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Evicted From Their Homes, Armenian Citizens Seek Redress In European

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  • Evicted From Their Homes, Armenian Citizens Seek Redress In European

    EVICTED FROM THEIR HOMES, ARMENIAN CITIZENS SEEK REDRESS IN EUROPEAN COURT
    Arman Gharibyan


    http://hetq.am/en/society/yerevan-2/
    2 009/09/28 | 18:10

    Feature Stories society

    The apartment building located at 11 Teryan Street, downtown Yerevan
    is in a semi-dilapidated state.

    Some of the building's former residents had signed a contract with
    Dvin Concern, a construction and design company. Soon afterwards,
    Dvin proceeded to tear the place apart. Those residents who didn't
    believe in the promises made by Dvin now live in a building that is
    falling down around them.

    "Dvin Concern" offers family pennies for prime downtown real estate

    "We're in a hell of a situation. They've demolished the neighboring
    apartments and we've ended up living in the ruins. They busted a
    water pipe during the demolition work and we went without water for
    days. But what can we do; this is our home. Where can we go?" asked
    Tereza Galstyan, a resident. Dvin promised Tereza and her mother a
    similar apartment in the high-rise to be built on the site.

    "We didn't accept their conditions from the very beginning. Had we
    done so, we would have now found ourselves on the street like our
    neighbors. They fooled them by promising that they'd give each of
    them 5 kilometers more; so they vacated their apartments," says Tereza.

    Dvin Concern offered Tereza U.S. $45,000 for her 60 square meters in
    the center of Yerevan. "We couldn't buy an apartment for that price
    in downtown Yerevan. So we told them - either give us an apartment
    of equal size or enough money in order to buy an apartment," Tereza
    says. This family can be considered one of the lucky few as they
    haven't been forcibly removed like the rest.

    We are building "elite" homes for the "elite"

    On December 25, 2005, Sedrak Baghdasaryan and his family were forcibly
    removed from their apartment by members of the CES (Compulsory
    Enforcement Service for Judicial Acts); the Armenian equivalent
    of bailiffs.

    "The court had handed down a decision to evict not only us but
    hundreds of others. But to where? The court wasn't interested in that
    part. In the dead of winter they threw us out on the street with two
    young children," Sedrak Baghdasaryan recounts. He will never forget
    one of court sessions regarding the evictions when the judge asked
    the representative of the Investment Implementation Services office
    why the residents hadn't been offered apartments in the new building
    planned for the site. "The IIS official said no such offers had been
    made and that they weren't planning to make such offers since the
    buildings going up on the site were 'elite' apartment houses for
    'elite' people," Mr. Baghdasaryan said.

    The judge in the case obligated the Baghdasaryan family to accept
    $23,249 in compensation for their and 77 square meters of land and
    the 55 square meter house on the site. 10% was subtracted from the
    compensation amount for land taxes so the family was left with around
    $21,000. "We not only lost our home but much of our furnishings and
    belongings as well. Some was damaged during the relocation and others
    received moisture damage. The biggest blow was that they removed us
    from the official property register without telling us. As a result
    37 citizens have no permanent registration and thus cannot vote,
    receive a pension or assistance, work or attend the local school. With
    the stroke of a pen, 37 citizens were turned into derelicts," Sedrak
    Baghdasaryan said.

    His son Tigran has since grown up but has no passport. Thus, he
    may be deprived of the right to get a higher education. "My son has
    been accepted at one of the institutes and they wanted to process
    his passport. But he has none since we have no permanent address
    registration. Now, they may expel him from the institute," says the
    concerned father.

    "It still remains a mystery why our government treated us in such a
    fashion. What was our sin? Perhaps the reason was that we lived in the
    center of Yerevan," says Sedrak. He is one of the 14 evicted residents
    who have taken his case to the European Court of Human Rights.

    Armenian citizens petition European Court and win

    In 2007, the government of Armenia was compelled to satisfy
    the compensation demands of Gevorg Jgheryan, one of the evicted
    residents. He was paid the additional sum of $150,000 out of the state
    coffers. Mr. Jgheryan had taken the case to the European Court. The
    Armenian government, realizing that the court would find in favor of
    the plaintiff, came to an out of court settlement with Mr. Jgheryan.

    On another case dealing with an Armenian citizen deprived of their
    property rights, the European Court, on June 23, 2009, decided
    that Nelli Minasyan and her daughter, Yelena Demirjyan, had indeed
    been illegally evicted from their home at 9 Buzand Street during
    2004-2005. The mother and daughter, residing in the U.S., hadn't
    agreed to the government's compensation package. Not being able
    to obtain redress in the Armenian courts, the residents took their
    complaint to the European Court. According to the Court's decision,
    the Armenian government was granted three months to "settle" the
    case to the satisfaction of the plaintiffs in the form of alternative
    compensation. The three month deadline has recently expired but the
    Armenian government has failed to present any compensation proposals
    to the family.

    Liza Grigoryan, attorney for Nelli Minasyan, told Hetq that, "If no
    settlement is reached, the European Court will decide compensation
    amount and obligate the government to pay it." The plaintiffs have
    demanded 200,000 Euros as fair compensation in their case. If the
    Court finds in their favor, such an amount would be a huge burden
    for the government budget given the current economic crisis.

    "It is simply absurd for the government to deprive a citizen of their
    property in return for a paltry sum and then turn around and grant the
    property to a private developer who will make twenty times the profit
    in the long-run. The government will only be using taxpayer money
    to pay the compensation amount prescribed by the European Court,"
    noted attorney Grigoryan

    P.S. Nelli Minasyan is the widow of a man killed while fighting
    in the Artsakh War. She and her daughter relocated to the United
    States many years ago. They held on to the apartment they owned in
    Yerevan. Despite the miles of separation, they learnt that their home
    had been demolished and their belongings tossed into the street. The
    mother and daughter didn't want to talk about the matter. Their
    attorney said the two still harbored ill feelings towards Armenia
    and it wasn't clear if they'd return even after winning the case.
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