Families from South Ossetia Apprehensive About Resettlement Plans
INTERNATIONAL ORTHODOX CHRISTIAN CHARITIES (IOCC)
110 West Road, Suite 360, Baltimore, Md. 21204
Tel: (410) 243-9820 - Fax: (410) 243-9824
Web: www.iocc.org - E-mail: news@iocc.org
For immediate release
DATELINE: Tbilisi, Georgia
November 5, 2008
Families from South Ossetia Apprehensive About Resettlement Plans
IOCC Provides Winter Supplies to Displaced Families
(Tbilisi, Georgia) -- For the 42 families taking refuge in the School
for Blind Children in downtown Tbilisi, the one advantage to their
location is that the Sheraton hotel next door provides food. Leftover
hotel food is a welcome break from pasta and buckwheat, their sole
sustenance provided by major aid organizations.
"We had the richest land and could cultivate anything-grapes, all sorts
of apples, walnuts, pineapples, peaches," says one elderly woman dressed
in black. South Ossetia seems almost like Shangri La when spoken of by
families forced to flee two-story homes and fertile farmland. Now, they
occupy classrooms, one family to each classroom, with cots and laundry
lined neatly against blackboards.
A group excitedly gathers around an aid worker who arrives to report on
their living conditions. A visit by a foreigner or someone official
looking can mean either news about the homes they abandoned or their
next move. They are apprehensive about plans by the Georgian government
to build 7,000 winterized homes in the Buffer Zone (the area just
outside of South Ossetia) by December for those who will not be able to
return to their villages in South Ossetia.
One woman from the group stands out from the rest. Lenna is middle-aged
and blond with a small upturned nose. She is Ossetian and married to
Giorgi, a mustachioed Georgian farmer. Mixed marriages between Georgians
and Ossetians are common but complicate an already difficult situation
since Russian authorities will not permit families with Georgian members
to return to South Ossetia.
"Our land was so fertile and we used to sell our fruit in Russia," says
Lenna. "When we compare what we had there to what we have now, we feel
like beggars." This is the second time Lenna has been displaced. She and
her husband fled Tskhinvali in the early 1990s when Georgia first lost
control of South Ossetia. For the past 18 years, however, life had been
good in Didi-Liachvi where her husband built a successful farm and two
homes. Lenna raised their three children while working full-time as a
teacher of Georgian literature.
"They could come any day and force us to move somewhere we don't want to
go, and maybe the land will not be any good," says Lenna, referring to
the government's resettlement plans. She doesn't have the energy, she
says, to start a new life for the third time. Perhaps it would have been
better to live in a tent and to have a temporary home than to be
settled in a place where nothing will grow.
IOCC has been providing continuous assistance to thousands of displaced
people who fled throughout Georgia, as well as to southern Russia, since
the August conflict began. Through a new $200,000 grant by the Office
of U.S. Foreign Disaster Assistance (OFDA), IOCC is helping 2,000
individuals get through the winter by providing stoves, fuel for cooking
and heating, bedding, and winter clothes. IOCC is cooperating with the
Georgian Orthodox Church to assist families, like Lenna and those
staying in the School for Blind Children, and in 20 displacement centers
in and around Tbilisi.
To help in providing emergency relief, call IOCC's donation hotline
toll-free at 1-877-803-4622, make a gift on-line at www.iocc.org, or
mail a check or money order payable to "IOCC" and write "Conflict in the
Caucasus" in the memo line to: IOCC, P.O. Box 630225, Baltimore, Md.
21263-0225.
IOCC, founded in 1992 as the official humanitarian aid agency of the
Standing Conference of Canonical Orthodox Bishops in the Americas
(SCOBA), has implemented over $275 million in relief and development
programs in 33 countries around the world.
Media: Contact Amal Morcos at 410-243-9820 or (cell) 443-823-3489.