GENEVA / ARMENIA AZERBAIJAN HUMANITARIAN UPDATE
29-Sep-2023
00:03:31
Almost 89,000 residents of the Karabakh region - roughly half of the region’s population - have moved to Armenia since last week’s flare-up in fighting there and the total number of arrivals could rise to 120,000 in coming days, the UN refugee agency (UNHCR) said. UNTV CH
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STORY: GENEVA / ARMENIA AZERBAIJAN HUMANITARIAN UPDATE
TRT: 03:31
SOURCE: UNTV CH
RESTRICTIONS: NONE
LANGUAGE: ENGLISH / NATS
DATELINE: 29 SEPTEMBER 2023 GENEVA, SWITZERLAND
TRT: 03:31
SOURCE: UNTV CH
RESTRICTIONS: NONE
LANGUAGE: ENGLISH / NATS
DATELINE: 29 SEPTEMBER 2023 GENEVA, SWITZERLAND
SHOTLIST
1. Wide shot, United Nations flag
2. Wide shot, panel and attendees at press briefing
3. SOUNDBITE (English) Kavita Belani, Representative in Armenia UN Refugee Agency (UNHCR):
“The numbers are increasing as we speak and the needs are also really increasing. The registration and the reception process is quite well managed by the government and of course there are huge crowds at the registration centers, there is congestion, simply because the sheer numbers are very high.”
4. Wide shot, attendees at briefing
5. SOUNDBITE (English) Kavita Belani, Representative in Armenia UN Refugee Agency (UNHCR):
“As of 10:00 a.m. this morning, the figure of people arriving is 88,780. These are government statistics, that we get from them – but the number of registrations done, as of 10:00 a.m. this morning, is 63,483. There is a long line of waiting for registration as well.”
6. Med shot, attendee taking photo at briefing
7. SOUNDBITE (English) Kavita Belani, Representative in Armenia UN Refugee Agency (UNHCR):
“In terms of what are the most urgent needs: psychosocial support because people are arriving very tired, people are also in need of some medicines, especially those who are chronically ill, shelter needs. The sheer number of people arriving has really constrained the current government ability to provide temporary shelter to everybody and schools have also been turned into shelters.”
8. Wide shot, panel at press briefing
9. SOUNDBITE (English) Regina De Dominicis, Regional Director for Europe and Central Asia and Special Coordinator for Refugee and Migrant Response in Europe, UNICEF:
“Approximately 30 percent of those are children and the major concern for us is that many of them have been separated by their family, so we are working in providing first of all psychosocial support and working with the ministries and local authorities as well to make sure that family-tracing is done immediately and families can unite. We have set up already a child-friendly space.”
10. Wide shot, panel and attendees at press briefing.
11. SOUNDBITE (English) Hicham Diab, Operations manager in Armenia, Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies (IFRC):
“It was so evident on everyone – children, men, women, elderly – the expressions on the faces of those who walk into registration points speak volumes: Each face tells a story of hardship, but also of hope, knowing they are in a place where they can receive aid.”
12. Wide shot, panel at press briefing
13. SOUNDBITE (English) Carlos Morazzani, Operations Manager, International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC):
“The priority of the International Committee of the Red Cross in recent days has been on life-saving activities, including the transfer of the wounded to hospitals into Armenia for treatment and bringing in medical supplies. Over the past week we have transferred around 130 people for medical care and after the explosion – that all of you saw – we increased our engagement with all regional authorities.”
14. Med shot, attendees
15. SOUNDBITE (English) ) Carlos Morazzani, Operations Manager, International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC):
“Just yesterday we transferred nearly 200 bodies – people who died either of the accident this week or the recent fighting. We do this in our capacity as a neutral intermediary working on humanitarian grounds. We have been negotiating constantly to ensure this kind of work happens, because ensuring that families can bury their loved ones or relatives, knowing what happened to them, so they are not left wondering.”
16. Wide shot, panel at press briefing
17. Med shot, attendees
18. Wide shot, panel at press briefing
2. Wide shot, panel and attendees at press briefing
3. SOUNDBITE (English) Kavita Belani, Representative in Armenia UN Refugee Agency (UNHCR):
“The numbers are increasing as we speak and the needs are also really increasing. The registration and the reception process is quite well managed by the government and of course there are huge crowds at the registration centers, there is congestion, simply because the sheer numbers are very high.”
