An Orthodox priest waits in a bus to pass a Russian checkpoint in Gori, northwest of the capital Tbilisi, Georgia, Friday, Aug. 15, 2008.
An Orthodox priest waits in a bus to pass a Russian checkpoint in Gori, northwest of the capital Tbilisi, Georgia, Friday, Aug. 15, 2008.
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References:
· Emergency Appeal: Conflict in the Caucasus
· Humanitarian Need Deepens As Conflict in the Caucasus Affects Thousands
· Moscow and Tbilisi accept Sarkozy’s truce, but tensions mount

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IOCC Begins Distributions in Tbilisi & North Ossetia
Posted on Fri Aug 15 2008

IOCC Begins Distributions in Tbilisi & North Ossetia
The U.N. estimates that more than 100,000 people have been displaced due to the conflict in Georgia. IOCC has distributed essential food and hygiene supplies to families in Tbilisi and is working with the Russian Orthodox Church to assist refugees in North Ossetia. (photo credit: D. Dzotsendize/IOCC Georgia)
August 15, 2008

Baltimore, Maryland — International Orthodox Christian Charities (IOCC) distributed emergency food and hygiene supplies to people who were displaced due to the conflict between Georgian, Russian, and South Ossetian forces. The distribution took place on Thursday in Tbilisi where displaced families took shelter in a school for the blind and in the nearby town of Tskvarichamia. IOCC is also coordinating assistance to refugees in North Ossetia (Russia) in partnership with the Russian Orthodox Church.

“Most people had to flee the fighting in South Ossetia and brought nothing more than the clothes on their backs,” said IOCC Georgia Program Manager Darejan Dzotsenidze. The Georgian government and the U.N. are currently registering some 23,000 people who fled the conflict and poured into Tbilisi. Those numbers are expected to increase.

IOCC released emergency funds to its Tbilisi and Moscow offices earlier this week to purchase food items such as pasta, rice, cereal, sugar and tea, and hygiene items including towels, soap and tooth paste. The collective centers where the displaced are housed often have two families in one room.

“Many of those who fled hid in basements and forests until they had to find food,” said Dzotsenidze. “Now they are saying, ‘please help me to get home – even if you give me a palace here, I would rather go home.’”

IOCC Georgia staff and volunteers pack essential food and hygiene items for displaced families. IOCC began providing emergency humanitarian relief to Georgia in 1994 when more than a quarter of a million people were displaced due to separatist fighting. (photo credit: D. Dzotsendize/IOCC Georgia)


IOCC, which has worked on emergency and development projects in Russia and Georgia since the early 1990s, is working in partnership with the Georgian Orthodox Church in the affected areas of Georgia and with the Russian Orthodox Church in North Ossetia.

To help in providing emergency relief, call IOCC’s donation hotline toll-free at 1-877-803-4622, make a gift on-line at www.iocc.org, or mail a check or money order payable to “IOCC” and write “Conflict in the Caucasus” in the memo line to: IOCC, P.O. Box 630225, Baltimore, Md. 21263-0225.

IOCC, founded in 1992 as the official humanitarian aid agency of the Standing Conference of Canonical Orthodox Bishops in the Americas (SCOBA), has implemented over $275 million in relief and development programs in 33 countries around the world.

Media: Contact Ms. Amal Morcos at 410-243-9820 or (cell) 443-823-3489.


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