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Coronavirus thrives in Karabakh’s bomb shelters

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Close quarters, poor ventilation and no masks: in the cellars of Stepanakert, the capital of the disputed Nagorno-Karabakh province, residents who have not fled fierce fighting may be safe from shelling, but not coronavirus.

Adjoining basements beneath one unassuming three-storey building in the city have been repurposed as a bomb shelter, where residents are seeking refuge from frequent bouts of shelling by Azerbaijan's forces, including on Friday evening.

The majority of Stepanakert's 60,000 residents fled after fighting erupted late last month between separatists in the Armenian-majority mountainous region and the Azerbaijani army.

The largest room in the basement -- around 50 square metres with a ceiling lower than 2 metres (6.5 feet) -- serves as the sleeping quarters.

Around ten mattresses and blankets are placed on stone benches built against the walls and the earthen floor is carpeted with cardboard boxes.

Facilities in the basements are primitive and there is barely room to stand up
Facilities in the basements are primitive and there is barely room to stand up
ARIS MESSINIS, AFP

A few dim lamps hang from the ceiling over an ageing wood stove in the middle of the room, its chimney running to an outside wall.

Lusine Tovmasyan used to run a medical testing centre in Stepanakert.

But when fighting erupted four weeks ago, the 44-year-old began working for the health authorities, carrying out coronavirus tests at the city's main hospital or at the homes of residents unable to travel.

On Friday morning she arrived at the building to test two women aged 63 and 76 thought to be possibly infected.

Bundled up in a coat, the older woman waits to be swabbed, sitting on a chair in the middle of the dormitory cellar.

- 'High infection rate' -

She coughs and groans when a cotton swab is pushed up her nose and then down her throat.

The sixty-year-old woman with a shawl over her shoulders is tested in the living room of her apartment on the ground floor and experiences similar discomfort, muttering a few words in a weak voice and grimacing.

"We do an average of 60 tests per day," says Tovmasyan, the only person among a half-dozen women in the cellar to be wearing a mask.

With no testing facilities in Stepanakert itself  hospital staff must care for suspected cases as be...
With no testing facilities in Stepanakert itself, hospital staff must care for suspected cases as best they can
ARIS MESSINIS, AFP

"The infection rate is quite high," she says because "people are living in groups in basements without masks".

"Between 40 and 60 percent of people test positive. It depends on the day".

After swabs are processed in the Armenian capital Yerevan -- around four hours away by road -- Tovmasyan says health workers compile lists of whose returned positive and the people they were in contact with.

There is no testing at an infectious diseases clinic near the central hospital in Stepanakert, but the facility does treat patients with coronavirus symptoms.

Nurses are busy in one of the wards administering intravenous drips for three seated and masked men.

Samvel Galstyan, 62, doesn't know whether or not he has coronavirus. He came to the facility because he had "a high temperature".

"It's cold in the basement. You go to bed and get up without changing your clothes. You can't stay there so you come in and out often. Hot, cold, hot, cold, and here I am," he said.

The entrance to the hospital is piled high with sandbags
The entrance to the hospital is piled high with sandbags
ARIS MESSINIS, AFP

The chief doctor on the ward, 63-year-old Raya Simonyan, estimates that 90 percent of Stepanakert's remaining residents have coronavirus, but admits she has no official figures.

"The situation is very bad (...) A majority of residents are sick," she says.

Back in the basement, a brown-haired 15-year-old teenage girl briefly emerges from under a large blanket before disappearing again.

Next to her on the edge of the bed, the girl's mother is staring vacantly.

Her husband and son are fighting at the front, she says, and she does not know where exactly they are although she speaks to them regularly.

"We want peace and for the war to end as soon as possible," she says tearfully.

Close quarters, poor ventilation and no masks: in the cellars of Stepanakert, the capital of the disputed Nagorno-Karabakh province, residents who have not fled fierce fighting may be safe from shelling, but not coronavirus.

Adjoining basements beneath one unassuming three-storey building in the city have been repurposed as a bomb shelter, where residents are seeking refuge from frequent bouts of shelling by Azerbaijan’s forces, including on Friday evening.

The majority of Stepanakert’s 60,000 residents fled after fighting erupted late last month between separatists in the Armenian-majority mountainous region and the Azerbaijani army.

The largest room in the basement — around 50 square metres with a ceiling lower than 2 metres (6.5 feet) — serves as the sleeping quarters.

Around ten mattresses and blankets are placed on stone benches built against the walls and the earthen floor is carpeted with cardboard boxes.

Facilities in the basements are primitive and there is barely room to stand up

Facilities in the basements are primitive and there is barely room to stand up
ARIS MESSINIS, AFP

A few dim lamps hang from the ceiling over an ageing wood stove in the middle of the room, its chimney running to an outside wall.

Lusine Tovmasyan used to run a medical testing centre in Stepanakert.

But when fighting erupted four weeks ago, the 44-year-old began working for the health authorities, carrying out coronavirus tests at the city’s main hospital or at the homes of residents unable to travel.

On Friday morning she arrived at the building to test two women aged 63 and 76 thought to be possibly infected.

Bundled up in a coat, the older woman waits to be swabbed, sitting on a chair in the middle of the dormitory cellar.

– ‘High infection rate’ –

She coughs and groans when a cotton swab is pushed up her nose and then down her throat.

The sixty-year-old woman with a shawl over her shoulders is tested in the living room of her apartment on the ground floor and experiences similar discomfort, muttering a few words in a weak voice and grimacing.

“We do an average of 60 tests per day,” says Tovmasyan, the only person among a half-dozen women in the cellar to be wearing a mask.

With no testing facilities in Stepanakert itself  hospital staff must care for suspected cases as be...

With no testing facilities in Stepanakert itself, hospital staff must care for suspected cases as best they can
ARIS MESSINIS, AFP

“The infection rate is quite high,” she says because “people are living in groups in basements without masks”.

“Between 40 and 60 percent of people test positive. It depends on the day”.

After swabs are processed in the Armenian capital Yerevan — around four hours away by road — Tovmasyan says health workers compile lists of whose returned positive and the people they were in contact with.

There is no testing at an infectious diseases clinic near the central hospital in Stepanakert, but the facility does treat patients with coronavirus symptoms.

Nurses are busy in one of the wards administering intravenous drips for three seated and masked men.

Samvel Galstyan, 62, doesn’t know whether or not he has coronavirus. He came to the facility because he had “a high temperature”.

“It’s cold in the basement. You go to bed and get up without changing your clothes. You can’t stay there so you come in and out often. Hot, cold, hot, cold, and here I am,” he said.

The entrance to the hospital is piled high with sandbags

The entrance to the hospital is piled high with sandbags
ARIS MESSINIS, AFP

The chief doctor on the ward, 63-year-old Raya Simonyan, estimates that 90 percent of Stepanakert’s remaining residents have coronavirus, but admits she has no official figures.

“The situation is very bad (…) A majority of residents are sick,” she says.

Back in the basement, a brown-haired 15-year-old teenage girl briefly emerges from under a large blanket before disappearing again.

Next to her on the edge of the bed, the girl’s mother is staring vacantly.

Her husband and son are fighting at the front, she says, and she does not know where exactly they are although she speaks to them regularly.

“We want peace and for the war to end as soon as possible,” she says tearfully.

AFP
Written By

With 2,400 staff representing 100 different nationalities, AFP covers the world as a leading global news agency. AFP provides fast, comprehensive and verified coverage of the issues affecting our daily lives.

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