4. Wide shot, attendees at briefing
5. SOUNDBITE (English) Kavita Belani, Representative in Armenia UN Refugee Agency (UNHCR):
“As of 10:00 a.m. this morning, the figure of people arriving is 88,780. These are government statistics, that we get from them – but the number of registrations done, as of 10:00 a.m. this morning, is 63,483. There is a long line of waiting for registration as well.”
6. Med shot, attendee taking photo at briefing
7. SOUNDBITE (English) Kavita Belani, Representative in Armenia UN Refugee Agency (UNHCR):
“In terms of what are the most urgent needs: psychosocial support because people are arriving very tired, people are also in need of some medicines, especially those who are chronically ill, shelter needs. The sheer number of people arriving has really constrained the current government ability to provide temporary shelter to everybody and schools have also been turned into shelters.”
8. Wide shot, panel at press briefing
9. SOUNDBITE (English) Regina De Dominicis, Regional Director for Europe and Central Asia and Special Coordinator for Refugee and Migrant Response in Europe, UNICEF:
“Approximately 30 percent of those are children and the major concern for us is that many of them have been separated by their family, so we are working in providing first of all psychosocial support and working with the ministries and local authorities as well to make sure that family-tracing is done immediately and families can unite. We have set up already a child-friendly space.”
10. Wide shot, panel and attendees at press briefing.
11. SOUNDBITE (English) Hicham Diab, Operations manager in Armenia, Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies (IFRC):
“It was so evident on everyone – children, men, women, elderly – the expressions on the faces of those who walk into registration points speak volumes: Each face tells a story of hardship, but also of hope, knowing they are in a place where they can receive aid.”
12. Wide shot, panel at press briefing
13. SOUNDBITE (English) Carlos Morazzani, Operations Manager, International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC):
“The priority of the International Committee of the Red Cross in recent days has been on life-saving activities, including the transfer of the wounded to hospitals into Armenia for treatment and bringing in medical supplies. Over the past week we have transferred around 130 people for medical care and after the explosion – that all of you saw – we increased our engagement with all regional authorities.”
14. Med shot, attendees
15. SOUNDBITE (English) ) Carlos Morazzani, Operations Manager, International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC):
“Just yesterday we transferred nearly 200 bodies – people who died either of the accident this week or the recent fighting. We do this in our capacity as a neutral intermediary working on humanitarian grounds. We have been negotiating constantly to ensure this kind of work happens, because ensuring that families can bury their loved ones or relatives, knowing what happened to them, so they are not left wondering.”
16. Wide shot, panel at press briefing
17. Med shot, attendees
18. Wide shot, panel at press briefing
STORYLINE
Almost 89,000 residents of the Karabakh region - roughly half of the region’s population - have moved to Armenia since last week’s flare-up in fighting there and the total number of arrivals could rise to 120,000 in coming days, the UN refugee agency (UNHCR) said on Friday (29 Sep).
“The numbers are increasing as we speak and the needs are also really increasing,” said Kavita Belani, UNHCR representative in Armenia. The Government is managing registration and reception of the new arrivals “and of course there are huge crowds at the registration centres”, she added. “There is congestion, simply because the sheer numbers are very high.”
Conflict between Armenia and Azerbaijan over the region has persisted for more than three decades, but a ceasefire and subsequent Trilateral Statement was agreed almost three years ago following six weeks of fighting, by the leaders of Armenia, Azerbaijan and Russia, leading to the deployment of several thousand Russian peacekeepers.
The exodus of people into Armenia prompted UN Secretary-General António Guterres to call for fully-fledged access for aid workers to people in need.
As thousands of people continue to cross the border into Armenia, the UN and partner organizations are scaling up their response to support those in need.
“In terms of what are the most urgent needs: psychosocial support because people are arriving very tired, people are also in need of some medicines, especially those who are chronically ill, shelter needs,” said the UNHCR representative.
“The sheer number of people arriving has really constrained the current government ability to provide temporary shelter to everybody and schools have also been turned into shelters.”
Echoing that message, the UN Children’s Fund said that approximately 30 percent of the new arrivals are children.
“The major concern for us is that many of them have been separated by their family, so we are working in providing first of all psychosocial support and working with the ministries and local authorities as well to make sure that family-tracing is done immediately and families can unite,” said Regina De Dominicis, UNICEF Regional Director for Europe and Central Asia and Special Coordinator for Refugee and Migrant Response in Europe. Initial support has included a UNICEF child-friendly space, Ms. De Dominicis noted.
