Several deputies of Armenian ruling party discuss Amulsar gold mine issue

News.am, Armenia
Aug 12 2020

21:15, 12.08.2020
                  

Police draw up record against Armenian boxing champion for not wearing mask during hunger strike

News.am, Armenia
Aug 12 2020

21:35, 12.08.2020
                  

Armenia extends state of emergency for fifth time

JAM News
Aug 12 2020

    JAMnews, Yerevan

The Armenian government has decided to extend the state of emergency in the country for the fifth time until September 11.

The state of emergency was introduced on March 16 due to the coronavirus pandemic.  This decision was made in light of the fact that the coronavirus mortality rate remains high, despite a fall in the number of new cases.

The vice prime minister and commandant during the state of emergency Tigran Avinyan had already spoken earlier about the fact that the state of emergency would be extended one final time on August 12, but that some of the restrictions would be lifted.

More details below on what changes will be made to the state of emergency, the opposition’s reaction to the decision, and what people are saying on social media.

This, in part, pertains to allowing foreign citizens to travel to Armenia.

“The entry ban for people who are not citizens of Armenia has been lifted. At the same time, we envisage that if a person is not hospitalized upon entering Armenia, they will self-isolate for 14 days. However, there is a new regulation, according to which within 14 days you can take another test, and if it comes back negative, you can be let out of self-isolation,” said Minister of Justice Rustam Badasyan.

Another easement involves mass gatherings. They will now be permitted, but during these events it will be necessary to wear protective masks and maintain a social distance of 1.5-2 meters.

Family events will now be permitted, even with a large number of attendants – up to 40.

All restrictions on the export of goods through customs borders have also been lifted.

Health Minister Arsen Torosyan believes that the spread of coronavirus in Armenia is steadily decreasing. In particular, as of August 12,  only 201 of the 1,710 tests conducted the day before came back positive:

“These figures are indicative of the trend in recent weeks. Each week, we have 50-100 fewer new cases of infection. We have a real opportunity to lower these numbers”.

The situation in hospitals is also improving – there are more beds open, both in the main part of the hospital and in the ICU. There are 300 patients in critical condition, but this number was double at the beginning of July.

The prime minister believes that Armenia has the chance to solve the coronavirus problem in the country for good:

“The main issue now is in correctly assessing the situation. We made it through hell, and now we need to do everything we can to not go back there. The second wave of coronavirus has begun in many countries around the world. The authorities of these countries themselves admit that they previously said they had overcome the pandemic, but now a new wave has swept over them”.

Pashinyan says that discipline on the part of the citizens and competent actions on the part of the government can still help prevent the second wave of coronavirus in Armenia.

The head of the opposition parliamentary faction Bright Armenia Edmon Marukyan stated that the government should abandon its intention to extend the state of emergency for one more month:

“There are countries in a worse situation in terms of coronavirus than Armenia, in which the legal regime of a state of emergency has not been officially declared. Therefore, it is very important that the legal regime of the state of emergency does not continue, that we maintain restrictions with the help of other legal regulations, which, in fact, was not done. In this regard, citizens who leave the country for work will suffer, many spheres of activity will suffer”.

Facebook users expressed mixed feelings towards the government’s decision.

Here are some of their comments:

“Please resolve the issue with flights and air traffic! People have been unable to see their relatives and families for several months!”

“For several months the government has been urging us to wear these masks! Is it really so difficult to understand that the sooner this infection passes, the sooner we will return to normal life? Is it really that hard to wear the mask?”

“Let them at least lift the regulation on wearing masks in open spaces. It’s summer. It’s impossible to breathe”.

“People have been without salaries for months! How can they survive? Thousands of people every year go to other countries to earn their living, and now they are deprived of this opportunity. I’m tired of these regimes!”

Pasadenans Mourn Victims of Beirut Explosion, Mount Efforts to Send Relief to Survivors

Pasadena Now
Aug 12 2020

Although it occurred more than 7,400 miles away, the effects of a massive blast blamed on an ammonium nitrate explosion in Beirut is being felt hard in Pasadena.

