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Azerbaijanis Flock To Iran For Food And Medicines

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  • Azerbaijanis Flock To Iran For Food And Medicines

    AZERBAIJANIS FLOCK TO IRAN FOR FOOD AND MEDICINES

    http://www.a1plus.am/en/social/2012/06/01/azerbaijan-iran
    12:47 pm | Today | Social

    People from southern Azerbaijan make regular trips to neighbouring
    Iran to buy food and access healthcare. Despite the crowds and
    obstructive officials at the border crossing, they say it is still
    worth the effort for the money they save.

    For some commentators, the cross-border trade is also a cause for
    alarm, where some see it as another avenue through which Tehran can
    project its influence. Despite cultural similarities between the two
    nations, post-Soviet Azerbaijan and Islamic Iran maintain an uneasy
    coexistence.

    "There are many unemployed people like me in Astara, and most of the
    men in work have insecure temporary jobs and earn a maximum of 200
    manats [250 US dollars] a month," Akif Huseynov, from the border town
    of Astara, said. "How can you feed a family on that amount? We have
    to go to Iran, where everything is half the price it is here."

    The frontier separates Astara from its Iranian namesake, and
    long queues form at customs as people from other parts of southern
    Azerbaijan like Lenkoran and Lerik join the locals on their shopping
    forays.

    Huseynov said Iranian officials were helpful and did not stop people
    going home with bagloads of food they had bought - in contrast to
    their Azerbaijani counterparts.

    "Each time we go, our customs officers take half our food away from us
    and discard it. Supposedly you're not allowed to bring in more than
    ten kilograms of foodstuffs, and they say you have to pay one or two
    manats for every extra kilogram. That makes the cost the same as it is
    in Astara, and you'd have to ask why you even went to Iran," he said.

    Before walking across to the Iranian side, would-be visitors have to
    wait inside one of a pair of caged enclosures, which lead to customs
    in Astara.

    When an IWPR reporter visited, a crowd of Azerbaijani nationals were
    kept waiting in one of these for three hours. The other enclosure,
    designated for foreign citizens, was faster, though it still took an
    hour. A cleaner pointed the journalist to this faster route, which
    she said she could enter in return for a "small fee".

    "You can see this horror show every day from early in the morning
    until 12 or one o'clock," said Maqsud, a man from Yardimli in southern
    Azerbaijan. "The majority of these people are lie me, going to Iran
    for food. First you have to wait two or three hours just to get inside
    the cage, then you have to stand inside it for about the same amount
    of time. It's closed off on all sides and people often get ill there.

    And it takes an hour for the border guards to open the door while
    you're shouting at them."

    Despite this treatment, Maqsud said he went to Iran twice a month.

    "I am a teacher on 240 manats [a month]. If I don't go to Iran to get
    food, my family will starve," he said. "Of course you can shell out
    ten or 15 manats and go via the left-hand cage which is meant for
    foreigners. People are allowed through quicker and you don't have
    to wait nearly as long. But I can buy a lot of food in Iran for that
    money, so it's a shame to give it to the border guards."

    Asen Hashimli, a member of the opposition Musavat party who lives in
    Iran, said the situation was an indictment of conditions in Azerbaijan.

    "All these people are going to Iran for cheap food, manufactured goods
    and medicines. And it isn't the first year this has been happening," he
    said. "Medicines in Iran are low in price and high in quality. For poor
    Azerbaijanis, Iran has become the only hope of feeding their families
    and getting treatment. And sadly, Azerbaijani customs exploit them."

    Safura Qadimova is among those who have benefited from Iran's
    healthcare system.

    "I've been married eight years, but we didn't have children. I
    underwent endless tests and treatment, amounting to over 5,000 manats,"
    she said. "In the end, my friends advised me to go to Iran. I spent
    400 dollars there and it only took a month - after the first course
    of treatment, I got pregnant immediately."

    Natig Ibadov, Astara's deputy mayor with special responsibility
    for healthcare, acknowledged that local residents often went to
    Iran for treatment, but he insisted the town's new hospital would
    improve matters.

    "It's got everything. The president set aside another two million
    manats to build a second wing. Now we'll be able to treat our own
    patients and there will be no need to go to Iran," Ibadov said.

    The hospital is certainly large and looks well-equipped. But when this
    IWPR contributor visited it, there was not a single patient in sight,
    just doctors and nurses sitting drinking tea.

    Hashimli said the hospital would do little to stem the flow of people
    heading for Iran.

    "If we don't have decent doctors, and the ones we do have think
    only about getting money from their patients, then who's going to go
    there?" he asked. "Everyone is still going to Iran."

    Hashimli said the government needed to pay more attention to southern
    parts of Azerbaijan because of their strategically sensitive location.

    "It's no secret that Iran wields influence in southern areas of
    Azerbaijan. And now it's expanding its influence because of the
    local population's needs," he said. "Our government has to take this
    seriously. It must provide people with work and create the conditions
    for them to live decent lives, to study and to access medical
    treatment, so that citizens of Azerbaijan aren't reliant on Iran."

    Samira Ahmedbeyli is an IWPR reporter on Azerbaijan.



    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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