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  • Amnesty: Azerbaijan: Discrimination and segregation compound probs

    Amnesty International
    June 28 2007


    Azerbaijan: Discrimination and segregation compound problems of
    internal displacement for hundreds of thousands of people



    Press release, 06/28/2007

    "We are ready to live with the Armenians of Karabakh and we have not
    forgotten our historical home there. But we won't see peace for at
    least ten years, that's why we want decent living conditions now."

    Ayaz, who was displaced from his home in Nagorny Karabakh and has
    been living in Goranboy region for 14 years

    "I don't need benefits, I'd rather have my compensation and integrate
    into society here in Baku. The government should stop deceiving me
    that I'll be able to return."
    Elmar, displaced from the province of Kelbajar.

    One of the largest populations of internally displaced people per
    capita in the world faces discrimination, segregation and an
    uncertain future, according to a new report released by Amnesty
    International today. Some 600,000 Azerbaijanis have lived in internal
    displacement for over a decade as a result of the conflict between
    Armenians and Azeris for Nagorny Karabakh, a territory within
    Azerbaijan populated mainly by ethnic Armenians, between 1991 and
    1994.

    Although minimum essential levels of human rights have been provided
    for by the Azerbaijani government, with international assistance,
    Amnesty International is concerned that current measures are not
    adequate to provide for the progressive realization of human rights
    in a context of long-term displacement.

    "By law internally displaced people enjoy the same legal protection
    and guarantees of their rights as other citizens. In practice,
    however, there are numerous limitations on their rights to freedom of
    movement, adequate housing, the fullest attainable level of health
    care and to work. Taken together, these violations effectively create
    a series of barriers discriminating against and segregating the
    internally displaced population," said Nicola Duckworth, Europe and
    Central Asia Programme Director at Amnesty International.

    In its report, Azerbaijan: Displaced then discriminated against --
    the plight of the internally displaced population, Amnesty
    International outlines a series of practices which in effect
    discriminate against and segregate the displaced population.

    Internally displaced people are restricted by the internal residence
    registration system to a fixed address in order to receive aid and
    social services, despite the de jure abolition of this system in the
    Azerbaijani Constitution. Residence permits in prosperous urban
    centres are difficult to obtain without the payment of bribes.
    New settlements for the internally displaced have been constructed in
    geographically remote, economically unviable and otherwise unsuitable
    locations, leading to isolation and segregation.
    The internally displaced have not been consulted on decision-making
    processes with direct impact on their lives, for example, the
    location of new settlements built to house them.
    The internally displaced are consistently encouraged to see their
    situation as temporary, discouraging them to seek integration or
    permanent resettlement in another part of the country.

    Internally displaced people suffer from higher rates of poverty
    compared to the rest of the population and have consequently remained
    highly dependent on subsidies and aid. The internally displaced
    population has not benefited from the privatization process in
    Azerbaijan and is all but excluded from participation in the
    country's oil-driven economic boom. According to official data
    published in 2005 the internally displaced show continued dependence
    on state benefits as their main source of income: 8.5 per cent
    compared to less than 0.1 per cent of the rest of the population.
    Poverty in turn contributes to disproportionately high incidences of
    anaemia, tuberculosis, malnutrition and mental health problems.
    Displaced people suffer disproportionately from unemployment and
    under-employment, compounded by restrictions to their right to move
    legally around the country in search of employment and by economic
    isolation in new settlements.

    Human rights treaties to which Azerbaijan is a party require the
    authorities to respect and protect the rights of internally displaced
    people to life, and an adequate standard of living.

    `Although on paper the Azerbaijani government appears willing to
    allocate resources to the needs of the internally displaced
    population, these resources are not being used in ways that allow the
    progressive realization of their human rights. State officials
    consistently emphasize the `temporary' nature of social and housing
    programmes for the displaced. Yet this emphasis is increasingly in
    conflict with the prolonged nature of displacement," Nicola Duckworth
    said.

    "The right to return to their original homes in conditions of dignity
    and security is the right of all internally displaced people, and
    remains a key aspiration of Azerbaijan's displaced population.
    However, displaced people have the right to make other choices,
    including to integrate or resettle permanently elsewhere in the
    country. This right to choose cannot be forfeited.'

    In order to address the human rights issues of the displaced people,
    Amnesty International calls on the government of Azerbaijan to:
    Remove all obstacles to the rights of the displaced population to
    freedom of movement and choice of residence;
    Take steps to provide for the right of displaced people to genuinely
    participate in a process of consultation on issues affecting them;
    Ensure that the right of the displaced population to an adequate
    standard of housing is respected in both rural and urban contexts.

    Amnesty International calls on the international community to
    continue to assist the Azerbaijani authorities in this regard.


    Background
    The conflict over Nagorny Karabakh is one of several
    minority-majority conflicts contesting sovereignty between former
    federal units of the Soviet Union. Known in the Soviet Union as the
    Nagorny Karabakh Autonomous Region, Nagorny Karabakh was populated by
    a local Armenian majority within Soviet Azerbaijan. With the onset of
    political liberalization in the late 1980s, the Armenians of Nagorny
    Karabakh began to campaign for separation from Azerbaijan and union
    with Armenia. The conflict escalated into a full-scale war in 1991,
    ending in 1994 with the de facto secession of Nagorny Karabakh from
    Azerbaijan. Nagorny Karabakh exists today as a republic unrecognized
    by any state, including Armenia. A number of proposals have been put
    forward to resolve the conflict by the Organization for Security and
    Co-operation in Europe, although no proposal thus far has been
    acceptable to the conflicting parties. A key feature of the conflict
    was forced population movements. It is estimated that over 400,000
    Armenians became either refugees from Azerbaijan to Armenia or were
    internally displaced in border regions. Over 200,000 Azeris became
    refugees from Armenia to Azerbaijan, while there are over 600,000
    internally displaced persons in Azerbaijan today.

    After the embargo, you can access the report, Azerbaijan: Displaced
    then discriminated against -- the plight of the internally displaced
    population,at http://web.amnesty.org/library/index/engeur5501020 07

    http://news.amnesty.org/index/ENGEUR550122007
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