city:yerevan

  • BBC - Capital - The city in the shadow of an ageing nuclear reactor
    http://www.bbc.com/capital/story/20190527-the-city-in-the-shadow-of-an-ageing-nuclear-reactor

    Metsamor has been described as one of the world’s most dangerous nuclear power plants because of its location in an earthquake zone.

    It sits just 35km (22 miles) from Armenia’s bustling capital, Yerevan, with distant views of snowy Mount Ararat across the border in Turkey.

    The plant was constructed around the same time as Chernobyl in the 1970s. At the time the Metsamor reactor provided energy for the growing needs of a vast Soviet Union, which once had ambitious plans to generate 60% of its electricity from nuclear power by 2000.

    #nucléaire #arménie #ex-urss #soviétisme #metsamor

  • After the Quake

    #Gyumri, the city symbol of the quake that 21 years ago struck Armenia. The stories of the homeless, the #domiks, the migrants, waiting for the opening of the borders with Turkey. Reportage.

    December 7, 1988, 11.41 am – An earthquake measuring 6.9 on the Richter scale hits northern Armenia, killing 25,000 and leaving many more homeless. Mikhail Gorbachev, then General Secretary of the Communist Party of the U.S.S.R. cuts short an official visit to the United States to travel to the small South Caucasus Soviet republic as news of the catastrophe makes headlines the world over. Poverty skyrockets as a nation mourned its dead.

    Hundreds of millions of dollars flooded into the country for relief and reconstruction efforts, but two other events of as much significance soon frustrated efforts to rebuild the disaster zone. In 1991, Armenia declared independence from the former Soviet Union, and in 1993, in support of Azerbaijan during a de facto war with Armenia over the disputed territory of Nagorno Karabakh, Turkey closed the land border with its eastern neighbor.

    Meanwhile, as corruption skyrocketed, the conflict as well as two closed borders and an economic blockade by Azerbaijan and Turkey only added to Armenia’s woes. Yet, despite strong economic growth in the mid-2000s, albeit from a low base, and promises from then President Robert Kocharyan to completely rebuild Gyumri, Armenia’s second largest city and the main urban center to be hit by the earthquake, the outlook appears as bleak as ever.

    Once Gyumri had been known for its architecture, humor and cultural importance, but now it has become synonymous with the earthquake and domiks – “temporary” accommodation usually amounting to little more than metal containers or dilapidated shacks. Hot in the summer and bitterly cold in the winter, others more fortunate found refuge in abandoned buildings vacated during the economic collapse following independence.

    Vartik Ghukasyan, for example, is 71 and alone. An orphan, she never married and now struggles to survive on a pension of just 25,000 AMD (about $65) a month in a rundown former factory hostel in Gyumri. However, that might all change as more buildings are privatized or their existing owners seek to reclaim them.

    According to the 2001 census, the population of Gyumri stands at 150,000 although some claim that it has since grown to 160-170,000. Nevertheless, few local residents take such figures seriously. Pointing to low school attendance figures, they estimate the actual population might be no more than 70,000. Even so, despite the exodus, there are as many as 4-7,000 families still living in temporary shelter according to various estimates.

    Anush Babajanyan, a 26-year-old photojournalist from the Armenian capital, is one of just a few media professionals who remain concerned by their plight. Having spent the past year documenting the lives of those still waiting for proper housing, the anniversary might have been otherwise low-profile outside of Gyumri, but Babajanyan attempted to focus attention on the occasion by exhibiting her work in Yerevan.

    “When I started this project, 20 years had passed since the earthquake and there were families still living in domiks who were not receiving enough attention,” she told Osservatorio. “ The government and other organizations promised to solve the issue of their housing, but their actions were not enough. Since then I have seen very little improvement.”

    “If this issue wasn’t solved in 20 years, it probably isn’t surprising that not much has changed in just a year. However, it has been two years since Serge Sargsyan, then Armenian prime minister and now president, said that the issue of these residents will be solved by now. But, although some districts are being reconstructed, this is not enough to resolve the issue.”

    As the center of Shirak, an impoverished region that most in Armenia and its large Diaspora appear to have largely forgotten, Gyumri suffers from unemployment higher than the national average. Travel agents continue to advertise flights from the local airport to parts of Russia. As elsewhere in the region, the only hope for a better life lies outside. But, with a global economic crisis hitting the CIS hard, there are now also fewer opportunities even there.

    This year GDP per capita has already plummeted by over 14 percent nationwide, far in excess of the decline registered in Azerbaijan and Georgia, while poverty and extreme poverty - already calculated with a low yardstick - has reportedly increased from 25.6 and 3.6 percent respectively in 2008 to 28.4 and 6.9 percent today. Local civil society activists claim that the figures might be twice as high in Gyumri.

