PHOTO GALLERIES – ON SITE

Armenia-Azerbaijan Border

NAGORNO KARABAKH 1994

Photographs from an international humanitarian aid mission to the disputed territory of Nagorno Karabakh, a mainly ethnic Armenian populated region situated withing Azerbaijan, in 1994.

ARMENIA PSYCHIATRIC INSTITUTIONS

Psychiatric institutions and dispensaries in Vardenis and Kapan in 2004. Part of a long-term multi-year personal project on social vulnerability in Armenia.

Kharberd

THE CHILDREN OF KHARBERD

Part of a long-term multi-year personal project on social vulnerability, centred on children with mental and physical disabilities in residential care in Armenia in the early 2000s.

POVERTY IN ARMENIA

A long-term multi-year personal project documenting the lives of socially vulnerable families in Armenia in the early 2000s.

LACHIN: LIFE IN NO MAN’S LAND

Documenting the lives of Armenian settlers in the town of Lachin, the crucial artery connecting Armenia with Nagorno Karabakh, in the early 2000s.

Kharberd

CLEARING THE KILLING FIELDS

Following the first Karabakh war, the work of the HALO Trust inc learning the disputed territory of landmines and unexploded ordnance (UXO).

REFUGEES IN ARMENIA

Refugees and Internally Displaced Persons (IDPs) in Armenia.

GEORGIA: INSTITUTIONS 2007

Orphanages and boarding schools in Georgia during the switchover to alternative forms of childcare such as fostering and group homes.

OCCUPIED GORI, GEORGIA 2008

The Russian military occupation of the Georgian city of Gori during the August 2008 August War between Tbilisi and Moscow. 

RECENT PHOTO GALLERIES – OFF SITE

In Georgian Village, Armenians And Azeris Find Common Ground

The Georgian village of Tsopi, located just a few kilometers from the Armenian border, is home to both ethnic Azeris and ethnic Armenians. Although tensions linger between Armenia and Azerbaijan over the Nagorno-Karabakh war of the 1990s, the two groups coexist peacefully in this remote Georgian setting.

First published by RFE/RL, July 2013

Kharberd

Meet The Cross Riders, Georgia’s First Motorcycle Club

They are united by their love of motorcycles, the open road and a lifestyle that embraces freedom above all else. Meet the Cross Riders, Georgia’s first classic motorcycle club. Established two years ago in the capital, Tbilisi, the club reflects the growing popularity of motorcycles in the country. 

First published by RFE/RL, November 2015

 

Georgia: The Street Kids Of Tbilisi

This photo documentary was started in 2013 by Onnik James Krikorian. It grew out of another project documenting the problems of children deprived of parental care and sent to institutions in Armenia and Georgia during the years between 2000 and 2010. Georgia has initiated reforms of its child protection system, but many children still can be found living or working on the streets.

First published by RFE/RL, February 2016

LATEST BLOG POSTS

Nagorno Karabakh: Peace in Sight?

Nagorno Karabakh: Peace in Sight?

True, we’ve been here before with the media reporting that a solution to the conflict between Armenia and Azerbaijan over the disputed territory of Nagorno Karabakh might finally be in sight, but the possibility for peace is once again resurfacing. However, such hopes have always been dashed at the last moment, but what makes the situation different this time round is the active involvement of Russian President Dmitry Medvedev in convening a meeting between his Armenia and Azerbaijani counterparts tomorrow in Moscow. RFE/RL has more.

Georgia Dispatches: The Aftermath

Georgia Dispatches: The Aftermath

With reports that much of Russia’s military presence in Georgia has been withdrawn, reflection on a serious conflict which threatened to ignite the entire South Caucasus is becoming more and more the order of the day. For whatever reasons, and whoever is to blame, the conflict between Russia and Georgia was the most serious for years. Despite Russian claims of thousands dead, hundreds died in South Ossetia and Georgia proper, and tens of thousands lost their homes in military action reminiscent of the ethnic cleansing which devastated the former Yugoslavia in the 1990s.

Neither Peace Nor War

Neither Peace Nor War

Armenians have read a lot about the frozen conflict over the disputed mainly-Armenian populated territory of Nagorno Karabakh, but such articles are usually from partisan sources inside Armenia or in the Diaspora. Seldom does the Armenian press carry impartial and objective reports, and of late there has been some clandestine funding of less than objective articles on the situation in and around Karabakh to serve certain political interests.