Return to Grozny Pressured by Russian and Ingushetian authorities, many Chechen refugees in the neighbouring republic of Ingushetia have headed back home. To respond to this new reality, Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) have decided to resume their programs in Chechnya. Denis Lemasson, MSF Program Manager in the region, was in Grozny on February 11. Here is his account... Nazran, Ingushetia, February 10, 2005 Return to Chechnya For security reasons – MSF volunteers have been kidnapped in the North Caucasus -- we have not had direct medical programs in Chechnya since 1997, although we were providing medicines and medical equipment to health facilities. In Ingushetia, our activities were focused in the camps and the kompakniki, abandoned farms and factories where refugees were living. We offered OB-GYN and pediatric consultations as well as logistical support to improve the miserable living conditions. In 2004, as many Chechen refugees left Ingushetia, we watched the number of consultations drop, while needs grew in Chechnya. In late 2004, after thinking long and hard about the risks, we decided to resume our activities in Chechnya. The trusting relationships we have established with our Chechen colleagues allow us to do so. Because of the risk of kidnapping, international volunteers cannot have an on-going presence in the North Caucasus but are limited to irregular and short visits. Unending War … The Russian military presence has not changed and still numbers around 80,000 soldiers. Military operations still occur at sensitive points. Furthermore, several Chechen factions that emerged during the war, and have been encouraged by federal authorities, are turning against each other. “Everyone suspects everyone else,” people say. “People don’t discuss the conflict or politics even inside their own families and in their own homes.” Today, the Chechens are as afraid of the Russian soldiers as they are of the armed Chechen militias. Simultaneously, we have observed a progressive worsening of security throughout the North Caucasus during the last nine months. It is now affecting Kabardino-Balkaria and Karachaevo-Cherkassia. Precarious Lives and Deteriorating Health Despite recent statements from the Ministry of Health, and even in the face of such precarious conditions, the health care system is not improving. When hospital supplies are available, they can meet only 40 to 50 percent of the needs. For example, the Grozny maternity ward has not received medicines or medical supplies in 2 ½ months and the burn unit has been without supplies for four months. MSF provides the only support available to these two facilities. Resumption of Our Medical Activities in Chechnya “Patients arrive in a catastrophic state,” the MSF doctors tell us. “Their living conditions are worse than those of the refugees two years ago in Ingushetia.” Most of our patients have multiple illnesses. We provide them overall care. The disastrous sanitary conditions, like the stressful setting, are linked to an “active” conflict, which is far from the so-called “normalization” that Russian authorities describe. On this visit, I could see that nothing is in place to provide the refugees, who have been pushed to return to Chechnya, a decent welcome. Security conditions remain troubling and restrict the presence of international and independent humanitarian aid. We must continue to fight for a space to work, threatened by recent, increasingly radical events. » Read about other featured projects
|
|
|||
|
||||