Pasadena’s Lebanese and Armenian communities are rallying to help in any way they can, as the Aug. 4 explosion was believed to have left at least 160 people dead, 6,000 people injured and an estimated 300,000 people homeless, according to the Associated Press.

Pasadena Mayor Terry Tornek said many local residents are in mourning.

“While it may seem really remote from Pasadena, it’s having a very significant impact on people in our community,” he said. “I really want to convey my condolences and my prayers to the members of the Pasadena Lebanese and Armenian communities who have suffered losses as a result of this terrible event.”

“They have got brothers and sisters and cousins and relatives that have been killed and have been made homeless. And whose homes have been destroyed and businesses have been destroyed. This is a terrible catastrophic event,” Tornek said. “I’m getting stories about people who have been impacted. It’s shocking.”

Tamar Orichian, who serves as chair of the Armenian Relief Society – Sosse Chapter in Pasadena, as well as treasurer for the  ARS of Western USA, said many local families are affected, and the organization was doing all it could to help.

“All of us have friends and family in Lebanon,” she said.

The 110-year-old international humanitarian organization has a footprint in 27 countries, including Lebanon, Orichian said.

The ARS immediately opened the doors to its medical center and clinic to care for the injured. “They have helped almost 500 wounded patients,” Orichian said.

The COVID-19 pandemic has made fundraising more challenging than usual, but the effort to raise money to help with the devastation in Beirut continues in earnest at local, regional, national and global levels.

“Each chapter, on their own, is collecting donations and doing different things,” Orichian said. “We’re making and selling food. With that profit, so far we have contributed $3,000.”

A new menu featuring traditional Armenian dishes is posted each week on the ARS – Sosse Chapter’s Facebook page at facebook.com/ARSSosse, she explained. Guests may then place their orders via text message, pay via the Venmo app and pick their orders up between 4 p.m. and 6 p.m. on Tuesday and Thursdays at the Pasadena Armenian Center, 2242 E. Foothill Blvd. More information is available on the organization’s Facebook page.

A car wash fundraiser was also planned at the Pasadena Armenian Center at 11 a.m. Sunday, where food will also be available for purchase, according to the ARS.

The ARS of Western USA has raised more than $50,000 from its 24 member chapters, and is working on raising another %50,000, according to Orichian. The national branch, known as ARS Central, has collected more than $245,000 for Beirut relief.

In addition to those dealing with injuries or the deaths of loved ones, ARS is working to provide food to the hundreds of thousands of newly homeless Beirut residents.

“In the last three days, they have fed almost 3,000 people,” Orichian said. “And they still continue doing that.”

All services are provided free of charge, and the funds are sent directly to those in need, Orichian said. “Our motto is: For the people, with the people.”

But more help is badly needed, she said.

“We are hoping we can reach out not only to the Armenian community in Pasadena, but everyone in Pasadena, to come together,” she said. At the same time, the relief effort was targeted at “everybody in Lebanon,” and not only Armenian communities.”

Orichian said she urged everyone to help “as much as they can.”

Even before the explosion the country was already experiencing difficulties, ranging from economic strife to internal divisions, he said. “This, on top of it all, is really unbelievable.”

Losses due to the explosion in Lebanon’s capital city have been estimated at between $10 billion and $15 billion, the AP reported.

Lebanon Prime Minister Hassan Diab and his cabinet announced their resignations on Monday, according to the AP.

Donations for disaster relief in Beirut via ARS can be made through the organization’s website at arswestusa.org, or via the ARS – Sosse Chapter’s Venmo account: @ARD-Sosse.

Correction: An earlier version of this story misspelled the name of the ARS-Sosse Chapter and incorrectly described the position of Tamar Orichian within the organization.

