01 November 2023

Mari, a 25-year-old mother of two, was at home when she heard the sound of bombs falling on 19 September in Karabakh, the region at the heart of a long-running territorial conflict between Armenia and Azerbaijan.

“It was a real-life nightmare. My elder son was at school, the younger one at the kindergarten,” she says, tears rolling down her face. “I didn't know which way to run, whom to save first. It was just horrible.”

More than 100,000 ethnic Armenians in Karabakh crossed the border into Armenia after hostilities escalated in late September.

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When the bombs fell, Mari says, she didn’t know which son to rescue first.

For Mari – who is also pregnant – and her family, the journey, which would usually take a little more than two hours, instead took 28, and was fraught with anxiety.

“I was terribly frightened while crossing the border,” she says. “We saw the bombing of our houses. But thank God, we are here now, alive and safe.”

Mari and her sons are staying at a Safe Space supported by UNFPA. At nine months pregnant, she will have access to trained health workers when she goes into labour. 
 

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Mari is expecting a baby girl. Her sons have helped choose a name: Gabriela.
Around half of the refugees are women and girls. © UNO Yerevan/DGC/Avedisiian
One of the buildings where dormitory-style accommodations have been set up in Vayots Dzor.
People arrive hungry, fearful and in desperate need of health care.
"I miss my home," says Mariam, 16.
Gohar, 37, fled with her five children.
“I have nothing left,” says Melania, 74.

With so many people displaced in a short period of time, existing services came under major strain.

UNFPA provided support through Safe Spaces and psychosocial services, as well as through training health workers on sexual and reproductive health care and distributing supplies – including some 21,000 dignity kits containing essential hygiene items for women and girls along with information on government services.

UNFPA is planning to procure an additional 20,000 dignity kits for the most vulnerable population, in addition to establishing more Safe Spaces, among other initiatives.

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A Safe Space supported by UNFPA in Syunik.

The supplies and health care services are desperately needed to prevent tragedy.

“One night, a pregnant refugee woman arrived, bleeding and in distress. We swiftly intervened, but sadly, displacement-induced stress led to a miscarriage,” says Dr. Metaksya Hovhannisyan, head of midwifery at the Vayk Medical Association. “If we hadn’t stopped the bleeding in five minutes, we would have lost her too.

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Dr. Hovhannisyan and her team are providing essential care to pregnant women. It’s estimated that 2,070 pregnant women are among the refugees.

Women and girls of all ages are among the refugees, with around a third reportedly under the age of 18. 

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“Imagine you build your own house, look after your family your entire life, and become homeless at 74,” says Melania.
Around 18 per cent of the refugees are reported to be older people.
Roza, 73, said she left the bread in the oven and the door open when she fled.
Roza crossed the border with four generations of her family.
Roza’s grandson, Alexandr, 2, sleeps at a dormitory that houses refugees.

The daughters and granddaughters of Melania, Roza and so many others need the opportunity to work in order to support themselves and their families.

The long-term welfare of refugees is something that concerns Ruzanna Torozyan. She is the director of WINNET, a UNFPA partner organization that runs Safe Spaces in Goris and Verishen.

“It is crucial that immediately after the humanitarian support, we engage in the second phase of rehabilitation and development,” she says. “Creating job opportunities for women and girls should be organized quickly so that people have stability.”

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Ruzanna Torozyan is concerned with both the immediate and longer-term needs of women and girls.
Lena, 74, says all she wants is “home, in a safe place, so we don't have to move again.”
“I just want peace for my children,” says Mari.

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