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  • Armenian Gays Face Long Walk to Freedom

    Institute for War and Peace Reporting, UK
    March 13 2009



    Armenian Gays Face Long Walk to Freedom


    Society remains as relentlessly homophobic here as elsewhere in the
    Caucasus, but activists say there some grounds for hope.

    By Vahan Ishkhanian in Yerevan (CRS No. 484, 13-Mar-09)

    The recent publication of Azeri writer Alekper Aliev's gay novel
    Artush and Zaur, dealing with an Armenian-Azeri love affair, rocked
    the conservative and mainly Muslim society of Azerbaijan.

    It broke a double taboo ` love between Armenians and Azeris and
    same-sex love, at the same time.

    But while the furor cast a harsh spotlight on homophobia in
    Azerbaijan, on the other side of the ethnic and religious divide, in
    Armenia, gays face just as much prejudice.

    Hovhannes Minasian found this out to his cost. Now 27, he is one of a
    small minority of gay men in Armenia who do not fear to give out their
    real names in interviews.

    He gained this freedom ` involuntarily ` after being sent to jail for
    his sexual orientation. After that, the whole of his former
    neighbourhood and his relatives learnt about it and there was nothing
    to hide.

    His nightmare began in 1999, when police arrested him and accused him
    of sodomy. A man who had once had an affair with him apparently
    betrayed him, and four others, to the authorities.

    Minasian, then 17, says he immediately admitted he had had a sexual
    relationship with a man. `I never thought it was a crime, so when they
    asked me if I did it, I confirmed it,' he said.

    He says the police who arrested him beat him violently, demanding that
    he name other homosexuals, which he refused to do.

    He was one of six persons charged for the then crime of sodomy under
    Article 116 of the Armenian penal code, receiving a relatively short
    jail sentence of three months as he was under age.

    While in prison, Minasian says he came under constant pressure. `The
    prisoners were as cruel to me as the jailors, I was like a toy for
    them, they used to bully me and throw me around the cell,' he said.

    After his release, the lads living next door to him chased him around,
    throwing stones at him and screaming `gay' at his back.

    That is not all. He says a policeman tried to blackmail him into
    confessing the names of wealthy homosexuals he knew about.

    When he failed to extract this information, he told the manager of the
    bar where Hovhannes worked of his sexual orientation, and Hovhannes
    and his gay friend were fired.

    Nine years since his conviction, the local boys have stopped chasing
    Hovhannes. They got used to him. He has a job. Still, he is going to
    leave the country, tired of the general climate of hostility.

    In 1922, a few years after the Bolshevik revolution, homosexuality
    ceased to be a penal offence in the newly formed Soviet Union.

    But it was reintroduced as a crime in 1933, and eventually removed
    from the penal code in 2003.

    In spite of the official change in the letter of the law,
    discrimination and intolerance against Armenian gays remains
    widespread.

    A year ago, Khachik, a 21-year-old student at university, was thrown
    out of his home when his parents found out about his sexual
    orientation.

    Khachik says he realised he was different from the rest when he was 13
    or 14 and accepted he was more interested in boys than girls.

    `At that age, when you start to masturbate, I used to imagine guys,'
    he confessed. `I thought I was alone with all this but then I found
    people just like me on the Internet.'

    He waited until he was 20 to have his first sexual encounter with a
    man whom he met on the Internet and introduced to his family as a
    friend.

    Trouble erupted after Khachik's mother discovered that their
    relationship was not entirely innocent.

    `We were watching a film in my room and I didn't know the door was
    open. Mother came and saw us kissing,' he recalled.

    At first, she wept, but later, once his father was home, the two of
    them became far more aggressive.

    `Dad got really angry and said, `Aren't girls enough for you? You want
    to start dating guys? My son can't do that!'

    `Mother started screaming that it would be better if I died. It would
    be better not to have a son than to know he was gay.

    `She even tried to hit me. I tried to hold her back, but dad began to
    help her. Then they told me I was no longer their son and that I had
    to leave the house. So I went away.'

    Khachik has been living in lodgings ever since and has to work in two
    jobs to support his studies.

    Two months after being thrown out, he was exempted from military
    service because of his `deviant' sexual orientation.

    According to the Helsinki Rights Committee in Armenia, in 2004 an
    internal defence ministry code effectively bans homosexuals from
    serving in the armed forces.

    `When I told the army psychologist I was a gay, he threw the pen on
    the table and exclaimed `Damn it!'' Khachik recalled.

    He says another officer struck him with a folder, saying, `You are not
    a man! How can an Armenian claim he's limp wristed?'

    He was then dispatched to a medical institution for official diagnosis
    ` which duly described him as possessing a `non-traditional sexual
    orientation'.

    On the subject of the deferment of conscription for homosexuals,
    Colonel Seyram Shahsuvaryan, representing the defence ministry, sent a
    written response to IWPR.

    In it, the colonel denied the existence of any unofficial ban on
    homosexuals serving in the army, `The law on compulsory military
    service in Armenia does not allow the exemption from military service
    of homosexuals.'