FeedConstruct gains exclusive media rights to cover matches of the VBet Armenian Premier League’s 20/21 season

European Gaming Industry News
Aug 12 2020
on                     

By George Miller 


With the new gaming season starting August 14th, FeedConstruct is delighted to announce yet another close collaboration that adds value to the history of the cooperation with the Football Federation of Armenia.

FeedConstruct will exclusively provide live scouting data and live video streaming coverage of more than 130 matches during this awaited season. 

Better news than that is that FeedConstruct acquires exclusive media rights to cover captivating matches, where 10 official teams will compete in a circular format to determine the winner of this season. 

“We are always looking forward to collaborating with Armenian Premier League since, for FeedConstruct, fundamental cooperation is the primary key to being successful in our sphere.”- says the head of FeedConstruct George Arabatlian.


Serbian diplomats in Baku after weapons supply to Armenia scandal

JAM News
Aug 12 2020

    JAMnews, Baku
 

The alleged supply of weapons from Serbia to Armenia during the recent escalation on the Armenian-Azerbaijani border from July 12-16, 2020 was the reason for the arrival of and meetings with Serbian Deputy Prime Minister Nebojsa Stefanovic in Baku on August 11.

However, at a press conference following the meeting, neither side commented on the issue of the alleged arms delivery.

Buzz around this story rose at the end of July 2020, when reports about the supply of weapons to Armenia from Serbia caused Baku to voice protest.

Georgia was also involved in the scandal after the Azerbaijani newspaper haqqin.az announced that the weapons supplied were transported through Georgian territory.

The Georgian Ministry of Foreign Affairs categorically denied this information.

On August 7, the topic of arms supplies was raised during a telephone conversation between the presidents of Serbia and Azerbaijan, Aleksandar Vucic and Ilham Aliyev.

Official reports state that the head of Azerbaijan expressed regret over the fact that Armenia used weapons produced in Serbia during the battles near the village of Tovuz.

Vucic replied that a delegation from Serbia would be sent to Azerbaijan to investigate the issue.

Whether this promise has been fulfilled by the current visit of the deputy prime minister is unknown.

Op-Ed: what Turkish-Azerbaijani military exercises in Nakhchivan mean for Armenia

How will the people “be prepared for peace” against the background of the escalation on the Armenian-Azerbaijani border?

Op-ed: what really happened in the July fighting between Armenia and Azerbaijan, what are the results?

Nebojsa Stefanovic is not only the deputy prime minister of Serbia, he is also the secretary of the national security council and the minister of the interior.

He was met by Assistant to the President of Azerbaijan for Foreign Policy Hikmet Hajiyev, Deputy Foreign Minister Araz Azimov and Secretary of the Security Council Ramil Usubov.

When speaking about the results of the meeting, Stefanovic emphasized the importance of a strategic partnership and friendly relations between Azerbaijan and Serbia. He also spoke about the successful work of Azerbaijani companies in Serbia.

Major bank investment in disputed Armenian gold mine to end

Open Democracy
Aug 12 2020

For over two years, the Amulsar gold mine in Armenia has been under blockade. Now, as part of the mining company’s restructuring process, the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development says its investment in the flagship project is finished.

Thomas Rowley
European Bank for Reconstruction and Development investment in a controversial $400m gold mine in Armenia is to end, a new assessment by the bank’s complaint body states.

For the past two years, Lydian International’s Amulsar gold mining project in southern Armenia has been under blockade by local people and environmental activists, who blocked access to the mine in the wake of the country’s 2018 ‘Velvet Revolution’. News that the EBRD’s investment is due to end comes as protests have been renewed at the Amulsar site in recent weeks, after the Lydian group hired a new private security firm and removed a trailer belonging to activists.

The London-based development bank has funded exploration, drilling and feasibility studies and environmental and social mitigation measures by Lydian since 2009, and has been targeted with criticism by civil society groups over its support for the company.

“The EBRD owes the public a proper statement expressing its position on the project and current developments,” said Fidanka McGrath, EBRD policy officer at CEE Bankwatch Network. “The recent despicable provocation by Lydian’s security company [at Amulsar] is only a sign of the reputational damage that this investment will continue to inflict on the EBRD, even after its shareholdings in Lydian International are wound up.”

