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BAKU: UN Expert: "There Will Be No Peaceful Solution In The Nearest

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  • BAKU: UN Expert: "There Will Be No Peaceful Solution In The Nearest

    UN EXPERT: "THERE WILL BE NO PEACEFUL SOLUTION IN THE NEAREST FUTURE"

    Today, Azerbaijan
    April 10 2007

    "I am leaving Azerbaijan with a mixed picture," said Walter Kalin,
    the UN Secretary-General's Representative for the Human Rights of
    Internally Displaced Persons at the end of his mission to Azerbaijan.

    As APA reports, the Representative left with the impression that
    their basic needs had been addressed to a significant extent, but
    "what we need to do is really to refocus on this situation and take
    joint action at the international level to finally reach a peaceful
    resolution to the conflict."

    Azerbaijan suffers from one of the most serious displacement problems
    in the world. Tens of thousands of displaced Azerbaijanis continue
    to live in run-down, overcrowded collective shelters with completely
    inadequate sanitary facilities. So many people have been displaced for
    so long, and "unfortunately it doesn't look like there will be peaceful
    solution to the conflict in the very near future," noted Kalin.

    The Representative said he was satisfied that some of the worst camps,
    where the displaced had spent over a decade in misery, had finally
    been closed, and that more dignified conditions had been constructed
    in new settlements. He welcomed the Government's plan to shut down
    the remaining tent camps by the end of the year.

    "Although to date, the efforts and achievements of the Government of
    Azerbaijan in addressing the problem of internal displacement are
    impressive, a number of challenges still lie ahead to improve the
    living conditions of the displaced populations," said the UN expert
    after visiting Baku, Sumgayit, Bilasuvar, Imishli and Sabirabad from
    April 2-6, 2007.

    The main challenge now lies in the creation of livelihoods. Jobs
    were even more difficult to find than in the rest of the country,
    because settlements are often isolated from local markets, and
    employment in agriculture was not always an option. For this reason,
    Mr. Kalin stressed the importance of continued Government support,
    through monthly allowances and subsidies, for the victims of forced
    displacement.

    After the visit Mr. Kalin will present a report on his findings
    and recommendations to the Human Rights Council and to the General
    Assembly.

    "This is very important because the situation of the IDPs in Azerbaijan
    is no longer in the headlines and many IDPs feel forgotten and
    neglected and to a certain extent it's true," Kalin said.

    "I hope the first impact [of my report) will be that the Government
    will take up some of my recommendations and that it will get assistance
    and support from the international community in implementing these
    recommendations."

    The displacement in Azerbaijan is linked to the still unsettled dispute
    over Nagorno Karabakh region, fifteen years after the conflict with
    Armenia.

    URL: http://www.today.az/news/politics/39079.html
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