“When my family moved here from Charentsavan, there were only construction workers here. It was 1999 and there was nothing here. Until 2002 we didn't have electricity. Now each family receives 60 Kilowatts of electricity for free. Many have cars and there is transportation to Stepanakert and Vardenis. In the last few years, life has gotten much better and I think it will get even better in the future, “ Robert said.
A “Hetq” interview with Ralph Yirikyan, General Manager of “Karabakh Telecom”
An Interview With Serzh Amirkhanyan, Director of the Office For Migration, Refugees and Resettlement Attached to the Government of the Nagorno-Karabakh Republic
Shalua is one of the few villages in Kashatagh where the Azeris were never able to destroy the local church.
Stretching two fingers apart Yura from Himnashen says, “Even though the beginning of the world starts here this is how far we are removed from the globe”.
An interview with Ernest Ghevondyan, Head of the Kashatagh Administration
Artsakh Bunyatyan, Chief Physician at the Berdzor Hospital, thinks that people who live in Kashatagh deserve special status.
Little Gevorg and Elya have only two books – The Liar, which is an Armenian folktale, and an anatomy textbook.
Three-year old Erik has been living in the boarding school at Berdzor, the regional center of Kashatagh, for the past four months.