The Amulsar blockade has led to a complex standoff between Armenia’s government, headed by former protest leader Nikol Pashinyan, Anglo-Canadian mining company Lydian International and protest participants themselves. The standoff has also drawn in the mine’s international backers, including the EBRD, as well as the UK and US governments.

The ongoing blockade and a government-ordered environmental audit have prevented Lydian, Armenia’s largest foreign investor, from completing work at the mine, as well as causing it financial difficulties. An assessment report by the EBRD’s Independent Project Assessment Mechanism (IPAM), published on 7 August, states that the bank’s investment will be “terminated” as part of Lydian’s corporate restructuring process.

After Lydian’s lenders revoked their agreement to suspend the company’s interest and principal payments, which had been initiated as a result of the Amulsar blockade, the group is now owned by its three senior lenders, resource investment firms Orion Resource Partners, Osisko Mining and Resource Capital Funds. Lydian’s existing parent company in Jersey, in which EBRD held a 5% shareholding, is being liquidated as part of this restructuring. The IPAM report states that EBRD “has no financial interest” in restructured Lydian’s new parent company, which is incorporated in Canada, and the completion of the Jersey proceedings “will result in the termination of EBRD’s shareholding”.

“The EBRD can still redeem itself by speaking up in support of democracy and by working with the Armenian government to remedy the environmental harm and social conflicts caused by the project,” said Fidanka McGrath. “Either way the bank will have to answer for its failure to ensure proper consultations with affected communities.”

Disagreements over the potential environmental and social harm of the Amulsar mine, which is 75% complete, have animated much of the public tension over the flagship mining project. Campaigners have cited concerns over the mine’s potential impact on environmental damage, local tourism and social change, and a petition signed by 26,000 people has called on the mine’s financial backers, including the EBRD, to divest. In 2017, the International Finance Corporation, the World Bank’s development arm, withdrew its funding from Lydian International, stating that its investment was no longer necessary.

Lydian calls the mine blockade illegal, and has accused the Armenian government of “inaction” over the situation. In March 2019, Lydian notified Armenia of a potential international arbitration dispute under British and Canadian bilateral investment treaties over what it calls an “ongoing campaign by the Armenian Government targeting Lydian’s investments in Armenia”.

Lydian, originally based in Jersey, states it has followed the highest international standards on environmental mitigation and protection for the proposed mine – as required by EBRD, which has been invested in the company since 2009.

“There is no environmental issue here, it has grown into a political issue,” Lydian Armenia director Hayk Aloyan said in a recent interview. “The entire world follows the situation in Armenia, where the most environmentally-sound mining investment project has become hostage to political games.”

The unfinished mine was set to employ 750 people once it came online, Lydian states, with another 3,000 jobs created by local companies linked to the mining operation. Company projections put the number of its tax and royalty contributions to the Armenian state budget at €432 million through the ten-year operation of the mine.

The EBRD IPAM report comes in response to a complaint by residents of the local tourist town of Jermuk, as well as five non-governmental organisations in May this year. They claim that Lydian had “failed to ensure that the project complies with the requirements of the bank’s Environmental and Social Policy”, and that they had “already experienced serious environmental harm from the project, resulting from pollution of water, air and land”.

The EBRD stated in response to the complaint that “environmental and social due diligence on the Project was undertaken and that the issues presented in the Request had been adequately addressed by the Company”. The report did not state Lydian’s position on the specifics of the complaint, but that the company “had indicated their willingness… to move discussions with stakeholders forward and with the intent of resolving issues”.

In its summation, IPAM stated that “Problem Solving would offer limited potential for a constructive dialogue… due to the lack of trust between the Parties”, and that the “Parties share irreconcilable differences in their own principles”.