    In Aliev's controversial novel, Artush and Zaur, the two lovers
    eventually decide to take their own lives, jumping from Baku's Maiden
    Tower, a symbol of doomed love in Azerbaijan.

    Psychologist Davit Galstian says societal pressures in Armenia have
    driven some gays to take their own lives in a similar desperate
    fashion.

    Within the past three years, he knows of at least ten homosexual men
    who threw themselves off the Kiev bridge in Yerevan, the capital's
    biggest.

    He cites several tragic cases that he has come across in his
    practice. A man's life that was destroyed when his family discovered
    his orientation; a woman who rejected her own children and sent them
    to an orphanage after learning that their father, her husband, is gay;
    and a father who threw his 14-year-old gay son out of the house, who
    then turned to street prostitution.

    `There is a real phobia against homosexuals in our society, people
    consider them beasts,' he said.

    `My [gay] patients learn about me from each other and come here. They
    say at least I listen to them.'

    Politicians do little to dispel the fog of ignorance and prejudice
    around the subject. Indeed, some make it worse.

    One former member of parliament, Emma Khudabashian, even used to say
    that people should throw stones at homosexuals.

    Armen Avetisian, head of Armenian Arian Union, an ultra-nationalist
    grouping, issued a bizarre attack on homosexuals ` and on Europe ` in
    July 2006, which was published in three newspapers.

    `We should form a community for them, called Hamaserashen (literally,
    `Homosex-burg'),' he said.

    `Of course, it should be located in Europe, as homosexuality is a part
    of the European values, so let them gather there.'

    The church is another conservative factor. The Armenian Apostolic
    Church ` like most traditional Christian churches in the world ` views
    homosexuality as a grave sin.

    Gay bashing is a popular pastime among Yerevan yobs. In the city's
    Komaygi park, where homosexuals sometimes gather, groups often attack
    and beat them.

    Galstian says homophobia is harmful to society, depriving it of
    potential talent.

    `We lost a talented singer, a computer programmer and an excellent
    student who could have become a chemist,' he said, mulling past
    suicides. Others have simply left the country.

    Yet, on December, 9, 2008, the Armenian government endorsed a United
    Nations statement outlawing discrimination on the basis of sexual
    orientation and gender identity.

    That only prompted a greater outcry from homophobic elements in
    Armenia, however.

    `This is a global plan worked out by masonic structures to destroy the
    world,' Khachik Stambolcian, a well known figure said in one public
    discussion.

    The right-wing Iskakan Iravunk newspaper accused the UN document of
    glorifying what it termed `human driftwood - those sodomites and
    lesbians'.

    Hrair, a 26-year-old activist, says the government's endorsement of
    the UN statement may not have helped gays much in Armenia in the short
    term.

    `Before that, we just lived our lives and worked but then they made a
    fuss, and it became tense,' he noted.

    Avetik Ishkhanyan, chair of the Helsinki Rights Committee of Armenia,
    and member of Independent Observers' Group of Penitentiary
    departments, says homosexuals experience the worst troubles within
    closed spaces like prisons and barracks.

    `In prison, they have a separate cell and it's a taboo to shake their
    hands, take cigarettes from them or even touch their stuff,' he said.

    `If a detainee uses homosexual's plates, even by accident, the
    criminals consider him а `pervert' too.

    `They are given the most humiliating work to do, like cleaning toilets
    and drains.'

    According to Ishkhanian, it is hard to defend homosexuals, as few are
    willing to publicly complain about their lack of status.

    Arsen Babayan, of the justice ministry's penitentiary service, denies
    gay detainees in prison are singled out for the most humiliating
    tasks. Every prisoner, he says, chooses his own type of work.

    `The fact that gays live separately in penitentiary departments is due
    to their wish. It's the same with Jehovah's witnesses, who also live
    separate lives,' he said.

    Meanwhile, Galstian says things may be starting to change ` albeit
    slowly.

    Since Armenia became a member of the Council of Europe in 2001, people
    generally have started to more actively defend their rights, and more
    and more homosexuals are open about their identity.

    The NGO PINK, short for Public Information and Need for Knowledge,
    founded in 2007, openly advocates for gay rights, as well specialising
    in the prevention of sexually transmitted diseases.

    PINK member Hrair broke up with his Iranian boyfriend when the latter
    wanted to leave for Europe.

    `He couldn't live in Iran, as they hang homosexuals there, but he felt
    depressed here too, so he was trying to talk me into going to Europe,
    but I didn't want to,' he said.

    Though well aware of the climate of intolerance in Armenia, Hrair says
    he is not ready to abandon his homeland now things are starting to
    shift a little.

    `When I was a child, I suffered, trying to understand myself and
    nobody was there to help me,' he recalled.

    `But now we are a big team, and we are trying to help the weaker ones
    to stand up.

    `This is very important to me. I would feel defeated if I went to live
    in a European country, hiding my head in the sand like an ostrich.'

    Vahan Ishkhanian is a freelance journalist and correspondent for
    Armenianow.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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