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BAKU: ICRC refutes Azeri ombudsperson's statement

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  • BAKU: ICRC refutes Azeri ombudsperson's statement

    AzerNews Weekly, Azerbaijan
    April 1 2010


    ICRC refutes Azeri ombudsperson's statement

    01-04-2010 06:45:45


    The International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC), an organization
    that has helped repatriate prisoners in connection with the
    Armenia-Azerbaijan conflict over Upper (Nagorno) Garabagh since 1992,
    has refuted the Azerbaijani Ombudsperson's recent statement on its
    censoring correspondence of Azerbaijani prisoners and pressuring their
    parents.

    According to the ICRC delegation in Azerbaijan, in response to Elmira
    Suleymanova's statement, made in a Geneva meeting with Pascale Meige
    Wagner, the ICRC's head of operations for Eastern Europe and Central
    Asia, the ICRC said `erroneous reporting can have a negative impact
    both on the detainees and on their families' members'.

    `The ICRC always prefers to deliver and discuss private information
    related to detained people only with their family members or relevant
    authority representatives from both sides and not subject those
    deprived of freedom to public scrutiny,' the statement said.
    The ICRC said that since 1992, it has been visiting people who are
    detained in connection with the Armenia-Azerbaijan Upper (Nagorno)
    Garabagh conflict for strictly humanitarian purposes. The ICRC
    assesses their detention conditions and treatment until their release.
    During these visits the ICRC offers detainees the opportunity to write
    messages, known as "Red Cross Messages" (RCM) to their families.

    `Designed exclusively for exchanging personal greetings and family
    news, these messages provide vital moral support for prisoners and
    their families as this is often the only means for them to keep in
    touch. It should be noted that RCMs are subject to censorship and can
    be returned to a detainee or his/her family, if the content of a RCM
    goes beyond strictly family news. The ICRC can not force a detained
    person to write or receive an RCM if it is not so wished.'

    When the relevant authorities decide to release a detained person, the
    ICRC, if requested, supports authorities in the arrangements necessary
    to repatriate such a person. The ICRC is not involved in the process
    of negotiations on possible transfer or repatriation of persons.
    However, before agreeing to assist in repatriation or transfer, the
    ICRC always ensures by means of a private interview with the detained
    person concerned that he or she wishes to be sent home. The
    organization will support any similar operation in the future should
    the need arise, the statement added.

    Azerbaijan and Armenia have been locked in conflict for two decades.
    Two Azerbaijani military men are currently held captive in Armenia and
    one civilian is held hostage.*

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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