Fresno Unified ethnic studies mandate faces worry of omitting Armenian, anti-Semitism studies

San Joaquin Valley Sun
Aug 11 2020


Fresno Unified’s school board is set to approve a resolution requiring its students to take two semesters of ethnic studies in order to graduate from high school.

The move puts Fresno Unified ahead of California legislators – who have debated a statewide requirement for the past year – and runs headlong into the fraught, and often confusing, world of ethnic studies curriculum.

The Fresno Unified resolution calls for its high school students to take 10 units of ethnic studies as part of the state-mandated requirements for graduation.

It specifically argues that “not learning about the comprehensive history and contributions of people of color in America contributes to lower test scores and achievement gaps for African American, [Latino/Chicano] and Native American students.”

It does not, however, cite a source to that specific claim.

While the district’s resolution crafting a required ethnic studies program does not lay an early blueprint for the specific required topics, it opens the door for the California Department of Education’s Ethnic Studies Model Curriculum.

The model curriculum came under fire last summer when unveiled by State Superintendent Tony Thurmond for omitting references to the contributions of and prejudice facing Jewish Americans.

The curriculum also initially omitted any reference to the Armenian population, which now exceeds 1 million in California.

Following an update, the current version of model ethnic studies curriculum includes four references to Armenians – all tied to the Armenian Genocide.

Jewish advocates expressed hope that Fresno Unified would avoid the key pitfalls embraced by state officials in 2019.

“We’ve been following this issue closely on a state level, in regards to the California Ethnic Studies Model Curriculum (ESMC),” said Max Samarov, Executive Director of Research with Jewish advocacy group StandWithUs. 

“While the ESMC is headed in the right direction, further revisions are needed to make it more inclusive of California’s diverse communities and perspectives. We hope Fresno Unified will work carefully to ensure that the serious problems we saw with the first draft of the state curriculum are not reproduced on a local level.”

Meanwhile, Armenian-American advocates cite the sizable population concentrated within the Golden State as reason to garner more than passing reference in model curriculum.

“We have been actively engaged in the California Ethnic Studies Model Curriculum conversation for over 2 years, and echo the calls of Asian-American Studies scholars to examine and include the experiences of other West Asian peoples, including the Armenians,” said Armenian National Committee education committee chair Alice Petrossian.

“Our Committee has always been in support of including Ethnic Studies classes in public education, and made sure that the CDE hears the voices of over one million strong Californians of Armenian descent. We advocate for representation in the curriculum of other marginalized groups. Ethnic studies must reflect our histories and experiences in California’s public schools.”


Alex Tavlian is the Executive Editor of The San Joaquin Valley Sun and Executive Director of Valley Future Foundation. You can reach Alex at .

Armenian PM’s assistant meets with angry protesters outside government building

Panorama, Armenia
Aug 12 2020

Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan’s assistant Nairi Sargsyan on Wednesday met with angry protesters in front of the government building demanding that they be allowed to return to Russia.

The affected citizens, however, called for a meeting with Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan or Deputy PM, Commandant Tigran Avinyan.

Voicing their concerns, the demonstrators asked the official when they can leave for Russia, while Hayk Sargsyan confessed that he is not aware of the problem, promising to provide information on the matter after making a call. His answer fueled more anger.

“Then who knows? Let Avinyan step out and answer our questions,” the angry protesters said.

Sargsyan promised to personally call and inform them, but the latter rejected the offer.

The premier’s assistant said the matter was not discussed at today’s special cabinet meeting, adding the ban on the entry of foreigners into Russia remains in place.

“So, hold talks with them to have them reopen [the borders] for at least two weeks. People are on the edge commenting suicide, don’t you get it? Tell us specifically when the borders will reopen, we seem to be in detention in Armenia, being forbidden to go and reunite with our kids,” they said angrily.


“Either the Child or Us”: Armenia’s Abandoned Babies

Transitions Online, Czech Rep
Aug 10 2020




 10/08/2020

Legal protections for mothers and renewed efforts from civil society are persuading more and more parents not to sent their disabled babies to orphanages. From Medialab.am.

