home
***
CD-ROM
|
disk
|
FTP
|
other
***
search
/
TIME: Almanac of the 20th Century
/
TIME, Almanac of the 20th Century.ISO
/
1990
/
93
/
jan_mar
/
03019934.000
< prev
next >
Wrap
Text File
|
1994-02-27
|
6KB
|
120 lines
<text>
<title>
(Mar. 01, 1993) In The Icy Grip Of Death
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
Mar. 01, 1993 You Say You Want a Revolution...
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
ARMENIA, Page 30
In The Icy Grip Of Death
</hdr>
<body>
<p>Life is becoming nasty, brutish and short for 3.5 million people
trapped in an undeclared war with Azerbaijan
</p>
<p>By FREDERICK PAINTON--With reporting by Ann M. Simmons/Yerevan
</p>
<p> As the wintry sun sinks, Armenia's capital takes on the eerie
cast of a medieval town under siege. Life in Yerevan has reeled
backward, like a grainy black-and-white film, toward a barbaric
era of ethnic and religious war--an apocalyptic time when
death becomes humdrum, the threat of disease is ever present,
and nothing matters but daily, primal survival.
</p>
<p> Along empty, unlit streets in the gathering gloom, sleighs rasp
over the ice. They carry branches lopped off trees that now
stand like amputees in mute supplication to the heavens. Soon
this last source of fuel for the city's l.5 million hungry,
freezing residents will be gone, and the suffering will intensify.
</p>
<p> For the family of Suren Pogosian, that is unimaginable. Smoke
gusts into the air as Pogosian, 68, opens the hatch of the tiny
iron stove he has welded together and feeds in a few more bits
of wood. His wife and teenage son, joined by some neighbors,
huddle around, their eyes fixed on the bubbling pot of potatoes
that will make the day's single meal. The stove provides the
only heat the apartment has had for two years.
</p>
<p> This is a place where electricity is available only a few hours
a day, telephones work intermittently if at all, and two gallons
of gasoline costs more than the average monthly salary. The
daily ration of nine ounces of bread is less than the amount
allotted workers in Leningrad during the German siege in World
War II. Food--what little is available--sells for double
the exorbitant prices charged in Moscow. Schools have closed.
Many hospitals have no hot water, electricity or heat and are
turning the sick away.
</p>
<p> According to government estimates, 30,000 people could die this
winter from cold, malnutrition or starvation. Already the death
rate has risen sharply as a weakened population succumbs to
the diseases of deprivation; morgues are overflowing with corpses
that relatives cannot afford to bury. Says Sarkis Abramian,
the chief doctor at the central ambulance service: "The Armenian
nation is on the road to destruction."
</p>
<p> Armenians, though, are a people whose will to survive is too
strong to submit to destruction. Their land, lying on the fault
line between the Christian and Muslim worlds, has been contested
territory for centuries. The Armenians survived the genocidal
massacre of a million and a half of their people in 1915 by
the Turks. In 1988 an earthquake killed 25,000 and left tens
of thousands homeless. At about the same time, Armenia became
embroiled in an undeclared war with neighboring Muslim Azerbaijan
over the Armenian enclave of Nagorno-Karabakh. The fighting
has claimed 2,500 lives so far, and no settlement is in sight.
On both sides the dispute has fired the same kind of atavistic
enmity that is tearing apart other former Soviet republics and
the Balkans.
</p>
<p> As the conflict escalated, the Azeris imposed a blockade on
Armenia, cutting off oil and gas lines. A crucial gas pipeline
in Georgia, the neighbor to the north--where minority unrest
also sputters unchecked--was blown up this month for the third
time, reducing the flow of gas to a trickle. Loans from Russia
and some international aid that managed to bypass the blockade
have saved Armenia from total collapse, but because of the power
shortage only six of 400 factories are operating.
</p>
<p> In this hour of trial, many citizens blame the government of
President Levon Ter-Petrosyan, elected when the republic declared
independence from Moscow in 1991, for the economic collapse.
Many agree with engineer Arthur Verdian that "a government whose
people are starving does not have the moral right to rule."
Others believe it is time to find a compromise over Nagorno-Karabakh.
"We have to stop this war by any means," says Armen Arutunian,
a doctor. "The world community should intervene. There already
have been too many victims, so many losses." Antigovernment
demonstrations are on the rise, but the President has little
room to maneuver. A militantly nationalist opposition, supported
by the several-million-strong Armenian diaspora around the
world, rejects the slightest concession over Nagorno-Karabakh,
even to arrange a cease-fire. The Azeris have proved just as
unbending.
</p>
<p> Rarely have Armenians felt so abandoned. Says Khachig Stambultsyan,
a parliamentary Deputy: "The entire world is watching with its
arms folded while we die of cold and hunger." Russia could probably
provide more assistance, but President Yeltsin, for all his
sympathy for Armenia, clearly is not about to get caught in
a war in the Caucasus, especially at the risk of alienating
his own country's Muslim minority.
</p>
<p> Ter-Petrosyan's attempts to improve relations with Turkey, still
regarded by Armenians as the true historic enemy, have produced
few results--if only because Ankara wants to avoid offending
Azerbaijan, a Turkic-speaking fellow Muslim country. The U.S.
has barely begun to address the complexities of Bosnia and Herzegovina,
let alone Nagorno-Karabakh. Says former Foreign Minister Raffi
Hovannisian, an Armenian American: "This is not the first difficult,
cold winter for Armenians, but there is an unfortunate sense
among the people that they have been abandoned to their fate."
</p>
</body>
</article>
</text>