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  • They Either Don't Know about Us, or Don't Want to Know

    HETQonline
    They Either Don't Know about Us, or Don't Want to Know
    April 9, 2007
    http://www.hetq.am/eng/society/0704-vardashen .html
    For people residing at 127/2 Gurgen Mahari Street (the former vocational
    culinary school in Vardashen) extreme poverty is all the future offers.
    According to Harutyun Sargsyan, a department head at the Erebuni district
    administration, there are many people like this in their community.
    77-year-old Harutyun Harutyunyan and his wife Shushik live in the kitchen of
    the former cooking school. When they go to bed they cover themselves with
    plastic bags to protect against the rainwater that drips through the
    ceiling. Their possessions consist of what they have been able to gather on
    the streets, since their apartment was robbed several years ago and all
    their bedding and kitchenware were stolen. There is no running water or
    bathroom facilities here. The elderly couple walk on a bare concrete floor
    and sleep with their clothes on.

    Shushik is blind and bedridden and thus unable to do housework. Twice a
    week, every Monday and Wednesday, her husband gets two packets of sour cream
    and two hot dogs from a nearby soup kitchen. On other days their menu
    consists of boiled potatoes and bread. But their greatest cause of sorrow
    and concern is their 35-year-old son Artur's worsening disability. Over the
    last years Artur has lost all movement in his legs. The couple hasn't
    received social allowances for several years now. "What do I know? One day
    they told me that I was not entitled to it and they stopped paying,"
    Harutyun Harutyunyan said hopelessly.
    We were informed by the territorial department of the Erebuni district
    social services that they were no longer eligible for government aid because
    of the recent increase in their pensions - the husband's pension is 14,551
    drams (about $39) and the wife's is 9,441 drams (about $25) per month.
    Department head Siranuysh Poghosyan noted that there were 3,462 aid
    recipients in the Erebuni district and many pensioners had been stricken
    from the lists when their pensions increased by a few hundreds of drams. It
    is more advantageous for the state to show higher pensions than more aid
    recipients.
    "If the people in need are left off the lists we try to help them by other
    means. In many cases, for example, by decisions of the community assistance
    council, once every three months we render them assistance in the form of
    money or foodstuff. But we do not know about them unless they themselves
    come here," Siranuysh Poghosyan said. It is not customary in Armenia for
    social workers to go out looking for these people. If they don't come in
    themselves, it's as if they don't exist.
    The worst problem for the residents of 127/2 Gurgen Mahari Street is the
    miserable state of their housing. Harutyun Sargsyan of the Erebuni District
    Administration notes that this is all that is available; the community has
    no vacant housing resources. "The condominium associations are supposed to
    deal with the improvement of the living conditions in the apartment
    buildings but often they are unable to do it because of a lack of resources.
    In these cases the district administration assists them. I don't know what
    the conditions are like in that particular building is but I assure you that
    there are many buildings in an emergency situation in our community,"
    Sargsyan said.

    "We have written dozens of applications asking them to come and take a look
    but they don't come because they are not interested. If they were they would
    have come and found out that our building is in critical condition. And, in
    general, they either don't know about us or don't want to know," said Hasmik
    Daveyan, a resident of #127/2 Gurgen Mahari Street says.
    The floor of Hasmik Daveyan's apartment is being destroyed by the damp. Her
    nine-year-old daughter, Ani, attends Boarding School #11, a special school
    in Sovetashen. When she was little Ani suffered a head injury and has
    difficulties reading and writing. "I have to bring her home on weekends but
    I don't know how to keep her. There is no place to sleep here," Hasmik said.

    All Hasmik's neighbor Ruzanna owns is some bedding she found on the street
    and the old clothes that serve pillows and blankets. She works as a cleaner
    at the Gum market. Her old house burnt down and she found herself in a
    dilapidated room on the top floor of 127/2 Gurgen Mahari Street, a room she
    doesn't even own. Her main concern is that her two sons are going to
    graduate from the Sovetashen boarding school and will then be homeless. She
    placed her five-year-old daughter in the children's home in Gavar.

    Christine Khachatryan was forced to send her eight-year-old son, Movses, to
    the boarding school, too.
    The mother is worried that after spending a few years in the school for
    mentally disabled children her son will fall behind his peers. But she has
    no other choice.
    "I know that at least he is not hungry at the school and has a place to
    sleep," Christine explained.
    In this building, people send their children away to a school for the
    disabled so they can have something to eat each day and a place to sleep.
    The elderly live on a hundred grams of sour cream and two pieces of bread
    from a soup kitchen. Their floors are bare and cold, and their walls are
    damp and covered with mold.
    Lena Nazaryan
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