    But, some believe, the city could benefit greatly from an open border with Turkey , transforming itself into a major economic and transit hub for direct trade between the two countries. Just 8 km away lies the village of Akhurik, one of two closed border crossings. Repair work had been conducted on the railway connecting Gyumri to the Turkish city of Kars prior to last year’s World Cup qualifying match with Turkey held in Yerevan.

    With Turkish President Abdullah Gül making a historic visit to Armenia for the match, villagers were once again given hope that a border opening would be imminent. “It will be very good if it opens,” one resident told RFE/RL at the time. “We used to work in the past — 40 families benefited from work related to the railway. Now they sit idle without work or have to choose migrant work in Russia. It will be good when the line is opened.”

    But, with pressure from Azerbaijan on Turkey not to sign two protocols aimed at establishing diplomatic relations and opening the border until the Karabakh conflict is resolved, such a breakthrough appears as elusive as ever while unemployment and poverty increases. Nowhere is that more evident than the city of Ashotsk, just 30 minutes outside of Gyumri. Karine Mkrtchyan, public relations officer for the Caritas Armenia NGO says conditions are typical.

    “Everywhere you will see abandoned places, especially public spaces,” she says. “They are ruined. There are no facilities, there is a lack of drinking water, and irrigation. People are on their own to solve their problems. We had a loss of life during the earthquake and then massive migration which stopped in the late 1990s before starting again in early 2000. Now there are even more people who decide to migrate.”

    Last week, on the 21st anniversary of the earthquake, the government attempted to counter criticism of what many consider to be inaction and a lack of concern with the socioeconomic situation in Gyumri. Opening a sugar refinery owned by one of the country’s most notorious oligarchs at the same time, the Armenian president visited Gyumri and promised that 5,300 new homes would allocated to those still without by 2013.

    The $70 million construction project has been made possible through a $500 million anti-crisis loan from the Russian Federation.

    However, whether such promises come to fruition remains to be seen and government critics remain unimpressed. Indeed, they point out, even if the apartments are built and allocated on time, it would have taken a quarter of a century to do so. Moreover, for Gyumri natives such as Mkrtchyan, the need for economic investment and development in the regions of Armenia remains as urgent as ever.

    https://www.balcanicaucaso.org/eng/Areas/Armenia/After-the-Quake-55719
    #tremblement_de_terre #post-catastrophe #Arménie #histoire #logement #réfugiés_environnementaux #asile #migrations #réfugiés #frontières

  • Red-hot planet: All-time heat records have been set all over the world during the past week
    https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/capital-weather-gang/wp/2018/07/03/hot-planet-all-time-heat-records-have-been-set-all-over-the-world-in

    No single record, in isolation, can be attributed to global warming. But collectively, these heat records are consistent with the kind of extremes we expect to see increase in a warming world.

    #climat

  • Back in the USSR: Soviet Roadside Architecture: From Samarkand to Yerevan

    http://worldarchitecture.org/architecture-books/?section=book-details&bidi=3181

    Bus stops are normally mundane structures, standardized and replaceable and therefore scarcely paid any attention. Out on the country roads of the former Soviet Union states, however, lies a treasure trove of unexpected waiting zones for those willing to make the trip—a wide-ranging panoply of socialist architecture.
    Germany-based freelance photographer Peter Ortner offers up a selection of these varied and jaw-dropping bus stops in Back in the USSR: Soviet Roadside Architecture from Samarkand to Yerevan.

    #soviétisme

  • INTERNATIONAL TENDER - 22 MOSKOVYAN STREET, YEREVAN, ARMENIA | LinkedIn
    https://www.linkedin.com/pulse/international-tender-22-moskovyan-street-yerevan-sargsyan-phd

    The Hellenic Republic Asset Development Fund (HRADF) announces an international open tender for the sale of a property at 22 Moskovyan Street in Yerevan, Armenia.

    The property is located in the city centre of Yerevan, close proximity to Cascade Complex and Theatre of Opera and Ballet .

    The property consists of land of 1,985.95 sqm, one main three-storey building of 1,156.7 sqm and four separate ancillary buildings of total area 361.7 sqm. Facade length is 41.7 m.

    Un petit pied à terre à Erevan, tout près du centre ville, sans doute quelques travaux à prévoir au vu des vitres manquantes. Occasion à saisir dans le cadre de la grande braderie du patrimoine de la République hellénique.

