‘I was too young to become a mum’: Teenage pregnancies in Armenia

OC Media
Aug 21 2020

 21 August 2020

The Kanaker-Zeytun maternity hospital in Yerevan. Photo: Yerevan Municipality.

Though the rate of teenage pregnancies in Armenia is declining, it remains substantial. Meanwhile, the stigma of unwanted pregnancy continues to lead teenagers to self-administer abortion medication without medical supervision.

‘I was 15 years old. Those were the best days of my life. My boyfriend and I lived for each other.’ Anna, now 25-years-old, (not her real name) told OC Media. ‘Then I realised I was pregnant.’

‘My boyfriend was 16’, she recalled. ‘Using protection didn’t cross our minds. We were just kids.’

‘One week, my period was late. A neighbour who was studying at the Medical University realised I was pregnant. She bought a pregnancy test for me, which came out positive. Later, my boyfriend and I bought 10 more tests. They were all positive.’

Anna’s experience is not unusual. Even though the number of teenage pregnancies has fallen in recent years — it halved between 2000 and 2015 — teenagers between 15-19 still account for 4% of all pregnancies in the country. 

Worse still, pregnant teenagers also face a harsh social stigma, even when they are victims of rape.

‘There are children who have consensual sex and get pregnant. There are also children who are victims of violence,’ Tatevik Aghabekyan, the head of the Sexual Violence Crisis Centre told OC Media. ‘Children are often afraid to tell their parents about their pregnancies, so they conceal them.’ 

According to Aghabekyan, 90% of underage pregnant women are married. In some villages in Armenia, it is common for girls to marry as adolescents. Armenian law allows children to marry at 16 if the child’s legal guardians consent and the other party to the marriage is at least 18 years old. 

Yet many unwanted pregnancies occur outside of marriage, resulting from both consensual relationships and rape. A lack of adequate support networks and fear of social stigma leads many teenage girls to self-administer abortion medication without proper medical supervision — sometimes with severe consequences. 

The budding pregnancy terrified Anna and her boyfriend. Her neighbour helped her procure and administer abortion pills. ‘We didn’t go to the doctor. I was terrified by the thought that my family or acquaintances would find out.’

‘I took abortion pills. That day, I lost so much blood that I thought there wouldn’t be one drop of blood left in me. My friend stayed with me but I didn’t know where my boyfriend was. A week later, he came to see me and said we should separate.’

Today, Anna has been married for three years and now wants a child, but the abortion pills severely impacted her reproductive system. ‘Those drugs wrecked my body. I am going through a difficult phase of fertility treatment. I am terrified by the thought of not being able to become a mother.’

Obstetrician and gynaecologist Tatev Davtyan told OC Media that Armenian women should be conscious of the dangers of self-administering abortion medication. ‘Every woman should understand that any pregnancy can be the last one. It doesn’t matter whether it was the first or the third.’

‘Women should not play with their health’, she added, recalling numerous cases of women who had attempted to self-administer abortions through medication, and ending up in the hospital. 

Davtyan said she had not personally treated any underage pregnant women at her practice. She said the youngest ones who visit her are 18 years old, including women who became pregnant from extramarital affairs and rush to terminate their pregnancies.

‘They come here scared. They don’t tell their parents about it.’

Many teenage pregnancies are the result of the rape of children by adults, Tatevik Aghabekyan, the head of the Sexual Violence Crisis Centre, told OC Media, adding that far too often children remain silent. 

‘Children blame themselves for what has happened’, she said. ‘They believe that no matter what they say, society will either blame the child or her parents, so they keep silent about what they have suffered.’

According to Aghabekyan, it is of the utmost importance for society not to isolate these children and to help them return to normal life.

In 2018, Aghabekyan’s centre supported four teenage girls who were pregnant, including a girl whose mother tried to keep her away from medical and psychological professionals with Aghabekyan only permitted to speak to the girl in the hospital.

