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Antarut: Where The Expression "We Don't Have" Rolls Off The Tongue

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  • Antarut: Where The Expression "We Don't Have" Rolls Off The Tongue

    Antarut: Where the Expression "We Don't Have" Rolls Off the Tongue
    Grisha Balasanyan

    http://hetq.am/en/society/antarut-2/
    2 009/09/28 | 18:06

    By looking at this photo, one would hardly imagine that this houses
    the community municipality and that local self government decisions
    in the name of the Republic of Armenia are adopted here.

    After I first spotted this iron-clad hut, located in the middle of
    the Andarut village in Aragatzotn, it occurred to me that maybe one
    of the community's poorer families called the place home, especially
    since there was no flag hoisted on the building nor it have any sign
    on the outside as to its function. Local villages joke that their
    municipal office is in a miserable state, just as they are.

    Andarut is located a few kilometers north of Byurakan and up till 1991
    was part of that community. However, for the past 18 years it has been
    cut off and all municipal services have remained behind in Byurakan.

    Not only does the village lack a municipal building, but there is no
    medical clinic or kindergarten. Heaven forbid if a local resident dared
    to get sick. They would have to be taken to the clinic in Byurakan
    some four kilometers away. Otherwise, the patient would have to wait
    till Thursday when a nurse from Byurakan comes to the village and
    makes her rounds.

    Villagers refuse medical check-ups

    Even though the nurse sets up shop to receive new patients once
    a week in the village, no one from Antarut ever bothers to show
    up. The reason they don't go for medical check-ups is because they
    have no health issues. The doctor sees the patients in the iron
    framed building that passes as the municipality. But none of the
    sick will allow themselves to be examined in a room where both the
    doctor and mayor sits, in addition to other staff members. Here,
    the term "medical exam" is quite a relative concept. In the best of
    conditions, the visiting physician may check the patient's pressure,
    heart and lung functions and prescribe some drugs. The doctor can do
    no more since the only equipment he brings along is a stethoscope.

    Rouzanna Haroutyunyan, Director of the Byurakan ambulatory clinic,
    confessed that no one from the village shows up on the days that the
    doctor is in town. "You know, I understand what the concerns of the
    villagers are. That isn't a clinic but a municipal office." She said
    in the beginning the patients would gather in one of their neighbor's
    homes but that the owner broke off the agreement because he no longer
    wanted his place to be converted into a health clinic. "I petitioned
    the community mayor on several occasions to allocate one room for
    the patients but he hasn't responded," added Ms. Haroutyunyan.

    Antarut Mayor Samvel Hovhannisyan said that the municipality just
    doesn't have the resources to build a clinic. "I even don't have the
    luxury of thinking about the municipality building itself. I'm more
    interested in bringing in gas to the village."

    No funds to supply village with gas

    Antarut, with a population of 273, is a village with a long laundry
    list of problems. In fact the expressions, "there isn't" and "we don't
    have" roll off the tongues of local residents quite easily. Antarut
    has no irrigation water and so the villagers don't bother working the
    fields they own. "The village has no irrigation water and folks use the
    snow melt and rain water. They only irrigate the fields up till July.

    Then they wait for the rainy season. If we had irrigation water coming
    in that would really allow us to cultivate large tracts of land that
    go fallow. At least the villagers would earn 60-70% of their yearly
    budget," noted Mayor Hovhannisyan.

    Antarut has 221 hectares of land of which 50 hectares are
    privatized. These fields are mostly used to grow fodder grass since
    there's no irrigation water. Fields located closer to the homes are
    mostly cultivated but grazing land is scarce. Thus, animal husbandry
    is slowly vanishing as a livelihood since the villagers can't afford
    to buy grass during the winter and there is no place to keep the
    animals during the summer.

    When it comes to the question of supplying the village with natural
    gas, it would appear that the government has washed its hands of the
    matter as well and pulled out. Some 550 meters of gas pipe has been
    laid by the village itself but the funds have dried up and so has
    the work to complete the project.

    "We've petitioned Minister of Territorial Affairs Armen Gevorgyan for
    assistance but haven't heard back from him yet. I really don't know
    what to expect. If we got another 500 meters of pipe then I could
    say that 50% of the village's gas problem had been solved. It would
    be a great boost for the village. Without government assistance,
    we'd be forced to tackle the job on our own but we just don't have
    the resources to finish it," stated Mayor Hovhannisyan.
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