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FROM THE FIELD

Mercy Corps Continues to Meet the Needs of Georgians Displaced by Conflict
19 Aug 2008 17:19:00 GMT
Source: Mercy Corps
Mercy Corps

Website: Website: http://www.mercycorps.org

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FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE August 19, 2008

Contact: Caitlin Carlson, 503-548-8497, ccarlson@mercycorps.org

Jeremy Barnicle, 503-367-7738, jbarnicle@mercycorps.org

- Over 150,000 Georgians uprooted by the conflict with Russia

- Emergency team gains access to Gori

Portland, OR - After brutal fighting between Georgian and Russian forces displaced an estimated 158,000 people from their homes, the global relief and development agency Mercy Corps is expanding its relief effort into the hard-hit city of Gori.

Within the last 24 hours, a Mercy Corps emergency response team was allowed past Russian checkpoints into Gori. A rapid needs assessment involving city residents and local officials clarified that food, water and hygiene items remain a high priority in the area. At the request of Gori's deputy governor, Mercy Corps will deliver hygiene kits to about 600 households in villages just outside Gori tomorrow.

Mercy Corps' team in Georgia's capital city of Tbilisi is currently preparing an additional one-week distribution of food, as well as critical non-food items for up to 1,000 displaced people in Gori.

"Our teams in Gori are seeing a significant level of damage from the fighting," said Jim White, Mercy Corps' vice-president of program operations. "Not much aid has reached the areas around there, so our immediate focus will be to provide the basics. Once those needs are met, we will look ahead to the recovery process and paving the way for a peaceful reconciliation among people on all sides of the conflict."

Last week, Mercy Corps distributed food to people in five displacement camps in and around Tbilisi, as well as two areas in central and western Georgia. Mercy Corps is also securing warehouse space in Tbilisi to house additional materials that are still flowing into the country for distribution to displaced families.

As the security situation stabilizes, Mercy Corps' relief effort will continue to expand into affected areas around Gori and into the disputed region of South Ossetia. As immediate needs such as food and hygiene supplies are met, Mercy Corps will transition into longer-term recovery programming such as helping displaced families return home and restarting businesses and schools.

Mercy Corps has worked in Georgia since 2000. The agency's programs support rural development by helping farm families increase production, gain access to financing, form farmer groups, and connect to markets and information. Mercy Corps has also helped cultivate young leaders working to build an inclusive, multi-ethnic society in Georgia.

Mercy Corps was on the verge of launching a new program in South Ossetia aimed at increasing interaction between ethnic Ossetian and Georgian youth when the conflict began.

HOW TO HELP:

Mercy Corps Georgia Crisis Fund Dept NR PO Box 2669 Portland, OR 97208

www.mercycorps.org 1-800-852-2100

About Mercy Corps:

Mercy Corps works amid disasters, conflicts, chronic poverty and instability to unleash the potential of people who can win against nearly impossible odds. Since 1979, Mercy Corps has provided more than $1.5 billion in assistance to people in 106 nations. Supported by headquarters in North America and Europe, the agency's global programs employ 3,500 staff worldwide and reach more than 16.4 million people in more than 35 countries. For more information, visit www.mercycorps.org.


[ Any views expressed in this article are those of the writer and not of Reuters. ]


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[ Any views expressed in this article are those of the writer and not of Reuters. ]

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Georgia's Foreign Minister Ekaterine Tkeshelashvili meets with U.S. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice (R) during a bilateral meeting in central Brussels August 19, 2008. NATO Secretary-General Jaap de Hoop Scheffer said ...



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