‘With all four of these children, there was one common thread: none realised what had happened to them. Even the growing belly and pains were not associated with pregnancy. They were children who had not recieved proper sex education and were unaware of what was happening to them.’

In 2019, the Sexual Violence Crisis Centre dealt with a shocking case — a 13-year-old girl with an intellectual disability who gave birth that summer. 

Aghabekyan said the 13-year-old mother did not realise she had become a parent, though she hugged her baby at the hospital.

‘She still calls her baby a doll. In her imagination it’s a doll. She always repeats, “When I earn money, I will take my doll home.”’


Defense Ministry: Internal investigation to be launched over disorientation of Armenian officer

Panorama, Armenia
Aug 25 2020

On August 22, at 19.30, Armenian officer Gurgen Alaverdyan who was on check of military outpost, got lost geographically due to adverse weather conditions. As the Spokeswoman at the defense ministry Shushan Stepanyan reported, an internal investigation will be launched to find out the circumstances of the case.

“We suggest the Azerbaijani defense ministry to exert no extra efforts to distort the reality. The reality will become known soon,” Stepanyan wrote on her Facebook page. 


Third line of energy exchange with Armenia to be completed by the end of 2020 – Iranian minister

Panorama, Armenia
Aug 25 2020
Iranian Minister of Energy Reza Ardakanian announced on Monday that the technical and engineering services of Iran’s water and electricity industry is at the top of the list of Iranian exporters, Iran Press reported. Reza Ardakanian’s response came to IP’s question on the importance of exporting technical and engineering services of water and electricity industry.
 
Iran’s energy minister noted that one of these projects is the third line of energy exchange with Armenia, which we hope will be completed by the end of 2020 and the energy exchange capacity will increase.
 
The senior official also stated that the plan to synchronize the electricity systems of Iran, Russia, and Azerbaijan is on the agenda and Iran’s water and electricity industry still has good potential for development.

Another domestic conflict between Armenians and Azerbaijanis took place in Georgia

Arminfo, Armenia
Aug 25 2020

ArmInfo. In Georgia,   another domestic conflict between Armenians and Azerbaijanis took place.

Thus, according to JNEWS, on August 23, a fight broke out between  residents of the Toriya village of Ninotsminda municipality and  Azerbaijanis.

The fact is that the Azerbaijanis grazed sheep on the pastures  belonging to the residents of the village of Toriya (Armenians –  ed.), The villagers drove the animals away, after which a scuffle  began.  The Georgian Interior Ministry launched an investigation  under two articles of the Criminal Code, there are wounded and  detained.

According to one of the residents of Toriya village, they sent a  16-year-old child to tell the Tusheti people to take the sheep out of  their pastures, but they beat the child, after which a fight ensued.

In an interview with JNEWS, one of the participants in the fight said  the following: “We have a territory for haymaking, we went and saw  that the Turks were grazing sheep in our territories. We drove the  animals out of the field, and a quarrel and a fight broke out from  there. Then they gathered in a group of several people and attacked  us. They were in about 3-4 cars, and there were many of us, but we  worked – some were mowing, while others were standing, they came and  attacked us with iron and wooden clubs. It so happened that about  three of our people were detained. I do not know if they were  arrested or not. The fight took place in the pasture. We want  justice, we want to find out who gave them “spirit” so that they are  taking such steps, attacking people, even beating up Georgian border  guards. “

According to Torii residents, 5-6 people were injured of varying  severity, including two minor children.  They received appropriate  medical care at the Ninotsminda hospital.

According to the villagers, there were no problems with Azerbaijanis  in the past, and this is the first serious incident that everyone  already knows about. The press service of the Ministry of Internal  Affairs, at the moment, has detained a total of 11 people on both  sides, an investigation is underway. The Ministry of Internal Affairs  of Georgia has launched an investigation under article .

On the morning of August 24, residents of the village of Toria  gathered in front of the Ninotsminda police building and demanded the  release of three detained residents of the village of Toria.


