Refugees: Urgent Problem Unresolved

REFUGEES: URGENT PROBLEM UNRESOLVED

news.am
Oct 28 2009
Armenia

Over the last 20 years the problem of Armenian refugees from Azerbaijan
has been a headache for independent Armenia’s authorities. The trouble
is, however, that the problem has not so far been resolved. Now
that the Nagorno-Karabakh peace process is intensifying and nearing
completion, the negative consequences of the authorities’ short-sighted
policy are becoming increasingly obvious.

In 1988-1990, when hundreds of thousands of Armenians flooded into
Armenia from Azerbaijan (over 200,000 refugees came to Armenia from
Baku alone), the country was busy with other things. The economy was
collapsing, Armenia was blockaded and Azerbaijan launched an aggression
against the country. The extensive Soviet housing facilities enabled
Armenia to provide refugees with temporary lodgings at hostels, and
only several thousands of Armenian refugees from Baku, Kirovabad and
Sumgait received or purchased flats in Armenia.

Since the hostilities were over and economy recovery got under way,
the refugees’ problems have been resolved at a snail’s pace. No
integration program for refugees has so far been elaborated in
Armenia. Specifically, nothing has been done to organize free Armenian
language courses for refugees – knowing the language at a necessary
level would play a serious role in their "settling" the language and
mental differences with the native Armenian population.

Years have passed, power has changed in Armenia and natives of
Nagorno-Karabakh are holding the reigns of government. North Avenue,
as well as numerous high-rise buildings with thousands of empty flats,
has been constructed in Yerevan. Yet, after Robert Kocharyan came to
power in Armenia, the authorities did not launch a policy of settling
the liberated territories, particularly, the ancient town of Shushi.

The opposite tendencies could be observed: thousands of families
from Nagorno-Karabakh settled down in Armenia to become one of the
major "supports" for the new authorities. They were joined by many
refugees from Azerbaijan, who have made up their minds to settle
down in Armenia, which had no necessary state policy of settling the
Nagorno-Karabakh Republic (NKR). It is noteworthy that most of the
refugees are natives of Nagorno-Karabakh.

All the above certainly affected the Nagorno-Karabakh peace process.

The Azerbaijani side has for many years been "howling" about
Azeri refugees, wildly exaggerating their real number, whereas the
Armenian side has hardly opposed anything to that. The logic of the
negotiations now is: Azeri refugees must return to their homes, but
Armenians – may not. True, a few months ago Armenian Foreign Minister
Edward Nalbandian at last remembered the 400,000 Armenian refugees
from Azerbaijan. His single statement, however, has not so far been
followed by any practical steps.

It is obvious, with the return of hundreds of thousands of Armenian
refugees to Baku and other Azerbaijani cities being impossible, the
Armenian side has the right to raise the issue of compensation. Quite
a good option is settling the Armenian refugees in Shuhsi, while the
Shushi "ex-residents" will demand housing from their fellow countrymen,
who seized the flats of tens of thousands of Armenians.

In short, the Armenian authorities should realize the necessity for
revising their policy as long as the situation can be improved.