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Azeris Criticised On Human Rights

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  • Azeris Criticised On Human Rights

    AZERIS CRITICISED ON HUMAN RIGHTS
    By Matthew Collin

    Story from BBC NEWS:
    http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/pr/fr/-/1/hi/world/ europe/6247776.stm
    Published: 2007/06/28 01:16:47 GMT

    Human rights body Amnesty International has criticised Azerbaijan for
    its treatment of thousands of people from the disputed Nagorno-Karabakh
    region.

    Many of those displaced by the fighting between Azeri and ethnic
    Armenian forces in the 1990s face discrimination and poverty, Amnesty
    says in a report.

    It estimates more than 600,000 Azeris remain isolated despite a
    ceasefire.

    The energy-rich former Soviet republic has one of the world's worst
    problems with internally-displaced people.

    More than 600,000 Azeris have not been able to return to their homes
    since the ceasefire in Nagorno-Karabakh in 1994, the report says.

    They remain a cause of huge concern for a relatively poor country with
    a population of only eight million, despite its booming oil economy.

    Some still live in run-down collective housing or refugee camps,
    others in newly-built settlements in remote locations where work is
    hard to find.

    Amnesty International says this has caused them to become isolated
    and segregated, and to suffer more from poverty and illness.

    Long-term impact

    Earlier this year, the UN praised the Azeri government's efforts to
    address some of these problems by closing some of the worst tent camps
    but it also said more should be done to improve living conditions.

    Azerbaijan effectively lost the war with Armenian forces over
    Nagorno-Karabakh.

    The Azeri government insists it will eventually regain control over the
    territory, although little progress has been made in peace negotiations
    in more than a decade.

    The long-term impact of the conflict also continues to affect
    neighbouring Armenia.

    Some 400,000 Armenians fled their homes during the war. Many of them
    still live in desperate conditions, just like their counterparts
    in Azerbaijan.
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