Arsen Torosyan did not resign: He is going on vacation

Arminfo, Armenia
Aug 25 2020

ArmInfo.The rumors that the Minister of Health Arsen Torosyan has resigned are untrue. Press secretary of the Ministry of Health of Armenia Alina Nikoghosyan  stated this in an interview with ArmInfo correspondent.

To note, these rumors were also denied by press secretary of  Prime  Minister of Armenia Nikol Pashinyan Mane Gevorgyan. According to the  press service of the government, from August 21 to September 18  inclusive, Torosyan goes on vacation. Prime Minister of Armenia Nikol  Pashinyan signed this decision on August 25. “During the vacation,  Arsen Torosyan will be replaced by First Deputy Anahit Avanesyan,”  the government’s decision emphasizes.

It should be noted that a number of Armenian media outlets reported  that Minister of Health Arsen Torosyan had resigned. This assumption,  in particular, is based on the fact that the Minister, such an active  user of social networks, for some reason deleted his accounts on the  Facebook, both official and personal.

Also, some media outlets disseminated information that Torosyan  decided to resign, but the Armenian Prime Minister does not intend to  sign the statement, as he instructed law enforcement officers to  check the rumors about the embezzlement of state funds by the  Minister during the coronavirus pandemic. To note, the public also  accused the Minister of distributing government orders among his  relatives and close friends.



Sports: Colombian Wbeymar Angulo to play for Armenian national team

Public Radio of Armenia
Aug 25 2020

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FC Gandasar-Kapan midfielder Wbeymar Angulo will play for the Armenian national team.

The Football Federation of Armenia has reached an agreement with the club.

Wbeymar Angulo, who is of Colombian descent, has been playing in Armenia since 2015 and is legally entitled to play for Armenia. 

“I’m very happy and can’t believe I will play for the Armenian national team. I have played in Armenia for almost five years, and have always waited for this moment. It’s a dream come true. I thank God for this,” the midfielder said.

“If i am included in squad for the upcoming matches against North Macedonia and Estonia, I will do my best to prove that this was the right decision. I will do my best for my family, which is always watching for me and for my Armenia, which is now my country too,” he added.

Speaking about the head coach Joaquín Caparrós, Angulo said: “We all know about Caparros’s journey in Spain, about his experience and what a great coach he is. I hope to learn a lot from him, and I am sure, that we can cooperate with each other easily and productively.”



Azerbaijani Press: Russia’s Lavrov Addresses Causes Behind Deadly Clashes On Armenia-Azerbaijan Border

Caspian News, Azerbaijan
Aug 25 2020

Sergey Lavrov, Foreign Minister of Russia / The Moscow Times

More than a month has passed since the deadly clashes on the Armenia-Azerbaijan border in July; however, the issue is not going unnoticed in discussions about regional developments.

In an interview with the local Trud newspaper last week, Russia’s Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov revealed the reasons behind the skirmishes between the armies of Armenia and Azerbaijan and discussed ways to cool off tensions.

Lavrov cited the failure to resolve the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict as the primary reason for border fights in July and said that the geographical factor also served as a trigger for the resumption of war in South Caucasus.

“The decision from the Armenian side to revive the old border checkpoint located 15 kilometers from the Azerbaijani export pipelines sparked heightened anxiety of some, while an unjustified response from others launched a flywheel of confrontation with the most unpredictable consequences,” Lavrov said in an interview published on August 21.

The minister went on to add that Russian authorities have been working hard to stabilize the situation, including phone calls with colleagues in Armenia and Azerbaijan and meetings with representatives of organizations uniting Russian citizens of Azerbaijani and Armenian nationals.

“The Russian Co-Chair of the OSCE Minsk Group on Nagorno-Karabakh, [Igor] Popov, all this time was in direct contact with the leadership of the foreign affairs ministries of the two countries. As a result, through active Russian mediation, a ceasefire was reached, albeit not on the first attempt, on July 16,” he said.

