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RUSSIA "FORCING" CAMP
CLOSURES
By Umalt Dudayev in Bart camp, Ingushetia
Chechen refugees in Ingushetia's tent camps are
coming under intense pressure go home.
February 26, 2004 - (IWPR's CAUCASUS REPORTING SERVICE, No. 220)
Ingushetia's refugee camps are disappearing. The long rows of tents
that used to be pressed up against one another have thinned. Now
dark spots and big empty spaces on the raw ground are reminders
that the place was home to displaced Chechens for more than four
years.
With the gradual closure of Satsita, Sputnik and Bart camps, Moscow
still seems to be set on the declared target of shutting down all
Ingushetia's makeshift refugee centres by March 1 - despite repeated
statements of concern from the United Nations and rights groups
that the internally displaced persons are being intimidated into
leaving.
In the early morning of February 21, the Chechen Datsayev family
in the Bart camp in the Ingush town of Karabulak were hard at work,
packing up their humble belongings, wrapping blankets and mattresses
in bundles and its pots and pans and other household goods in cardboard
boxes.
Like many other families from the camp, they had decided to head
back to Chechnya - but with great trepidation.
The Datsayevs have three daughters, the eldest of whom has just
turned 13-years-old. The parents said it was because of their safety
and health that they had spent four long years in this tent camp.
"As soon as the first bombing of Grozny began in the autumn
of 1999 I immediately took the children and left for Ingushetia,"
said 39-year-old Larisa Datsayeva.
"My husband stayed in Grozny, to protect the house from looters
and robbers. He did manage to save it from bandits, but not from
the Russian artillery. Our house was completely destroyed by shelling
and now we have nowhere to live.
"At first it was very hard. With three children, the youngest
of whom was seriously ill, I lived with some friends of friends
and then got a place in this tent camp. Then it got a bit easier,
although we had no gas for several days in the winter and they turned
off the water or the power sometimes. We had all kinds of problems."
Datsayeva said they had been promised a "box house" and
compensation for returning to Chechnya - but they are still very
anxious about going back. However, after the authorities told them
that the Bart camp would be closed on March 1, they felt they had
little choice in the matter.
Ramzan Datsayev, the head of the family, explained, "Everyone
from the president right down to the last bureaucrat in Ingushetia's
migration service constantly tells us that there will be no forced
return of Chechen refugees to the homeland, but in actual fact it's
not like that at all.
"Forced migrants are being threatened, blackmailed and such
unbearable conditions are being created that they are basically
being forced to leave."
Of 318 tents put up in Bart camp at the start of the second Chechen
conflict in 1999, only a few dozen remain, housing little more than
100 families. Many of these will try to be re-housed in Ingushetia
rather than go back to Chechnya.
Estimates differ as to the number of displaced still in the region.
The Ingush authorities say there are still some 45,000 Chechen refugees
in Ingushetia, local human rights groups claim the true figure is
double that, while international agencies put the number at around
67,000. The majority live in makeshift temporary accommodation,
with only a few thousand left in tents.
One Ingush official told IWPR that were now only 3,540 Chechens
living in tents and that many were returning home voluntarily. This
compares with figures of more than 300,000 people who left Chechnya
four years ago. The authorities say the refugeess have simply had
enough of living in tents.
"For some reason people are always talking about pressure and
threats," said Zelimkhan Bokov, deputy head of Bart camp. "But
put yourself in the place of those refugees who have been living
under canvas for more than four years. They are simply tired. No
one is expelling them.
"In our camp there are around 60 families who have said they
want to stay on the territory of Ingushetia and have put in applications
for panelled houses, and we are solving this problem. But the majority
of the refugees are determined to go home."
But Usam Baisayev of the human rights organisation Memorial said
the refugees were being pressured to go back before a date - March
1 - that had been arbitrarily decided in Moscow. "Practically
every day refugees come to us complaining about the brutal behaviour
of security officials from different agencies," he claimed.
"The March 1 date is no coincidence. The authorities are determined
to liquidate all the tent camps by March 14, the date of the upcoming
Russian presidential election. The issue of Chechen refugees has
stopped being a social problem and become a political one."
The non-returnees give various reasons for not wanting to go back
- there is no accommodation fit for them to return to; there is
no work in Chechnya, which has 176,000 unemployed, and above all
they are worried about security. "In my view the right conditions
still have to be created for people," said Adlan Daudov, head
of the Public Council of Refugees.
"I'm not talking about temporary resettlement units or humanitarian
aid or compensation and all those things the bureaucrats talk about.
People need to be provided with security and given work so they
can feed their families and then many questions will fall away by
themselves.
Refugees don't need to be persuaded to return home. They want to
do it themselves, without being forced to."
Ella Pamfilova, Russia's outgoing presidential human rights commissioner,
visited the camps earlier this month and reported that many refugees
were now willing to go home. But she said that many displaced were
also still receiving threats which compelled them to go back to
Chechnya.
Jan Egeland, United Nations Under-Secretary-General for Humanitarian
Affairs and Emergency Relief Coordinator, also delivered a mixed
message earlier this month after visiting Chechnya.
Egeland said "the suffering was by no means over" in Chechnya
and that 2004 would be a "decisive year". He said he had
received assurances that all return of refugees to Chechnya would
be voluntary and that the March 1 deadline no longer applied.
He also pointed out a much-overlooked problem - that there are still
some 200,000 displaced people inside Chechnya itself, and described
conditions inside one temporary accommodation centre there as "overcrowded
and insecure".
Umalt Dudayev is the pseudonym of a Chechen journalist.
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