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Elderly People

Elderly People

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Several 'domiki' in Gyumri. Photo: Armine Avetisyan/OC Media.
Armenia

Elderly ‘domik’ resident freezes to death in Armenia

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A 70-year-old woman living in a makeshift ‘domik’ home in Gyumri froze to death. It is the first such death in the city in five years.  The woman, whose name has not been made public, was reportedly found unconscious in her home. She was then taken to hospital, where she was pronounced dead. She lived alone.  ‘This is the first such case in the province in five years’, Vahan Tumasyan, the head of the Shirak Centre, an anti-poverty NGO working in Gyumri, told OC Media.   Shirak is the only

Georgia offers older school teachers redundancy in education shake-up
Education

Georgia offers older school teachers redundancy in education shake-up

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Elderly teachers have been offered a generous retirement package as part of new reforms announced by Georgia’s Education Ministry. But some critics fear a ‘purge’ of older teachers.  Out with the old and in with the new. In an effort to modernise Georgia’s education system, the Ministry of Education has embarked upon a controversial new scheme to phase out elderly and under-qualified ‘practising’ teachers throughout the country’s education system. In May, the education ministry announce

Small kiosks also sell lemons along with other goods. ‘These ones have been hanging here for two weeks’, the owner said. (Tamuna Chkareuli / OC Media)
Elderly People

In pictures | Tbilisi’s lemon vendors — the hardships of selling lemons to survive

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Selling lemons in the streets at ₾1 ($0.38) for a bag of 5, Tbilisi’s lemon vendors — almost exclusively elderly women — struggle to scrape out a living. Tina Giguashvili, 69, stands with her hands up, a bag of lemons hanging from each finger. Since December, she’s been selling lemons every other day near the Okriba bus station in Tbilisi. For women like her, the fragrant, West Georgian citrus is not only a healthy fruit but a means of survival.

Georgia’s new pension scheme challenged in constitutional court
Elderly People

Georgia’s new pension scheme challenged in constitutional court

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Tbilisi-based rights group the Georgian Democracy Initiative (GDI) have challenged country’s new pension system in the Constitutional Court. The group argues that the new private saving scheme contradicts Articles 11 (right to equality) and 19 (right to property) of the Georgian Constitution. The new, cumulative pension scheme stipulates a 6% investment of a person’s income into a personal pension account, with 2% contributed each by employees, employers, and the state. The scheme is m

(Tamuna Chkareuli/OC Media)
Elderly People

Opinion | Georgia’s pension reforms do nothing for most Georgians

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Despite the good intentions of the government, Georgia’s pension reforms are doomed to failure. In July, Georgia’s parliament approved a long-overdue new pension law. But these reforms will not fulfil their main purpose — to significantly increase pensions for citizens retiring in the coming years. In a country where incomes are low and unequally distributed and informal labour is rampant a saving pension scheme such as this will change nothing for the most Georgians. Back-door reforms

Anzor and Giorgi Noniashvili (Tamuna Chkareuli/OC Media)
Elderly People

‘People’s goodwill is my only hope for survival’ — elderly poverty in Georgia

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Struggling to make ends meet, many Georgian pensioners end up relying on donations from charities or support from relatives or kind neighbours. Places in care homes are few and far between and even the state-run Soviet-era institutions are no longer taking in residents. The government is set to introduce a new pension contribution scheme but critics argue it doesn’t go far enough. Eighty-one-year old Makvala Kebadze, who suffers from diabetes and has undergone heart surgery, spends ₾135

Protests in Kabardino-Balkaria over retirement age rise
Elderly People

Protests in Kabardino-Balkaria over retirement age rise

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More than 500 people gathered in Nalchik, the capital of Kabardino-Balkaria, on Saturday to protest Russia’s pension reforms raising the retirement age by 5 years for men and 8 years for women. Similar protests took place simultaneously in Kabardino-Balkaria’s second city, Prokhladny, as well as dozens of cities throughout Russia. The nationwide protest rally against raising the retirement age was organised in most cities by the Russian Communist Party. The rally in Nalchik was organised

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