Azerbaijan: Safe-play areas project on track
ICRC (press release), Switzerland
June 14 2005
Last week the ICRC and Azerbaijan's National Agency for Mine Action
held a four-day workshop near Baku to raise awareness of the risk
posed by mines. The event was part of an ICRC project to create safe
play areas in villages near former conflict zones in Azerbaijan.
Fifteen members of the Red Crescent Society of Azerbaijan took part.
"Ten years after the ceasefire in the Nagorny Karabakh conflict,
mines are still an extremely serious problem in Azerbaijan," said
Musa Jalalov, head of mine-risk education at the National Agency for
Mine Action. "Our studies have led us to designate 11 areas as
high-risk, 101 as medium-risk and 970 as suspicious." The workshop
represented a first step in what was to be three-way cooperation
between the ICRC, the National Agency and the Azerbaijani Red
Crescent. This cooperation will enhance the Agency's existing
mine-awareness work and help reduce the number of mine victims,
especially children. Mine-risk education in high-risk areas is one of
the Agency's main activities.
Fifteen safe play areas would be created this year, said Herbi
Elmazi, ICRC coordinator for the project. "We're helping to gradually
build up the mine-education capacity of the Azerbaijani Red
Crescent," he added. The project will involve working together with
local communities, helping them to identify the specific mine
problems they face and to protect themselves. The Red Crescent will
play a key role in the work with those communities.
For further information, please contact:
Gulnaz Guliyeva, ICRC Baku, tel. +99 412 465 63 34 or +99 412 440 62
22
Annick Bouvier, ICRC Geneva, tel. +41 22 730 24 58
ICRC (press release), Switzerland
June 14 2005
Last week the ICRC and Azerbaijan's National Agency for Mine Action
held a four-day workshop near Baku to raise awareness of the risk
posed by mines. The event was part of an ICRC project to create safe
play areas in villages near former conflict zones in Azerbaijan.
Fifteen members of the Red Crescent Society of Azerbaijan took part.
"Ten years after the ceasefire in the Nagorny Karabakh conflict,
mines are still an extremely serious problem in Azerbaijan," said
Musa Jalalov, head of mine-risk education at the National Agency for
Mine Action. "Our studies have led us to designate 11 areas as
high-risk, 101 as medium-risk and 970 as suspicious." The workshop
represented a first step in what was to be three-way cooperation
between the ICRC, the National Agency and the Azerbaijani Red
Crescent. This cooperation will enhance the Agency's existing
mine-awareness work and help reduce the number of mine victims,
especially children. Mine-risk education in high-risk areas is one of
the Agency's main activities.
Fifteen safe play areas would be created this year, said Herbi
Elmazi, ICRC coordinator for the project. "We're helping to gradually
build up the mine-education capacity of the Azerbaijani Red
Crescent," he added. The project will involve working together with
local communities, helping them to identify the specific mine
problems they face and to protect themselves. The Red Crescent will
play a key role in the work with those communities.
For further information, please contact:
Gulnaz Guliyeva, ICRC Baku, tel. +99 412 465 63 34 or +99 412 440 62
22
Annick Bouvier, ICRC Geneva, tel. +41 22 730 24 58