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This displaced Azerbaijani population has faced the same
obstacles when they try to return home as do returnees in other
countries. The homes they left behind are in shambles or
completely destroyed. Other families may have taken up residence
in their homes or on their land. Many have tried to integrate into the
crowded capital of Baku, but the influx of refugees has led to tension with longtime Baku residents.
Eleven years after the ceasefire, they struggle to survive;
many still live as refugees or returnees in camps polluted by
pesticides or open sewers. Their shelters are abandoned railway cars,
dilapidated buildings, the backs of trucks or homes dug underground.
They try to live on humanitarian assistance in the amount of $3.50 per
month for each adult and $2.10 for each child. Started by a woman who
was herself displaced, the Women Initiative Group seeks
to help women who are trying to reintegrate into their rural
communities or settle permanently in the cities.
The group challenges cultural traditions that discourage the
education of girls, many of whom are pushed into early marriage between
the ages of 13-17. As a result, many girls become pregnant and do not
finish school. In turn, the children of these undereducated mothers
have fewer chances to pursue an education or gain skills to obtain
better-paid work. Displaced women are more likely to become victim to
the increasing prostitution, trafficking, drug use and violence.
Committed to deepening women's sense of agency, the group has
organized seminars on family planning among women in the Sumgait IDP
(internally displaced persons) camp to encourage women to use
contraception, rather than abortion, as a means of birth control. As a
result of the group's educational efforts, one of the area hospitals
agreed to take care of women suffering from reproductive health
problems free of charge.
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Over the past three years, the Global Fund for Women has awarded the
Women Initiative Group two grants totaling $10,080 to support their inspiring efforts to
help displaced women create healthy, stable homes.
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