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Georgia: Georgia's displaced,
Young and old face personal struggles
September 30, 2008 – (RelifWeb) Tbilisi, Georgia - Shock,
dismay, fear and concern surfaced when conflict struck Georgia on
7 August. For many watching from afar, the complexities of the political
crisis – and what it would mean in the global context –were
unclear.
For Georgians living in major conflict zones, the Tskhinvali and
Gori regions of Shida Kartli, there was little time to think. The
immediate imperative was to save themselves and their families.
Under the threat of bombings and bloodshed, individuals were forced
to leave their homes and belongings without knowing where their
next meal would come from, or when and how they'd be able to change
into clean clothes, take a shower or brush their teeth.
Some 128,000 Georgians were displaced. Hundreds were counted among
the missing and the dead. Behind each number is a personal struggle
to cope with the new realities of their disrupted lives.
Difficult decisions
At the onset of the crisis, houses and personal belongings were
not all that were left behind. Many adults reported leaving elderly
family members because they were too frail to walk from villages
to city centres safely.
"We thought that if our elderly remained behind they would
be okay, and that there would be someone at home to watch over the
property," explained Maia, an internally displaced woman from
Tirznisi dwelling in a tent camp in Rustavi near Tbilisi. "We
never imagined that anyone would attack or harm our elderly mothers
and fathers."
Maia is in touch with her parents by cell phone when she can get
a connection. On the phone, her parents tell her that they hide
in the orchard where it is safer so that they can sleep at night.
An elderly displaced woman, Mari, who lived with her brother's family
in a village in the Liakhvi Gorge, now resides in a temporary shelter
in Gori. It took her three days to walk from her village to the
shelter, and when she arrived her legs and feet were swollen and
blistered. "I am old, but I do not want to die," she declared.
Her brother stayed behind and watched his house being looted and
burned from a hiding place in his orchard. "We are all alive,"
Mari pointed out. "But we have lost everything."
No one is spared
Seeping to the surface are stories of the violence that people endured
and the insecurity and uncertainty that remains. And the perpetrators
do not discriminate as all have been reportedly affected: women
and men, girls and boys, and the young and elderly.
Nana, a young woman from Kareleti who now lives in a tent camp in
Rustavi, thought her brother-in-law was dead when he recently went
missing. "Someone told us that they saw him being kidnapped,"
Nana explained. "I heard that there were ten men kidnapped
in Karaleti during the bombings, and eight more recently,"
she added. Those being kidnapped have allegedly been held hostage
in exchange for valuable items, such as motor vehicles.
In this region, sexual violence is a taboo subject and few will
discuss it publicly, but some survivors have sought care through
UNFPA, United Nations Population Fund, and UNIFEM. Others have shared
harrowing experiences with family members or friends of being kidnapped,
assaulted and raped.
Voicing concerns
For young people caught up in the crossfire of the conflict typical
pastimes, such as reading magazines, watching TV and surfing the
web, have become things of the past. Yet they long to participate
in recreational activities if only for the chance to focus on something
light-hearted, positive, and fun. Some of the youth have kept busy
by volunteering to work alongside UNFPA and other agencies, packaging
and delivering essential non-food items to those in need.
Perhaps, the youth serve so they can focus on the act of giving
instead of thinking about all that has been taken away. UNFPA, UNIFEM,
UNDP, and local NGOs have joined together to assess their needs
by talking with them first hand. Many openly voiced their concerns:
Will we be going to school next year? Where are our family members?
Will my life always be filled with so much tension, seriousness,
and responsibility?
Adults, like Giorgi from Karaletti, and many others, are worried
over the probability of losing their yearly income –and being
unable to provide their families with food – if they can't
return home in time to harvest their crops. If Giorgi and other
farmers cannot repay or refinance the loans that they borrowed against
their homes prior to the crisis they could lose everything.
Pregnant mothers are concerned over how they will raise a child
in such an unstable environment, and if they will have access to
emergency obstetric care if needed.
In the wake of the reported violence and exploitation, many people
are anxious over their family's physical safety and their own.
Easy access
Some 25,000 individuals from and around the conflict zone that may
not be able to return home until winter. Many are dwelling for the
time being in temporary shelters. Nearly 68,000 people that have
attempted to return home to their villages.
In these types of scenarios mobile health services are not just
convenient, but vital to saving lives. Therefore, UNFPA/Georgia
has deployed four mobile medical health teams to travel throughout
various locations in Georgia, with one team attending to the needs
of 2,200 displaced in a tent city in Gori.
"Our strategy is to focus on getting health care to these people,
and to ensure international guidelines on gender-based violence,
including sexual violence, are followed," explained Tamar Khomasuridze,
the head of UNFPA's country office in Georgia. Such healthcare and
guidelines include providing treatment for injuries resulting from
forced intercourse, and ensuring that the identity of survivors
are kept confidential, and that their psychosocial needs are cared
for.
On top of these services, the mobile teams will provide pregnant
women living in shelters or passing through with pregnancy related
medical care, including assistance with the safe delivery of their
babies. So far, UNFPA's mobile teams have assisted over 1,706 women
in more than 31 displaced dwellings across Georgia.
Dreaming of peace
Keeping individual's safe is a concern on everyone's mind. In a
fight against violence, the United Nations is coordinating assistance,
under a UN Joint Project of UNFPA, UNICEF, UNDP, UNIFEM and the
office of the Resident Coordinator (with UNFPA as a managing agent),
along with UNHCR and non-governmental organizations such as World
Vision, IRC and CARE.
The programme will link to human rights groups already established
in the country in order to build on their strength and experience.
Through this initiative, resources on gender-based violence will
be translated into local language, and UN and government staff will
be trained on how to mainstream related guidelines into existing
and planned multi-level programming, both to provide response to
survivors, as well as to ensure that prevention mechanisms are in
place. A gender-based violence hotline is also being established
so that survivors can obtain psychosocial counselling and health
guidelines by making a simple phone call.
Georgia's displaced are keen to recall a time when making a phone
call was for catching up with old friends. Now, many are far from
home and have been separated from, or completely lost, their family
members. Dreaming of happier times, Maia recalled, "It is hard
to comprehend that just several weeks ago we lived in peace. We
lived together side by side, and often our families were mixed.
We can only hope to one day return home and live in peace again."
From:http://www.reliefweb.int/rw/rwb.nsf/db900sid/EGUA-7K3S69?OpenDocument&query=gender
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