AN UNDERCLASS EMERGES IN POST-SOVIET ARMENIA

Text and photographs by Onnik James Krikorian

YEREVAN, Armenia — For many visitors to Armenia, the center of the capital resembles almost any other city in Europe. As in Baku and Tbilisi, new hotels, restaurants and boutiques have sprung up where once stood communal markets and gray, drab shops selling wares that the majority could afford.

But travel just ten minutes from the city center and it’s as if you’ve entered another world. Roads have deteriorated, buildings are in disrepair and some have even collapsed. And although the center of the city is illuminated by hundreds of neon signs and billboards when the sun goes down, the rest of the capital instead descends into darkness. Poverty is widespread.

Shengavit, Yerevan © Onnik James Krikorian 2003

According to official government statistics, nearly half the population lives below the national poverty line with thirteen percent living in extreme poverty. In 2002, salaries averaged just $50 a month while pensions were even lower at $10. According to the National Statistics Service of the Republic of Armenia, seventy percent of the population lives on a staple diet of bread, potatoes and macaroni.

As a result, the United Nations concludes that the issue of survival is still vital for many Armenians.

“When we talk about poverty in Armenia,” says Ashot Yesayan, First Deputy Minister at the Ministry of Social Security, “we are talking about people who cannot even afford to eat. Among potential claimants [for social benefits] are families with young children who have no money for even bread.”

Living on the Edge

In a small room of a derelict house situated in Agarak, half an hour away from Yerevan, one such family burns plastic and rubber to stay warm during the winter months. The walls of the room should be white but, like the three children that resemble paupers from a Dickensian novel, they are black and covered in soot.

A social worker stands calmly as the children’s uncle articulates his anger. The Government’s National Commission for Minors has decided that the children must be removed for their own safety and placed in a Children’s Home. An international organization has been called in to do the dirty work for them.

Without the children, the family will find it impossible to survive. Every day, they beg for scraps and change in the nearby village. Faced with the prospect of his only source of income being taken away, the uncle waves a knife in the air before emotion finally overcomes him. His legs give way and he collapses into a heap on the floor.

Families like this are representative of the poorest of the poor in Armenia. They are unable to feed or clothe themselves; their children rarely attend school and in some cases, are not even officially registered as having been born. With no official documents, they are unable to receive social benefits or medical assistance.

Agarak, Armenia © Onnik James Krikorian 2003

An underclass is forming in Armenia, a world away from the image that the Government would like to portray to its large and influential Diaspora. It is, however, one closer to the reality than that depicted in a hundred coffee-table books and postcards of monasteries and churches photographed against scenic landscapes.

Some even rationalize the situation by arguing that conditions are only bad in the regions of the Republic but there are just as serious concerns with poverty in the cities. In fact, the United Nations considers that urban poverty can be far more desperate than that which faces villagers who can at least live off the land.

In Erebuni, one of the capital’s poorest residential districts, approximately two hundred families inhabit a dilapidated hostel complex that once accommodated workers from the nearby chemical factory. The condition of the building should be enough to raise alarm in most civilized countries but the local council says that it is none of their concern. There are no windows left on the stairwell now exposed to the elements, and the elevators no longer work after residents cannibalized their innards long ago.

Yevgenia with Isabella, Erebuni, Yerevan, Armenia. Isabella died a week later © Onnik James Krikorian 2003

A four year old child pushed another on this stairwell last summer and one and half year old Isabella fell through a hole in the railings seven floors to her death. Her mother, Yevgenia, shrugs off her loss although from time to time, tears still swell in her eyes when she remembers.

Yevgenia has four other children to bring up in two tiny rooms furnished only by three rusting, metal bed frames and a divan covered with rags that serve as bedclothes.

They’ve lived in this apartment for over a decade now and don’t even have running water. Her children instead collect water from those more fortunate living below.

Now, her children no longer beg on the streets after Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) included them in their Prevention program but that is not to say that their situation has improved. Somewhat ironically, although most of the inhabitants of the hostel are living in abject poverty, only two fall within the remit of the international medical organization.

“I agree that many families in this building live in very difficult conditions,” admits Samuel Hanryon, MSF’s former Country Director, “but their situation is not the same. For example, we can only work with two of these families because there is a problem with violence. The needs are enormous in Armenia but we are not the Government…”

Which is probably just as well.

Across the road, two former officials have erected large and opulent mansions, an arrogant display of wealth to contrast against the extreme poverty opposite.

Children in a Difficult Situation

Two floors up, a father of six removes copper wire from electrical appliances and automobile parts to sell for a few hundred drams. Like Yevgenia, Hampartsum Grigorian’s family is also included in MSF’s Prevention Program but their situation could be considered even worse.

Hampartsum’s only son is in prison for theft after he stole in order to buy food for the family but unlike those in government who are believed to have stolen significantly more, the courts threw the book at him. Recently, Hampartsum’s son wrote a letter to his father. He can be released from prison if he pays $100. For Hampartsum, however, it might as well be $100,000.

Erebuni, Armenia © Onnik James Krikorian 2003

Last September, his daughter, Gohar, became the face on hundreds of posters that were displayed throughout Yerevan highlighting the plight of vulnerable children in Armenia. “I want to live with my family,” read the poster. Now, Gohar and two of her four sisters are temporarily residing in a Children’s Home in Gyumri.

And to make matters worse, Hampartsum’s eldest daughter lives with her grandmother, unwilling to tolerate her father’s drinking. When Hampartsum was supplied with a bag of cement to fix up his apartment he allegedly sold it in order to buy vodka. In and out of hospital for alcoholism, when he drinks, he beats his wife.

But Hampartsum is not a bad man; it’s just that times are hard. His wife found work in a local kiosk but left after three days when the owner refused to pay her the 3,000 drams ($6) she was owed. Meanwhile both Margarita and her husband can’t even scrape 500 drams together to pay for the photographs required for their passport applications.

They’re not planning to leave the country, of course; just that they need some official papers to receive benefits and other assistance.

Zarik Hakobyan, a 44-year-old Tuberculosis sufferer, Erebuni, Yerevan, Armenia. She died a month later
© Onnik James Krikorian 2003

But although journalists, international organizations and film crews visit the families living in this hostel on a regular basis and seemingly with good intentions, everyone complains that nothing changes.

Perhaps they have a point.

Although the Armenian Government finalized its long awaited Poverty Reduction Strategy Paper (PRSP) in August 2003, it will take until 2015 before poverty in Armenia is reduced to the post-earthquake 1989 level of twenty percent. But at least the World Bank and the United Nations consider that such goals are achievable.

Key to the success of the PRSP will be increasing social benefits and salaries while waging an effective struggle against endemic corruption and a shadow economy that by some estimates accounts for the lion’s share of all business in the Republic.


First published in The Armenian Weekly, 2003. 

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