Clashes on the Armenia-Azerbaijan border on July 12-16 was the second most flagrant violation of the 1994 ceasefire after the four-day war in April 2016. For the first time in 26 years, the two sides used field artillery, mortars and attack drones far from the contact line in the main conflict zone — the occupied Nagorno-Karabakh region of Azerbaijan.

The border conflict erupted after Armenian troops opened heavy artillery fire on Azerbaijani positions stationed in the Tovuz region along the border with Armenia. By the end of the fighting on July 16, Azerbaijan lost 12 servicemen, including one general, and one civilian. Although Armenian authorities confirmed four deaths as a result of the clashes, the country’s civil society has denied official numbers and claim the death toll to be more than 30.

Tovuz is located in a strategically important region of Azerbaijan that houses the Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan oil and Baku-Tbilisi-Erzurum gas pipelines, as well as the South Caucasus pipeline — the first segment of the international Southern Gas Corridor (SGC) mega gas route. The SGC is the one and only route to carry a total of 16 billion cubic meters of Caspian gas annually to Turkey and Europe.

At the height of border fights on July 13, the foreign ministry of Russia issued a statement expressing “serious concerns over the sharp aggravation of the situation on the Armenian-Azerbaijani border.” It added that the further escalation is unacceptable in the light of the security of the region.

On the same day, Lavrov held phone calls with his Armenian and Azerbaijani counterparts calling for an immediate ceasefire and adherence to the obligations reached during mediation of OSCE Minsk Group Co-Chairs and the Personal Representative of the OSCE Chairperson-in-Office. Lavrov has also vowed that Russia will continue fulfilling its mission as a Minsk Group Co-Chair.  

Armenia’s authorities said on July 13 that Yerevan has faith in the Collective Security Treaty Organization (CSTO) military bloc to address the tensions on the Armenia-Azerbaijan border. The CSTO includes Russia, Belarus, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan and Armenia. The charter of the organization requires joint action of member states for protecting state frontiers. Although an emergency meeting of CSTO was called upon Armenia’s request, it was later postponed due to unexplained reasons.

Yevgeny Mikhaylov, an international conflict expert based in Russia, said CSTO countries believe that Armenia deliberately caused provocation on the border to drag all of Azerbaijan’s friends in the military bloc into the conflict.

“Indeed, in the bloc, only Armenia is the enemy of Azerbaijan. All other countries have successful political and economic cooperation with it. Azerbaijan, for them, is a strategic partner and ally in the region,” Mikhaylov said, according to Report.az. “It is impossible to imagine that Russia and other CSTO member countries will go to war against Azerbaijan at the whim of Armenia. The main thing [Nikol] Pashinyan hoped for was to drag the CSTO into the conflict. It did not work out.”

The Armenia-Azerbaijan Nagorno-Karabakh conflict, which is over 30 years old, is one of the main threats to peace and stability in the South Caucasus. The roots of the conflict can be traced back to the rise of anti-Azerbaijan sentiments in Armenia in 1988 due to Yerevan’s illegal claim to the internationally-recognized Nagorno-Karabakh region of Azerbaijan.

Political tensions between Armenia and Azerbaijan morphed into a full-blown war in 1991 after Armenia launched an armed attack on Azerbaijan. The bloody war lasted until a ceasefire in 1994. Armenian forces killed 30,000 Azerbaijanis and displaced one million throughout the hostilities. Armenia forcibly occupied Azerbaijan’s Nagorno-Karabakh region and seven districts around it.

The lands that comprise 20 percent of Azerbaijan’s internationally-recognized territory remain under Armenia’s occupation to date. Yerevan continues to defy four UN Security Council resolutions which call for the withdrawal of its forces from occupied lands and the return of internally-displaced Azerbaijanis to their native land.