    #Grèce

  • Putin just sent Armenia #MiG-29_fighters and military aid. Here are three key reasons why.

    In February, the Russian air force announced that MiG-29 fighters and other sophisticated aircraft were headed to Armenia, to a Russian base 25 miles from the Turkish border. Moscow promised Yerevan a $200 million weapons credit and announced talks aimed at making Armenia the host of an essential link in Russia’s regional power grid to Iran.

    https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/monkey-cage/wp/2016/04/14/putin-just-sent-armenia-mig-29-fighters-and-military-aid-here-are-the-3-key-reasons-why/?postshare=4581460665613287&tid=ss_fb-bottom
    #Russie #Arménie #aide_militaire
    cc @reka

  • Information War Rages over Karabakh | EurasiaNet.org

    http://www.eurasianet.org/node/78091

    Disturbing reports of atrocities, and official claims and counterclaims continue to stream from the Armenian-Azerbaijani conflict zone as fighting enters its third day. With no international media or conflict-monitoring mission apparently yet on the ground in the breakaway Nagorno-Karabakh region, it is next to impossible to glean frontline facts from the ongoing information war.

    That lack of objective information could become even more critical in the coming days. Armenian President Serzh Sargsyan, a Karabakh native, pledged on April 4 that escalation of the fighting, the worst since the signing of a 1994 ceasefire, would prompt Yerevan to recognize Nagorno Karabakh as an independent state.

    #haut_karabagh #arménie #azerbaïdjan #causase

  • Azerbaijani Defense Ministry reports five killed in fighting in Karabakh conflict zone on Friday
    http://www.kyivpost.com/content/russia-and-former-soviet-union/azerbaijani-defense-ministry-reports-five-killed-in-fighting-in-karabakh-c

    Five servicemen were killed and 19 suffered injuries in a clash between Armenian and Azerbaijani armies in the Karabakh conflict zone on Friday, the Azerbaijani Defense Ministry press service said on Saturday.

    (intégralité de la brève)

  • Armenian Police Disperse Protest After 2 Weeks - The New York Times
    http://www.nytimes.com/aponline/2015/07/06/world/europe/ap-eu-armenia-protest.html

    Police cleared away barricades on Monday to unblock a central avenue in the Armenian capital that demonstrators had occupied for two weeks to protest hikes in electricity prices in the impoverished former Soviet nation.

    Police also detained 46 demonstrators who refused to disperse, but released all of them quickly.

    The protest organizers called on supporters to gather in the evening on nearby Freedom Square, but fewer than 1,000 turned up and they were outnumbered by police. Police have allowed demonstrations to be held on the square, where they don’t disrupt traffic, but they appeared determined to prevent the protesters from taking to the streets again.

  • Police Warn Armenian Protesters To Disperse
    http://www.rferl.org/content/article/27098665.html

    Antigovernment demonstrators in the Armenian capital continue to protest on Yerevan’s central Baghramian Avenue despite calls by police to leave the avenue.

    Police chief Vladimir Gasparian told activists in the evening on June 28 to move to the nearby Liberty Square.

    Gasparian gave protesters 30 minutes to leave Baghramian Avenue, warning police would move to “restore public order” otherwise. Officers took away protesters’ microphones. 

    A police statement also warned parents not to allow their underage children to remain among the protesters.

    It also demanded media workers to leave the area and not to hinder police actions.

    … tiens, c’est sur RFE/RL…

    • ’ElectricYerevan’ Protesters Chafe At Comparisons To Ukraine’s Euromaidan
      http://www.rferl.org/content/armenia-electricyerevan-protesters-chafe-at-euromaidan-comparison/27095421.html

      As protests in Yerevan and other Armenian cities enter their second week, activists are struggling with a postmodern problem — branding.

      They bristle at comparisons — whether well-intentioned or not — with the Euromaidan movement that ousted Ukrainian President Viktor Yanukovych in February 2014.

      Babken DerGrigorian, an activist who is also a researcher at the London School of Economics and who invented the #ElectricYerevan Twitter hashtag that has been widely adopted, has been adamant on social media that outside observers should avoid slapping the Maidan label on events in Armenia.

      Framing is crucial,” he posted on Twitter. “IT IS NOT A MAIDAN! ITS (sic) MUCH MORE IMPORTANT THAN THAT!!!

      Perhaps the main reason why the protesters resist this comparison is because Russian state-controlled media and pro-Kremlin figures have been so aggressive in insisting on it. And when they use the term “Maidan,” they mean a U.S.-inspired anti-Russian coup.

