A video is being circulated on social media, which simultaneously shows footage of luxurious houses and a child, most likely abandoned by an Armenian family who fled their home in the occupied territories. The special forces of Azerbaijan entered the house, where they found this small lonely man. The footage shows the conditions in which his family lived.
By and large, the overwhelming majority of ordinary Armenians living on the territory of Karabakh had to drag out a miserable existence.
But those close to power grew rich. Over the past three decades, they have been collecting money under the pretext of helping the population of Karabakh, but most of the funds received from the diaspora and from all kinds of world financial organizations, where the diaspora had influence, settled in the pockets of the Karabakh clan, which unleashed a conflict with the Azerbaijanis and seized power in Armenia.
These people lived in luxury, built villas in the most beautiful places with panoramic views of Mount Ararat, drank brandy with the leaders of the Armenian diasporas in France, Greece and Cyprus. The video, which showed the difference between the people and "fighters for their rights", caused a wide response. Here are just a few comments below this Facebook video:
"On the one hand there is a small man who will remain a man; on the other hand, those who devour, devour and devour like pigs, but do not gorge themselves," writes Shoger Khurshudyan.
"The oligarchs are fattening, but they cannot help such children. They will probably become impoverished. Horror," Oganes Ambartsumian says indignantly.
"Let the Russian Armenians see why the people do not want neither Kocharyan, nor Ter-Petrosyan, nor Sargsyan ... If they had lived in Armenia all these 30 years, they would have learned how these politicians robbed the whole of Armenia," Veronica Veronika says. ...
"Which government has the right to spend the money transferred from the fund, collected by the diaspora to help Karabakh and the victims? Victims in Karabakh, who lost their relatives, left without housing, food, soldiers in need of treatment, tell me what kind of help you received from the state," asks - Luze Jantanyan-Harutunyan.
"So what? Have you just now seen these mansions? Where were your eyes before? You had to lay so many guys to look at the fences - who is cooler?", Elena Iordanian addresses her compatriots.