Dispatches from Chechnya No. 5 - Humanitarian organizations in Chechnya and Ingushetia Dispatches from Chechnya No. 5, December 1, 2000
HUMANITARIAN ORGANIZATIONS IN CHECHNYA AND INGUSHETIA
GROZNY, December 1, 2000 -- The humanitarian situation in the Chechen Republic continues to be very complicated. Despite the fact that the number of organizations providing aid to Chechen refugees has lately been increasing, most of these organizations work only in Ingushetia and are not able to influence the situation in Chechnya. The people who need humanitarian assistance the most are those who still live within the war zone. Not only are these people unable to obtain the basic necessities of life, they have also been deprived of fundamental human rights, such as freedom of movement.
The effectiveness of humanitarian organizations working in Ingushetia has been declining. This decline can be explained in large part by the fact that these organizations are developing excessive bureaucracies, which not only eat up a significant portion of the humanitarian budget, but also provide obstacles to refugees seeking assistance. For example, when the Danish Council on Refugees first started working in Ingushetia, it was very successful. The Council set up a substantial number of distribution centers, effectively notified people at what times the distribution centers would be working, and even began compiling lists of refugees (Council workers would go to refugee camps and make lists of names). But lately it has become very difficult not only to receive aid from the Danish Council on Refugees, but even to get on the list of those eligible for aid.
In order to be registered, a refugee must spend several days standing in line, and has to show up at 6 or 7 am (and this process has to be repeated at least two or three times), while the bureaucrats whose job it is to register refugees begin their work no earlier than 10:00 am. Additionally, if a refugee, for one reason or another, misses one or two distribution days, he is automatically taken off the list, and re-registering can take weeks or even months.
In order to receive aid, it is also necessary to spend a minimum of two days in line, or arrive at 6 or 7 in the morning, due to the fact that the Danish Council has closed a number of its distribution centers. Those centers that are still open are located in places that are very difficult for the majority of refugees to get to.
In order to get a card that allows one to receive aid from the International Committee of the Red Cross, it is necessary to pay at least 100 rubles to the local migration service officials. In other instances the necessary forms are simply not available.
The activities of other humanitarian organizations are conducted on an even smaller scale, and in the majority of cases are so low-profile that they are almost secret.
It is important to consider that the Danish Council on Refugees and the Red Cross are among those organizations that do provide a significant amount of assistance to the suffering population of Chechnya. If such organizations were able to work more efficiently, their aid would reach a larger percentage of refugees.
More cooperation between all the organizations working in Chechnya and Ingushetia, and increased transparency in the work of these organiztions, could help increase their efficiency. In Nazran, for example, representatives of all local humanitarian organizations meet weekly, but this meeting is a formality.
Most humanitarian organizations in Chechnya and Ingushetia are very secretive about their activities. Not only do they not provide information to the media or to the local population, they also avoid giving information to the government. No one knows how many people have sought humanitarian assistance or how many people are receiving it. The numbers provided by various organizations very often do not reflect reality.
Therefore, despite the fact that the official amount of humanitarian aid being given has increased, the provision of aid is organized very poorly. This makes humanitarian organizations very inefficient and makes assistance inaccessible to the majority of the Chechen population.
In order to increase the effectiveness of humanitarian organizations in Chechnya and Ingushetia, we believe that the following steps are necessary:
- Real cooperation among all humanitarian and non-governmental organizations (including the formation of a coordination center for representatives of these organizations as well as for representatives of the public sector);
- Transparency and publication of humanitarian activities and increased cooperation with the media;
- Cuts in the bureaucratic structure of humanitarian organizations and a simplification and humanization of the procedures for registration and receipt of aid;
- More reliable means of informing the Chechen population of the time and location of aid distributions, as well as on the amount of aid to be distributed;
- A significant increase in the number of distribution centers; and
- Public control of humanitarian organizations.
We also believe that as soon as spring arrives it will be necessary to move the activities of more humanitarian organizations from Ingushetia into the Chechen Republic.
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Information about LAM:
LAM (mountain in Chechen), is a Chechen NGO currently working to assist refugees and displaced persons, bring an end to the war, help reconstruct Chechnya, and document war crimes. Before the current war, Lam focused on preserving Chechnya's intellectual and cultural heritage. It produced and distributed recordings of musical, theatrical, and dance programs, published books on cultural topics, and organized regular meetings of intellectuals on cultural, legal and human rights topics. Since the outbreak of the war, Lam has focused on providing humanitarian assistance to refugees, providing information to international relief organizations on how best to deliver humitarian aid, trying to bring an end to the war, and disseminating information about the crisis and about war crimes. In its information dissemination efforts, Lam works closely with the Andrei Sakarov Museum in Moscow, IDEE-Warsaw, and IDEE. In the spring of 2000 Lam became the Chechen Center for Pluralism, the 17th member of IDEE's transregional network of NGOs dedicated to promoting democratic ideas and principles. In June 2000, with support from IDEE, Lam held a conference in Nazran, Ingushetia on The Crisis in Chechnya and Prospects for its Resolution. The conference attracted approximately 100 participants from Grozny, Argun, Shali, and other towns and villages in Chechnya, and included teachers, lawyers, doctors, and artists, as well as representatives of social and political movements. At the conclusion of the conference, the participants issued a statement on the situation in Chechnya.
Lam may be contacted through:
The Andrei Sakharov Museum,
Zemlianoy val, 57, bld.6
107120 Moscow, RUSSIA
Tel: (7095) 923 4401
Fax: (7095) 917 2653
E-mail: sakharov.mus@g23.relcom.ru |