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  • Armenia/Azerbaijan: UNHCR warns of jobless despair

    ReliefWeb (press release)
    June 14 2009


    Armenia/Azerbaijan: UNHCR warns of jobless despair

    Source: Institute for War and Peace Reporting (IWPR)
    Date: 12 Jun 2009
    Special Report: Karabakh Refugees


    Senior aid official says international community needs to improve
    skills of those displaced by war to improve their employment
    prospects.

    By IWPR staff (CRS No. 497, 12-June-09)

    The United Nations' new representative for refugees in Azerbaijan has
    warned international donors that people still displaced by the Nagorny
    Karabakh conflict may lapse into despair if they do not receive more
    help in finding work.

    The Karabakh conflict, which ended with a ceasefire 15 years ago,
    uprooted at least 800,000 Azeris and 500,000 Armenians. Most of the
    former fled to Azerbaijan while a majority of the latter escaped to
    Armenia with a minority settling in Karabakh itself. Azerbaijan and
    Armenia still have no diplomatic ties, while Karabakh itself is ruled
    by Armenians who have declared their own state.

    "The challenge for the [displaced] is the anxiety and strong desire to
    go back to their places of origin. Among them, especially the most
    vulnerable, [are those who] need support and skills to engage
    themselves in gainful employment while living in settlements waiting
    for their return," Arun Sala-Ngarm, the resident representative of the
    United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees, UNHCR, told IWPR. "If
    people sit in their house doing very little, they become frustrated
    and agitated."

    He warned that those displaced by the fighting might lapse into
    despair if the international community does not help to improve their
    job prospects.

    UNHCR in Azerbaijan distributes humanitarian support to 60,000
    refugees in rural areas, and also runs legal clinics to make sure all
    those displaced by the fighting know their rights. Assistance is only
    provided to those Azeris displaced from Karabakh itself, and from the
    territory around Karabakh which is occupied by Armenians. Azeris who
    fled Armenia are now considered the same as normal citizens of
    Azerbaijan.

    "They have been naturalised and have fully integrated in
    Azerbaijan. [But] for the [displaced] from Nagorny Karabakh, it is
    clear that they have the right to return to their places of the origin
    with safety and dignity," said Sala-Ngarm.

    Tentative moves towards a political solution to the frozen conflict
    have repeatedly come to naught. Armenia still occupies 14 per cent of
    Azerbaijan's territory, and shots are still regularly exchanged over
    the line of control. Nevertheless, Sala-Ngarm said UNHCR would be
    ready to help the displaced civilians to go home when a final peace
    deal was signed.

    "People were forced out of their homes against their will. They have
    the right to voluntarily return to their homes when the opportunity
    arises," he said.

    "Whenever political solutions are found, UNHCR, with its experience
    and expertise, stands ready to work closely with the government and
    all stakeholders to facilitate their voluntary return."

    http://www.reliefweb.int/rw/rwb.nsf /db900SID/MUMA-7SZ8RG?OpenDocument

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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