“Let’s take her to an orphanage, then wait and see: if she becomes human in a year, we will bring her back [home].” This is how the grandmother of little Alina, recently born in a maternity hospital in Yerevan, reacted when she learned that the child had Down syndrome.

Alina is the third child for the Torosyans, a family from a village in Syunik, the southernmost province in Armenia. Their first child also has health problems, and so the grandmother persuaded the parents to take Alina to an orphanage and abandon the baby.

The child’s 38-year-old mother was in despair. She knew nothing about Down syndrome and  was afraid of what was in store if she kept the child.

“I wasn’t expecting this. It was very difficult for us; we did not know how the villagers would react,” the mother says abruptly.

Alina’s story ended happily. After talks with specialists from the Ministry of Labor and Social Affairs and the Bari Mama charity, the parents changed their minds about sending her to an orphanage. The experts explained to them that Down syndrome is not a death sentence and that the child needs plenty of parental attention.

Mothers usually drop the idea of placing their children in an orphanage when they receive clear information from specialists about the child’s condition, according to Anahit Kalantaryan, head of the children’s department at the Ministry of Labor and Social Affairs.

“When parents realize that their child is a little bit special, they are reluctant to abandon him or her. In fact, we all have something special within ourselves,” says Kalantaryan.

The Power of Persuasion

Bari Mama tries to persuade parents to take their children home from institutions, says Marine Adulyan, the charity’s director.

“Because the child needs parental love very much. It was an indescribable feeling when, more than our team, the ministry was fighting with all its might for these children to live in their families,” she says, referring to the new state policy that aims to keep children in their biological families.

Illustrations by Vahe Nersesyan, used with permission

The number of children abandoned by their parents has been falling. Labor Ministry data show that in 2018, parents in Armenia abandoned 33 children, and 34 in 2019, but only one up until early March 2020.

Bari Mama, which has been assisting families and children since 2014, keeps its own statistics. According to Adulyan, the number of abandoned children has fallen from 70-80 a year in the first years after the group began, to 35-40 per year now.

Key to this positive change – which has so far seen about 150 children returned to their biological parents – are the successful cooperation between the state and NGOs, and the state policy of keeping the child in the biological family, Adulyan says.

“When a child returns to his or her family, it is not as though we forget and sever ties with them. We keep track, we call, we inquire about the problems they have. I hope the social services will develop in our country, and those families will no longer need us,” she says about the work of her organization.

The organization also runs Bari Tnak, a center in Yerevan for people with disabilities and those in need of social and psychological support.

Under Stress

Who or what incites mothers to abandon their disabled children?

Every family’s situation, and every child’s story, is different. According to the Labor Ministry, no studies have been done on why parents abandon children, but the experience of Bari Mama suggests that parents tend to take action if they receive no psychological support and feel unable to care for the child unaided.

As several high-profile cases in Armenia in recent years suggest, it is not uncommon for relatives or health-care providers to urge mothers to give up their children. Ingrained public opinion also can play a big role in the mother’s refusal to keep a newborn with problems.

“Imagine a parent having a child who, let us say, does not look the way they dreamed of. A painful phase begins: the parent wonders why he or she should go through so many problems? And it is at that moment that one must choose one’s words very carefully. More caution is required from medical personnel, as it often happens that doctors start advising the parent to abandon the child, saying, ‘leave it, and you will lead a better life,’” Adulyan notes.

Born without hands and a foot, Gagik (the name has been changed) was abandoned by his parents in 2014, at the urging of medical personnel. His parents were depressed and suffering from severe psychological distress.

Doctors had failed to detect the child’s physical problems during pregnancy. After the birth, the mother gave in to the urge to abandon him. The parents left for Russia to recover from the stressful situation. Gagik stayed in the orphanage.

That was when Bari Mama was created through the efforts of Marina Adulyan and a group of like-minded women. And a year after leaving the child, in 2015, with the help of Marina and the others, the parents – by then returned to Armenia – were able to take Gagik home from the orphanage.

