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Refugees From Azerbaijan Want Armenia, International Agencies To Add

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  • Refugees From Azerbaijan Want Armenia, International Agencies To Add

    REFUGEES FROM AZERBAIJAN WANT ARMENIA, INTERNATIONAL AGENCIES TO ADDRESS THEIR ISSUE
    By Siranuysh Gevorgyan

    ArmeniaNow
    21.06.11 | 10:48

    Hundreds of thousands of refugees who fled ethnic violence in
    Azerbaijan and settled in Armenia in the late 1980s and early 1990s
    want their voice to be heard in Armenia and the world.

    At a press conference in Yerevan on June 20, marked as World Refugee
    Day, representatives of Azerbaijani-Armenians spoke out about their
    problems, claiming that neither the Republic of Armenia nor relevant
    international agencies, such as the United Nations or the Organization
    for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE), have so far addressed
    them properly.

    Enlarge Photo Hranush KharatyanAn estimated 360,000 Armenians
    from Azerbaijan became refugees because of the conflict around
    Nagorno-Karabakh. Hranush Kharatyan, a leading ethnographer in Armenia,
    says that 80,000 of them have been forced to acquire Republic of
    Armenia citizenship and today there is no precise statistics as to how
    many of them continue to live in Armenia and how many have gone abroad.

    Members of the organizing committee of the Azerbaijani-Armenians'
    Congress say that they are ready to return to their former homes, even
    to Baku and Sumgait, if they are provided with corresponding security
    guarantees. Meanwhile, Congress member Nikolay Babajanyan, who is
    also a reporter writing for the local Russian-language newspaper
    Novoye Vremya, in an interview with ArmeniaNow says that besides
    integration they were not given another alternative in Armenia.

    He also complains about the UN and OSCE policies.

    "The United Nations objective is for refugees to return to their
    original home countries, but the United Nations Armenia Office did
    not attend to this matter, perhaps peace in the South Caucasus would
    not suit the donors of the United Nations," says Babajanyan.

    As for the OSCE, which mediates the Karabakh peace talks through its
    Minsk Group, Babajanyan queries: "Why don't they consider us? They
    say they don't deal with refugees. In that case, what right do they
    have to deal with the Karabakh issue at all, as the issue of refugees
    is one of the major issues?"

    To the question as to why Azerbaijani Armenians themselves have been
    passive in raising their own problems, Babajanyan says that they no
    longer believe that the state will anyhow support them for something
    to change.

    Grigory Ayvazyan, who heads another organization of Armenian refugees
    from Azerbaijan, Azerbaijani-Armenians' Assembly, also says that they
    are ready to return to their former places of residence, but he also
    questions Azerbaijan's readiness to ensure their security. In contrast
    to members of the Azerbaijani-Armenians' Congress, Ayvazyan says that
    the issue should not be shifted into the internal political domain
    and that it is not the Republic of Armenia, but Azerbaijan that must
    be criticized for its position.

    Ethnographer Kharatyan, who has for years been raising issues related
    to Armenian refugees from Azerbaijan, is also highly critical of the
    activities of the United Nations and the Republic of Armenia.

    According to her, it is strange that the problem of Armenian refugees
    is in no way reflected in the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict settlement
    process and is not included in Armenia's foreign-policy agenda. The
    ethnographer has no expectations that the issue will be discussed
    in any way during the upcoming meeting between the Russian, Armenian
    and Azerbaijan presidents in the Russian city of Kazan.

    Kharatyan is also concerned about the statement made by Armenian
    President Serzh Sargsyan during his meeting with United Nations High
    Commissioner for Refugees Antonio Guterres in May when he said that
    from day one of receiving refugees Armenia has advocated the policy of
    integrating refugees in society and has never politicized this issue.

    "But refugees have this issue on their agenda and have repeatedly asked
    Armenia's authorities to make this an issue for political discussion,"
    says the ethnographer.

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