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- <text id=93TT1034>
- <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>
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