  • As Protests Continue In Yerevan, Russia Concedes To Armenia On Soldier Murder Case | EurasiaNet.org
    http://www.eurasianet.org/node/74051

    Russia has agreed to let Armenian courts try a Russian soldier accused of murdering seven members of an Armenian family after deserting Russia’s major military base in the country. The move is a major concession by Moscow, and comes as large-scale street protests in Yerevan against Armenia’s Russian-owned electricity company have been gathering strength.

    Cette concession est la cerise (ardemment attendue) sur un gâteau plus conséquent…

    On June 26, Armenian President Serzh Sargsyan met with a Russian government delegation to discuss energy fees, the issue that sparked the Yerevan protests. But the scope of the discussions was apparently wider than that, and Sargsyan’s office issued a surprise announcement after the meeting:

    At the meeting ... Sargsyan took the opportunity to express appreciation to the Russian law enforcement organs, in particular to the prosecutor’s office for effective cooperation with the Armenian prosecutor’s office on the investigation the inhuman crime in #Gyumri in January,” Sargsyan’s office said in a statement, news agencies reported. “The decision about the transfer of the criminal case to the Investigative Committee of Armenia and the appropriate authorities in Armenia, reflects the spirit of partnership and brotherhood and fully corresponds with the position of the Armenian-Russian agreement on the status of the Russian military base in Armenia.

    On top of that, Russia also apparently agreed to give Armenia $200 million in credit for arms purchases.

    Various Russian officials have been darkly warning that the protests in Armenia represent an anti-Russian, U.S.-backed “maidan,” a la Ukraine, and advising Sargsyan to take a harsher stance against the protesters. But this move shows that Moscow also realizes it needs to try to assuage Armenian public opinion, which has been wounded not just by the electricity issue and the Permyakov case, but arms sales to its enemy, Azerbaijan. Will this concession be enough to tamp down the anti-Russian sentiment on the streets of Yerevan? Stay tuned.

  • Protesters renew march against electricity prices in Armenia - CAUCASUS
    http://www.hurriyetdailynews.com/protesters-renew-march-against-electricity-prices-in-armenia.aspx

    Street protests in the Armenian capital against a hike in electricity prices grew on June 23 evening, with an estimated 7,000 people joining a second attempt to march toward the presidential residence even after riot police had used water cannons to forcefully disperse demonstrators.

    The number of riot police also increased, and helmeted officers holding shields stood shoulder-to-shoulder to block the protesters from moving farther down the central avenue in Yerevan. The protesters stood behind large trash containers that they had placed across the road as a barricade.

    There appeared to be some progress toward ending the standoff late June 23, with the protesters agreeing to appoint several representatives to meet with President Serge Sarkisian. But after a long discussion, they changed their mind.

    In the early hours of June 24, the street remained full of protesters, most of them young.

    Yerevan’s deputy police chief, Valery Osipyan, told the crowd that all of the nearly 240 protesters detained early June 23 had been released, one of the demonstrators’ demands.

    The unrest was the most serious that Armenia has seen in years, raising concerns about political stability in the impoverished former Soviet nation, which hosts a Russian military base and is part of a Moscow-dominated economic alliance.

    Russian companies control some of the most prized economic assets in Armenia, including the power grid.

    The protest was triggered when an Armenian government commission agreed to raise electricity rates at the request of the power company.

    Russia was closely following the protests, Russian President Vladimir Putin’s spokesman said.

    “Of course, we hope that in the near future the situation will be resolved in strict accordance with the law and that there will be no violations of the law,” Dmitry Peskov told journalists.

    @rumor

    #Electricité #Russie #Arménie

  • “Ciao USSR” exhibition by Hayk Bianjyan. Yerevan 2015. — Type & Press
    http://www.typeand.press/new-blog/2015/5/3/yerevan-2015-chao-ussr-exhibition-by-hayk-bianjyan

    Since 2003 Hayk Bianjyan (b. 1977) has been documenting the violation of property rights in Yerevan. With a camera in his hands, he tries to preserve the architecturally and historically significant structures in Yerevan, Armenia’s 2,797-year-old capital.

    This exhibition showcases not only photos, taken by Hayk, showing what has happened to the famous buildings and monuments of Yerevan in the Soviet era over the past decade, but also a number of objects from everyday life.

