![]() Document printed from the website of the ICRC. URL: http://www.icrc.org/Web/eng/siteeng0.nsf/html/57JPWG International Committee of the Red Cross 1-06-1999 Annual Report 1998 Kyiv Regional Delegation
(Belarus, Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania, Moldova, Ukraine)
The first timid signs of economic growth witnessed in some of the countries covered by the Kyiv regional delegation at the beginning of 1998 suffered a severe setback with the effects of the Russian financial crisis in August. Living conditions for much of the population became even more difficult than before. In addition, minority issues were a constant source of tension throughout the region. Six years after fighting had broken out in Moldova, the situation remained deadlocked, despite the 1997 Normalization Memorandum which provided for a return to normal relations between the parties on the basis of a common State and autonomous status for the self-proclaimed Moldovan Republic of Dniestr. The document was further endorsed by a meeting of the Presidents of Russia, Ukraine and Moldova in Odessa, Ukraine, in March 1998. These developments did not, however, yield any tangible results on the ground. For its part, the ICRC kept up its efforts to regain access to the four members of the "Ilascu group" held since 1992 in Tiraspol, in the self-proclaimed Moldovan Republic of Dniestr. The detainees were last visited in 1993/4. Throughout the year, the ICRC was unable to meet with the Minister of State Security of the self-proclaimed Moldovan Republic of Dniestr. Supporting the implementation of humanitarian law The delegation continued to provide advice and technical support for the incorporation of international humanitarian law in national legislation and the adoption of measures to protect the red cross emblem. To this end, the delegation met regularly with the national committees for the implementation of humanitarian law in Belarus and Moldova and, in countries where such committees had not yet been set up, with State officials and working groups on implementation, to chart their progress and make recommendations. In addition, the ICRC produced commentaries on the new or amended penal codes of the Baltic States, Moldova and Ukraine in the light of international law, and submitted them to the authorities. These five countries also received financial support from the ICRC Advisory Service to conduct their own studies on the state of national legislation in relation to humanitarian law. Seminars were held and presentations given in all countries as a means of promoting implementation. Of particular note was a first high-level seminar on the implementation of humanitarian law held in Estonia in co-operation with the authorities. Those countries that had not yet done so (the Baltic States and Ukraine) were encouraged to create national committees to coordinate government activities in the field of implementation. Promoting the law of armed conflict The Kyiv regional delegation pursued its efforts to see the law of armed conflict included in teaching and training programmes at all levels of the armed forces. Under cooperation agreements signed at the beginning of the year between the ICRC and the Defence Ministries of Belarus, Moldova and Ukraine, a number of seminars and presentations were organized to help the armed forces incorporate the subject into daily instruction and combat training. In Belarus, the ICRC gave presentations on the law of armed conflict to border guards, Interior Ministry troops and officers of the security services. A training course was organized for field instructors at the Military Academy. In Ukraine, the ICRC established contact with the Ukrainian Army in the Crimea, the Ukrainian Naval Forces and the Russian Black Sea Fleet in Sevastopol to offer its assistance in promoting and teaching the law of armed conflict. Two high-ranking Ministry of Defence officers from Moldova and Ukraine respectively took part in the second Russian-language course on the law of armed conflict held at the International Institute of Humanitarian Law in San Remo, Italy. In the Baltic States, the ICRC presented programmes for incorporating the law of armed conflict into regular military training to the Ministries of Defence. Cooperation with the region's National Societies Cooperation agreements covering a range of activities were renewed with the National Societies of the region. Training as well as material and financial support were provided to help strengthen their operational capacity, notably in the areas of tracing and dissemination. The ICRC also assisted in the preparation and publication of the National Societies' internal bulletins, so as to enhance contact between local branches and headquarters, and to spread basic knowledge of the International Red Cross and Red Crescent Movement and humanitarian law. In all the countries covered, dissemination seminars on the Red Cross and humanitarian law also served to make the local authorities aware of the role the Red Cross can play in providing useful community services. Dissemination at universities Throughout the region, the ICRC pursued its efforts to have humanitarian law included in all academic courses on international law, and, as a second step, to set up specialized courses in humanitarian law at selected universities. To that end, the ICRC provided training and support for several professors of international law. Joint relief work with the Ukrainian Red Cross in the Crimea The ICRC continued to provide material and technical support for Ukrainian Red Cross relief activities in Crimea, where the social and economic situation remained very precarious. The Crimean branch distributed food parcels, clothes and shoes to the most vulnerable and handed medical supplies over to the 80 Red Cross nurses who regularly visited elderly and disabled persons in their homes and provided them with basic medical care and food parcels. In April the Ukrainian Red Cross, with ICRC support, initiated a new programme to set up first-aid centres in settlements for "formerly deported people". [3] By the end of the year, seven such centres were in operation with 12 more planned, and 18 medical kits had been distributed to their staff. The ICRC provided some of the material for distribution, and assisted the Crimean branch of the Ukrainian Red Cross in assessing the needs of the population and in organizing surveys, reporting and logistics. IN 1998, THE ICRC:
Note 3. Mainly Tatar communities who had been deported to Central Asia at the end of the Second World War. |