“Finally, everything fell into place, and the baby returned to the family,” says Adulyan. “When the baby was born – and when it was so important for the parents to feel that they were not alone and would be able to overcome this ordeal – instead of helping, the doctors urged them to abandon the child, as the parents would not have been able to take care of the baby. The mother was in deep shock, the father was lost in despair, and the people who had taken the Hippocratic Oath urged them to take the worst step. Unfortunately, this is what Armenian reality looks like. And the health-care workers are also to blame for the bitter fate of the children in orphanages.”

Today, Gagik, now 5 years old, is growing up with his parents, who share their child’s success, giving him love and tenderness. Marina mentions that Gagik’s father often sends videos capturing the boy jumping, playing, and delighting his parents with a loud laugh.

Should Child Abandonment be a Crime?

Early this year, the Labor Ministry proposed tighter penalties for inciting or forcing an individual to give up their parental rights, including the possibility of prison time. The government approved the bill in February and sent it to parliament for debate.

During a cabinet meeting where she outlined the proposed changes, Labor Minister Zaruhi Batoyan said violations of parental rights pose a serious challenge for Armenia. She also noted many statements from the public about parents, especially mothers of newborns with Down syndrome and other health problems, being taken advantage of or deceived into giving up parental rights.

“Such actions threaten the child’s right to live in the biological family; they contradict the state policy of strengthening the family and the principles of mutual assistance, responsibility of all the members of the family, and the inadmissibility of any arbitrary interference with family affairs,” Batoyan said.

As part of the state’s strategy to reduce the numbers left in orphanages, in April 2019 the Labor Ministry, Health Ministry, and Bari Mama signed a trilateral memorandum on preventing child abandonment. Their goal is to stop the practice of institutionalizing children with health problems and ensure the child’s right to live in a family. The memorandum also foresees training medical personnel – who, as noted above, often encourage women to give up their disabled children – and recommends placing psychologists in maternity hospitals to counsel mothers and other relatives to prevent child abandonment.

The government’s campaign against child abandonment has also seenthe Labor Ministry open day-care centers in 26 localities, with four more centers planned to open soon.

“Children with certain problems can receive professional help in these centers,” the ministry’s Kalantaryan says. If need be, staff will travel to visit children in need of assistance, she adds, which can also take the form of financial help or food and clothing.

Families who take their children back from institutions are eligible for some state aid in the form of food baskets suitable for the child’s age and a refund of electricity bills for one year.

However, Adulyan of Bari Mama points out that these children may still face a lack of understanding, particularly in remote areas. Society is guided by the stereotype that a child with a disability is sick, and people are often ashamed to keep such a child, she says.

“No matter how much we raise awareness about disability issues and the need for inclusion, still they say that they do not want a sick child at home because it makes them ashamed in front of relatives and friends,” she says.

Karine, 45, and her newborn son have been living at Bari Tnak for a long time. Her third son has Down syndrome. The father is in prison, and the other members of the family do not want to accept Karine with her beloved baby.

“My relatives will not let me in the house; they say, ‘either the child or us.’ My husband is unable to help us from a distance,” Karine says. “I am in a difficult situation. We are rejected, but I will not give up my child, no matter what they say. I will raise my little miracle.”

Update: On 19 June, the Armenian Parliament adopted a bill making it a criminal offense to incite or force a woman to renounce her parental rights. Violators are liable to fines of up to 500,000 drams ($1,000) and prison terms of from several months to four years if the accused is a member of the woman’s family, or up to five years and deprivation of some working rights in the case of a health worker. 

This article originally appeared on the Armenian news outlet Medialab, as part of the Strengthening Independent Media in Europe and Eurasia project, funded by Internews. Transitions has done some editing for length and style. Medialab was founded in 2015 with the initial goal of promoting political cartooning in Armenia as a means of flagging important social issues, such as domestic violence, gender equality, and equal opportunities, among others.

Translated by Amalya Soghomonyan.