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UN food program to halt food aid for Azeri refugees displaced by war

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  • UN food program to halt food aid for Azeri refugees displaced by war

    Associated Press Worldstream
    December 15, 2004 Wednesday

    U.N. food program to halt food aid for Azeri refugees displaced by
    war with Armenia

    AIDA SULTANOVA; Associated Press Writer

    BAKU, Azerbaijan


    The World Food Program said Wednesday that it will halt food aid to
    nearly 140,000 Azeri refugees displaced by the 1990s conflict with
    Armenia over the disputed Nagorno-Karabakh enclave by January if the
    U.N. agency does not receive more assistance.

    WFP country director Rahman Chowdhury said the agency had halved
    rations for refugees last month in an effort to stretch food stocks.
    The WFP faces a US$10 million ([euro]7.5 million) shortfall this
    year, he said, in part due to higher retail prices and rising
    gasoline and natural gas prices.

    He said only the food aid for 5,300 primary children would continue,
    though on a limited basis.

    "Most of the displaced are so poor they don't have the means to buy
    food," Chowdhury said in a statement. "It's a dreadful situation,
    especially in the winter."

    Refugee rights activists said the decision was horrible. Vugar
    Gadirov, who heads an Azeri organization looking after the needs of
    refugees, said the WFP decision would be a "humanitarian
    catastrophe."

    "Ending the aid is a harsh blow for these people, many of whom live
    in the very worst conditions in tent camps, camps that don't have any
    amenities for living," Gadirov said.

    Government officials declined to comment on the WFP decision.

    Most of the displaced live in western regions of Azerbaijan, not far
    from Nagorno-Karabakh enclave, which ethnic Armenian forces seized
    after several years of war in the early 1990s.

    A cease-fire was signed in 1994, after 30,000 people were killed and
    about 1 million were left homeless.

    No agreement has been reached on the territory's final status, and
    the two countries have tense relations.
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