With homes destroyed and harsh winter weather just a few months away, it is likely many who have fled
the recent violence in South Ossetia and surrounding areas will be unable to return before spring, World Vision warns. With nearly 160,000 civilians displaced in all, the organisation expects the
region's humanitarian needs to continue for six to 12 months.
'Once winter comes, it is likely the roads will be blocked and the weather conditions too extreme for displaced families to
return to their communities,' said Ashley Clements, World Vision's emergency advocacy advisor. 'So if people are not able to go home before winter, they will be forced to remain in displacement
centers for months. As a result, World Vision's emergency response may need to last as long as a year.'
Landmines laid during the recent conflict also pose a threat to those wishing to
return home, especially children, and hinder full humanitarian access to some areas. For people who are able to return to their communities, damaged infrastructure may prevent a return to normal
livelihoods. Those who stay in Georgia must endure life in displacement shelters, many of which lack running water, heat, electricity and windows.
'Children in some Georgia shelters are
sleeping on bare concrete because these abandoned buildings lack bedding and other basics,' Clements said. 'World Vision will be providing mattresses to help, as well as continuing our distributions
of food, hygiene kits and other basic necessities.'
Meanwhile, World Vision staff who visited Gori this week found that the population had received little humanitarian assistance,
particularly people in villages outside of the city. Earlier this week, the organization was able to provide its first food and emergency supplies to 1,000 residents of Gori and plans to increase
distributions to the hard-hit city, along with more isolated families in surrounding villages.
Even families not directly displaced have been economically impacted by the crisis, World
Vision has found. Poor entrepreneurs in Georgia who receive small loans through the agency's microfinance program, for example, have found it difficult to buy supplies and to sell their finished
products because of blocked roads and lack of access to markets further afield.
To address the specific needs of displaced children in Georgia and North Ossetia, World Vision is planning
Child-Friendly Spaces to offer them a safe place to play and regain a sense of normalcy, as well as talk with trained counselors about what they have experienced. In Tbilisi, the organization is also
addressing the special needs of pregnant and nursing women and their infants who have been forced to flee the violence.
As a leading relief and development agency in Georgia, World Vision
is appealing for $4.2 million for its response and plans to assist 45,000 displaced people in Georgia-along with additional families in North Ossetia.
-Ends-
[ Any views expressed in this article are those of the writer and not of Reuters. ]
Russian military vehicles approach the Russian border as they drive through the northern part of breakaway South Ossetia August 24, 2008. A U.S. navy warship arrived in Georgia's main Black Sea ...