    #photo #typo #urss #arménie

  • David and Goliath in the Caucasus - Features - Israel News | Haaretz
    http://www.haaretz.com/news/features/.premium-1.651064

    YEREVAN – Ever since I learned that I would be traveling to the Nagorno-Karabakh Republic, my ears have hummed with the words of a song that I’d heard in my youth and that was still etched in my memory, though it had been many years since I heard it. The song was “At the Edge of the Volcano,” written by Dan Almagor and Danny Litani in 1972; I remembered Chava Alberstein’s hauntingly evocative rendition well. Even 40 years ago, the song left me restive and edgy. Since rediscovering it, I have been listening to it nonstop, singing the lyrics: “Why don’t they run away from there, and seek a safer place, where they can finally live in peace, once and for all… ”

    #arménie #caucase #haut-karabakh #haut-karabagh

  • Armenia: Customs Union Marks Great Leap Backward — Activists | EurasiaNet.org

    http://www.eurasianet.org/node/68285

    While President Serzh Sargsyan’s administration touts Armenia’s pending accession to the Russia-led Customs Union as likely to usher in an era of prosperity for the South Caucasus country, rights activists assert that when it comes to democratization, Customs Union membership means Yerevan will take “one step forward, two steps back.”

    https://dl.dropbox.com/s/qppgbfarv1hsemr/armeniauniondouaniere.png

    #arménie #russie #union_douanière

  • Armenia hate group protest against ’perverted’ gay film | Gay Star News
    http://www.gaystarnews.com/article/armenia-hate-group-protest-against-perverted-gay-film091012

    Armenia hate group protest against ’perverted’ gay film
    An extreme right wing group organised a protest against a screening of gay film in a children’s puppet theatre in Yerevan, Armenia
    09 October 2012 | By Dan Littauer
    Gay hate group Hayazn Union of Armenia allege that Parada, a film about gay rights, is ’gay propaganda’ designed to pervert children.

    Extremist Armenians have protested outside the German embassy in their capital, Yerevan, against the screening of a ’perverted’ gay rights film.

    As part of on-going events to promote tolerance and non-discrimination in Armenia, the German embassy and the European Union plans to screen the Serbian film Parada (meaning parade), which is about gay rights, next week (15 and 16 October).

    Parada is a film by Serbian director Srdjan Dragojevic which tells the story how a second gay pride parade in Belgrade was attempted after the first was banned.

    The screening will take place in Yerevan’s puppet theatre, a venue which has previously hosted film festivals and hardcode rock concerts.

    Nevertheless, an extreme right wing group, Hayazn Union, has instigated a moral panic about the event being a ‘gay propaganda’ to children.

    Hayazn Union then organized a protest in front of the German embassy in Yerevan yesterday (8 October) demanding the event is cancelled.

    Protestors, including a leading Armenian blogger Tigran Kocharyan (known better as Pigh, or Elephant, in the blogosphere), demanded that the German embassy refuse to sponsor ‘the perversion of minors’.

    Kocharyan ranted in his blog: ‘The screening of the film in a puppet theater is unacceptable… As a parent and an Armenian, I am against it. [Its] like perverting children.’

    In fact the film covers gay rights but is not sexual.

    An official statement by Hayazn Union read ‘The European Union continues to attack our country with its immoral propaganda.’

    The theater’s director, Ruben Babayan defended the screening telling Tert.Am portal: ‘This is a feature film, which has been shown at many festivals. By the same logic, I think you can ban the showing of films by Sergei Parajanov [who was convicted of being in gay in the former Soviet Union].

    ‘One should take a principle as a basis and decide – either we turn this country into Iran and feel happy about that, or we just come to the realization that there are things like tolerance, a feature film and arts.’

    On his Facebook page spokesman of Armenia’s opposition Heritage party, Hovsep Khurshudyan, criticized the protesters, accusing them of trying to distract public attention from real problems.

    He said: ‘What is this row that the saviours of our nation have kicked over the movie is all about? They are all but saying that the European Union is organizing a mass rape of kids and puppets in the puppet theater. In doing so, they, in fact, managed to advertize the film so much that I watched it from beginning to end.

    ‘Go and see this movie. By watching it you won’t change your sexual orientation for sure. Unless, of course, you’re already dreaming it, deep in your heart.’

    The Hayazn Union are thought to be behind a recent arson attack in May against a gay bar and nightclub and its lesbian owner who was forced to flee and seek asylum in Sweden after death threats.

    The group also attacked Yerevan’s Diversity Parade, in May blocking the march and shouting ‘Gays, get out of the country’.

    The blogger of Unzziped - Gay Armenia slammed Hayazn Union’s actions calling it ‘a bout of hysteria’.

    He added: ‘I should congratulate the embassy of Germany in Armenia and the EU office for success of the event that has not even started yet.

    ‘Never before there was such an awareness of gay rights-themed film in Armenia.’

    Watch the trailer to Parada: