.

    - Links with Turkey

    An economics professor at Yerevan State University, Tatoul N.

    Manasserian, agrees: "Gyumri will be one of the first cities where
    the effect of opening the border would be most tangible."

    "Traditionally, Gyumri has experience in dealing with Turkey, even
    during Soviet times," he adds.

    According to Manasserian, Turkish companies would invest in the
    construction, food processing and IT sectors. Gyumri already hosts a
    "technopark" free-trade zone for IT start-ups as well as hosting food
    processing industries and construction firms.

    Back in Gyumri, Arsen Vardanyan believes a path which would carry
    Armenia into European Union is "better" and "preferable."

    But, for now, he believes that "one day the border will be opened."

    25 March 2015

    http://www.turkishweekly.net/news/182333/life-inside-armenia-s-fallen-city.html

Working...
X