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No Place For Refugees: "I Have Spent A Lifetime Living In The Hotel

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  • No Place For Refugees: "I Have Spent A Lifetime Living In The Hotel

    NO PLACE FOR REFUGEES: "I HAVE SPENT A LIFETIME LIVING IN THE HOTEL WALLS . . . "

    http://armenianow.com/society/52902/refugees_in_armenia_baku_refugees_larisa_alaverdya n_united_nations
    SOCIETY | 21.03.14 | 15:40

    Photo: www.aravot.am

    By GAYANE MKRTCHYAN
    ArmeniaNow reporter

    Twenty six years after being displaced from Azerbaijan and finding
    safety in Armenia some refugees still do not have their own places
    of residence, staying in hostels with no hope their housing issue
    would ever be resolved.

    "There is no instance we haven't turned to, we have sent letters to
    wherever's possible, the most recent letter was to the president last
    year. The answer is always the same - wait until there are funds. We
    have waited for so long our lives have passed by, not much is left,"
    says Laura Ananyan, 57, who for a quarter of a century has lived
    In Nairi hotel in Nork district of Yerevan. "When I came here from
    Kirovabad, I was 31; today my children are 34, they have left for
    Russia. I have spent a lifetime in these hotel walls."

    Her story echoes a similar one told by Nelli Makeyan, 53, who has been
    staying here and there at her relatives' places for all these years.

    "Our issues will never be resolved, and living like this is terrible,
    where shall we go?" she says.

    Larisa Alaverdyan, leading Against Legal Arbitrariness NGO, says it's
    a big failure on a state level that the issue is yet unresolved.

    The United Nations allotted 20 million drams (around $49,000), while
    the state budget of Armenia - only 5 million drams ($12,000) during
    the years between 2003 and 2009, for the refugees' housing issue.

    Alaverdyan says those funds were insufficient to solve the housing
    issue for the displaced. She adds with regret that this issue has
    been removed from the political agenda at all. There isn't a single
    designated body in Armenia to be dealing with the issues of either
    the refugees or those displaced from Azerbaijan.

    "In Azerbaijan, refugees' issues are solved on a vice premier's
    level and are number one issue on their agenda. In Armenia, migration
    has gained new tempo, and I can state for sure that the most mobile
    group is that of refugees, because not having even the minimum living
    conditions they are the first to leave the country," Alaverdyan says.

    Robert Khachatryan, heading the Union of Baku Compatriots, says the
    most serious issue to the Baku refugees is their housing.

    "We have arrived to a conclusion that there has been deliberation on
    the RA government part in not solving this issue. We see corruption
    risks here, starting from construction and ending with apartment
    distribution," he says.

    Alaverdyan says there is no such case in the international practice
    when for 15-20 years refugees' issues would have remained unresolved.

    "The state has to find a respective solution. The fact that there
    isn't enough money should not affect the refugees," says the human
    rights advocate.

    MP Aragats Akhoyan, member of the NA Commission on Social Issues, says
    the same story is now repeated also with the Syrian-Armenian refugees.

    "We are thinking of building a new district, which means isolating
    Syrian-Armenians, when they have to be integrated," he says.


    From: Baghdasarian
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