Azerbaijani Press: Azerbaijani Troops Take Armenian Reconnaissance Commander Captive

Caspian News, Azerbaijan
Aug 25 2020

By Ilham Karimli

Photo from competitions among military scouts of the Combined Arms Army of Azerbaijan, May 25, 2020 / Ministry of Defense of Azerbaijan

Azerbaijani forces took an Armenian military commander captive on August 23 during an operation to repel an attack on Azerbaijani positions in the western Goranboy district.

The captured man was the commander of a sabotage-reconnaissance group. He was identified as Gurgin Alberyan, a senior lieutenant of Armenia’s armed forces, Azerbaijan’s defense ministry reported.

“As a result of the resolute actions of the units of the Azerbaijan Army stationed in this direction, the enemy, suffering losses, was forced to retreat,” read the statement published to the ministry’s website.

The ministry went on to accuse Armenia’s military-political leadership of instigating tensions at the battle front.

A spokesperson for Armenia’s defense ministry, Shushan Stepanyan, confirmed in a Facebook post that an Armenian serviceman was taken captive on August 22. She explained that the officer was checking combat positions, but got lost on his way back due to what was claimed to be poor weather conditions.

On Sunday, the captured officer appeared in video footage that went viral. The man was seen handcuffed and surrounded by Azerbaijani servicemen who said that he was caught while trying to infiltrate Azerbaijani positions.

This was not the first sabotage attempt. Armenian forces have repeatedly violated a 1994 ceasefire that stopped the hostilities between the two countries. However, one of the most flagrant violation was on July 12 when Armenian forces attacked Azerbaijani positions and a short war broke out that lasted four days.

Armenia’s military shelled Azerbaijani positions in the Tovuz district located on the Armenia-Azerbaijan state border. Continuous shelling by Armenia’s troops triggered a full-blown war that ended on July 16. Azerbaijan lost 12 servicemen, including one general and one colonel, as well as a civilian. Although Armenia’s government confirmed four deaths on its side, civil society has denounced the official death toll, which is believed to be over 30.

Since the July clashes, Armenian troops have been trying to conduct aerial reconnaissance over Azerbaijani positions. As of August 15, Azerbaijani air defense units destroyed seven Armenian spy drones, two of which were identified to be tactical unmanned X-55 aerial crafts — a flying robot produced domestically in Armenia.

Armenia and Azerbaijan have been locked in a decades-long conflict in South Caucasus which began after Armenia kicked off an armed attack on internationally-recognized Azerbaijani lands following the dissolution of the Soviet Union in 1991. The war lasted until a ceasefire in 1994, which saw Armenia occupying the Nagorno-Karabakh region and seven surrounding districts of Azerbaijan. One million ethnic Azerbaijanis were forcibly displaced from these areas and 30,000 were killed.

Despite four UN resolutions demanding the immediate withdrawal of Armenian forces from occupied lands and the return of internally-displaced Azerbaijanis to their native land, Armenia has been refusing to pull its forces out.



CivilNet: Survey: More Than 50% Respondents State that Their Economic Situation Has Worsened Since Covid-19

CIVILNET.AM

22:05

✓The International Committee of the Red Cross started dialogue with Armenia and Azerbaijan over the issue of an Armenian officer.
✓According to the newly released report by the Caucasus Research Resource Center, more than half of respondents perceive coronavirus as the main factor causing the economic crisis in their lives.
✓Rumours are spreading that Armenia’s Minister of Health, Arsen Torosyan has submitted a resignation letter.

PM Pashinyan’s meeting with ruling My Step faction kicks off

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 12:20,

YEREVAN, AUGUST 24, ARMENPRESS. The meeting of Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan with the members of the ruling My Step faction of the Parliament kicked off at the headquarters of the Civil Contract party.

My Step faction head Lilit Makunts told reporters that there is no planned agenda for the meeting.

“This is the faction’s regular meeting with the Prime Minister. Each month the faction is holding such a meeting. There is no planned agenda, it will be formed on the spot”, she said.

 

Reporting by Norayr Shoghikyan; Editing and Translating by Aneta Harutyunyan