Since Sunday, Armenian villages near the border with the Karabakh region have turned into makeshift refugee camps. Some of those seeking shelter had only minutes to pack to leave by cars, buses and construction trucks, they said. While many refugees expressed relief at reaching Armenia from Azerbaijan, they remain traumatized and confused about the future, according to the International Federation of the Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies (IFRC).
“It was so evident on everyone – children, men, women, elderly – the expressions on the faces of those who walk into registration points speak volumes,” said IFRC’s Hicham Diab, speaking from Armenia’s capital Yerevan. “Each face tells a story of hardship, but also of hope, knowing they are in a place where they can receive aid.”
The desperate situation was compounded by an explosion on Monday at a fuel depot in the Karabach region that killed at least 68 people, according to local authorities. An additional 105 people are still missing following the blast, which reportedly occurred as many people were lining up to get fuel to help them leave.
“The priority of the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) in recent days has been on life-saving activities, including the transfer of the wounded to hospitals into Armenia for treatment and bringing in medical supplies,” said Carlos Morazzani, ICRC Operations Manager. “Over the past week we have transferred around 130 people for medical care and after the explosion – that all of you saw – we increased our engagement with all regional authorities.”
Morazzani added that “yesterday we transferred nearly 200 bodies – people who died either of the accident this week or the recent fighting. We do this in our capacity as a neutral intermediary working on humanitarian grounds.”
“The numbers are increasing as we speak and the needs are also really increasing,” said Kavita Belani, UNHCR representative in Armenia. The Government is managing registration and reception of the new arrivals “and of course there are huge crowds at the registration centres”, she added. “There is congestion, simply because the sheer numbers are very high.”
Conflict between Armenia and Azerbaijan over the region has persisted for more than three decades, but a ceasefire and subsequent Trilateral Statement was agreed almost three years ago following six weeks of fighting, by the leaders of Armenia, Azerbaijan and Russia, leading to the deployment of several thousand Russian peacekeepers.
The exodus of people into Armenia prompted UN Secretary-General António Guterres to call for fully-fledged access for aid workers to people in need.
As thousands of people continue to cross the border into Armenia, the UN and partner organizations are scaling up their response to support those in need.
“In terms of what are the most urgent needs: psychosocial support because people are arriving very tired, people are also in need of some medicines, especially those who are chronically ill, shelter needs,” said the UNHCR representative.
“The sheer number of people arriving has really constrained the current government ability to provide temporary shelter to everybody and schools have also been turned into shelters.”
Echoing that message, the UN Children’s Fund said that approximately 30 percent of the new arrivals are children.
“The major concern for us is that many of them have been separated by their family, so we are working in providing first of all psychosocial support and working with the ministries and local authorities as well to make sure that family-tracing is done immediately and families can unite,” said Regina De Dominicis, UNICEF Regional Director for Europe and Central Asia and Special Coordinator for Refugee and Migrant Response in Europe. Initial support has included a UNICEF child-friendly space, Ms. De Dominicis noted.
Since Sunday, Armenian villages near the border with the Karabakh region have turned into makeshift refugee camps. Some of those seeking shelter had only minutes to pack to leave by cars, buses and construction trucks, they said. While many refugees expressed relief at reaching Armenia from Azerbaijan, they remain traumatized and confused about the future, according to the International Federation of the Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies (IFRC).
“It was so evident on everyone – children, men, women, elderly – the expressions on the faces of those who walk into registration points speak volumes,” said IFRC’s Hicham Diab, speaking from Armenia’s capital Yerevan. “Each face tells a story of hardship, but also of hope, knowing they are in a place where they can receive aid.”
The desperate situation was compounded by an explosion on Monday at a fuel depot in the Karabach region that killed at least 68 people, according to local authorities. An additional 105 people are still missing following the blast, which reportedly occurred as many people were lining up to get fuel to help them leave.
“The priority of the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) in recent days has been on life-saving activities, including the transfer of the wounded to hospitals into Armenia for treatment and bringing in medical supplies,” said Carlos Morazzani, ICRC Operations Manager. “Over the past week we have transferred around 130 people for medical care and after the explosion – that all of you saw – we increased our engagement with all regional authorities.”
Morazzani added that “yesterday we transferred nearly 200 bodies – people who died either of the accident this week or the recent fighting. We do this in our capacity as a neutral intermediary working on humanitarian grounds.”
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