|
REN TV 15
September 2003
Chechen government intends to move all refugees from Ingushetia in two
weeks
[Presenter] In line with the government's plans, not a single refugee
camp should be left in Ingushetia by 1 October. Some 10,000 people have
to be resettled to Chechnya. Newly-repaired youth hostels provided with
electricity, gas and water and heat supply systems are waiting for the
refugees. People can live here as long as they want - till compensation
is paid and damaged houses are restored. However, many still do not
want to come back to their motherland.
[Correspondent Aleksey Zubov] Several KamAZ lorries and a bus carrying
refugees entered Groznyy in the evening. The vehicles were allocated by
the Ingush emergencies ministry. On their arrival in Groznyy, the
refugees started voicing indignation at the rush to take them to a
temporary accommodation centre in this bad weather although the
centre's dyed walls had not dried out.
[Unidentified woman] It was possible to wait a week and then take
everyone here. It is raining today and our stuff has become dirty.
[Correspondent] However, those who arrive first have an obvious
advantage - they can chose a room they like. This temporary
accommodation centre has been set up in a former kindergarten and can
host 300 refugees, 3.2 sq. m. per a person. The Khamzatov family of 10
people gets 2 rooms. They have been living in a refugee camp in
Ingushetia for four years and now say that the new dwelling is much
better as it is provided with electricity, heat, gas and water supply
systems.
[Zina Khamzatova, captioned as former refugee] I'm pleased with these
two rooms. It was very difficult to live in a tent. We were suffering
from diseases.
[Correspondent] People take with them everything they can bring. Even
old wood plaques from tents can be used here, in devastated Chechnya.
However, the main things they bring are flour, sugar, pasta and tinned
meat which refugees received in Ingushetia for nine months. People are
accommodated in a temporary accommodation centre as soon as a special
commission approves it. The Chechen government says that people, who
now lose their status of displaced persons, can stay here as long as
they want.
[Lema Kaplanov, migration service's department head] They will stay in
a temporary accommodation centre till they have their compensation is
paid and their houses restored.
[Correspondent] Superintendents from refugee camps are usually
appointed superintendents of some temporary accommodation centres. As
refugees know these people, trust them more than any authorities and
often agree to move for that reason only. However, some refugees still
hide their faces from camera even here, in Groznyy.
[Larisa Shakhabova, captioned as former refugee] I do not known why
they are afraid. Some people told me to wait and move after the
presidential election. But I am sick and tired of living in tents where
I have spent almost four years.
[Correspondent] Repairs are going on in nearby youth hostels. Building
workers say that they were suddenly sent there a month ago and haven't
have days-off since. A task was set to complete the repairs by
mid-September.
[Unidentified male building worker] We work from eight [in the morning]
to seven [in the evening] every day and do not have days off.
[Correspondent] Some 5,000 people - one in every 10 of 50,000 refugees
still living in Ingushetia - are expected to be placed in temporary
accommodation centres which have become operational in Chechnya this
week.
[Video shows refugees in a temporary accommodation centre]
|