Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Armenia's Impoverished Children's Homes

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

  • Armenia's Impoverished Children's Homes

    ARMENIA'S IMPOVERISHED CHILDREN'S HOMES
    By Hasmik Hambardzumian

    Institute for War and Peace Reporting IWPR
    CAUCASUS REPORTING SERVICE, No. 599,
    July 11, 2011
    UK

    Funding levels leave homes able to provide children in care with food
    and clothing, and not much else.


    Children's homes across Armenia are so poorly resourced that they
    struggle to provide even basic care, according to staff and other
    observers.

    Armenia's eight state-funded homes currently house 940 children,
    360 of them disabled, and share a total government allocation of
    under 2.5 million US dollars a year.

    The Marie Izmirlyan home in the capital Yerevan, for example, gets
    365,000 dollars a year to feed, clothe and house the 95 children there,
    some of them disabled.

    The home's director Hasmik Lazarian, said the money was enough to
    pay for food and other basic items, but only allowed the purchase of
    half the amount of nappies that were actually needed.

    "We have children in wheelchairs and kids suffering from bedwetting
    who really need to have their nappies changed at least twice a day,"
    she said.

    The home gets some private donations, such as a gift of 800 dollars
    from businessman Karen Vardanyan to top up the money available for
    children to phone relatives.

    "The state provides only 30,000 drams [80 dollars] a month for phone
    bills, but we run up an enormous phone bill," Lazarian said. "We
    cannot deprive [the children] of these phone calls, since they ensure
    contact between child and parent."

    Nevertheless, the Marie Izmilyan care facility finds it hard to make
    ends meet. Lazarian said the premises needed a new lighting system,
    a ventilation system for the basement, a new roof for one building,
    replacement flooring, a bus and some IT equipment.

    Hayk Muradyan, head of the department responsible for monitoring
    children's homes at Armenia's labour and social affairs ministry,
    flatly denied that state provision was inadequate.

    "I have to say that provision is now at a satisfactory level. There
    are problems, but we are trying to improve everything day by day and
    month by month," he said.

    Muradyan suggested that children in care were often better off
    than others.

    "The funds provided by the state are sufficient to cover the costs
    of education, psychological treatment and food for the children,"
    he said. "Of course, there are some problems, because the spending
    [pattern] is far from ideal. But let's not forget that across
    the country and particularly in villages on the border, there are
    children in families who - in contrast to those in homes - live in
    poor conditions and aren't well fed."

    Araz Artinyan, a diaspora Armenian who has run a programme of
    treatment for children in orphanages since 2009, said levels of care
    were woefully inadequate.

    "I was stunned by what I saw in children's homes. The children just
    live there and get no medical assistance or education," she said. "It
    turns out that they're merely fed, and no one worries that there's
    a child with a heart condition who's been living with it for years,
    or a deaf child for whom nothing is done."

    Disabled children in care often attend one of a number of specialised
    schools. Anahit Bakhshyan, a member of parliament from the Heritage
    party, recently visited one of these schools in the town of Gyumri,
    and said she found conditions there almost indescribable.

    "I saw with my own eyes how at least two groups of disabled children
    were walking around without nappies. We were told that the money the
    state provided wasn't intended to be used for nappies," she said.

    Bakhshyan plans to raise the living conditions of children in care
    in parliament in September, and will also propose the creation of a
    children's ombudsman.

    "Although this question, which we've raised more than once, has been
    ignored, we are going to try one more time," she said

    Hasmik Hambardzumyan is a correspondent for the Panorama news site.

Working...
X