Nansen Award Winner Kanai Uses Prize To Help In Armenia And Azerbaij

NANSEN AWARD WINNER KANAI USES PRIZE TO HELP IN ARMENIA AND AZERBAIJAN

Reuters, UK
April 19 2007

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GENEVA, April 19 (UNHCR) – Japanese optometrist Akio Kanai has used
all the prize money that came with his Nansen Refugee Award to assist
refugees and internally displaced in Azerbaijan and Armenia, countries
where he has been helping victims on both sides of the conflict for
almost a decade.

The UNHCR gives the annual award, consisting of a medal and a
US$100,000 monetary prize, to a person or group for outstanding
services in supporting refugee causes. Dr. Kanai was awarded last
year’s Nansen Refugee Award for providing free eye testing and
spectacles to almost 110,000 people over more than two decades.

Since receiving the award last June, Dr. Kanai has used the prize
money to fund humanitarian aid for people who became refugees
or internally displaced persons (IDP) during the conflict between
Armenia and Azerbaijan. The funds were evenly divided between aid in
Armenia and Azerbaijan, two countries where he and his devoted team
of specialists have been volunteering work for almost a decade to
benefit victims on each side of the conflict.

Dr Kanai and his Fuji Optical company had already donated vision
services and appliances to thousands of displaced people in
Azerbaijan. In his latest act of generosity, in addition to other
support, he helped UNHCR to fund a water supply project implemented
with the Norwegian Refugee Council in the IDP settlements at Yeni
Khojevend and Tug. The project would not have been implemented
otherwise.

The project, which began in October and ended in January, entailed
drilling a new artesian well and rehabilitating water distribution
systems in the settlements, which house some 2,000 people originally
from Khojevend in the disputed Nagorno-Karabakh region. Many fled
their homes in the early 1990s.

UNHCR worked closely with experts from Azerbaijan’s ministry of
ecology and resources on the project. After tenders were issued, an
experienced company was selected to conduct the successful drilling,
which followed failed attempts by other parties to find potable
water. The new well is estimated to produce six tonnes of water per
hour, more than enough to meet UNHCR standards.

Inhabitants of the two settlements expressed their gratitude for the
valuable assistance. For the past six years, they had had to pay for
water supplies brought by vehicle from other villages.

Fuji Optical is expected to conduct another Vision Aid Mission
to Azerbaijan in June, when it will be testing the eyes of IDPs,
and UNHCR hopes to bring Dr. Kanai to Yeni Khojevend settlement to
officially inaugurate the new well.

In neighbouring Armenia, the money donated by Dr Kanai enabled UNHCR to
fund a project aimed at helping 2,167 vulnerable refugees and former
refugees in Yerevan, Kotayk, Aragatsotn, Armavir and Gegharkunik
provinces starting from October.

These Armenian refugees from Azerbaijan – the bulk of them in Yerevan
and Kotayk – had been left out of earlier assistance projects handled
by implementing partner Mission Armenia because of a lack of funds.

Mission Armenia used some US$30,000 of Dr. Kanai’s gift to provide
supplemental food, furniture and hygiene goods, pay for electricity
bills, provide vocational training and organise community events.

Mission Armenia and UNHCR staff donated used clothes and provided
entertainment at Christmas.

The agency used the balance to construct a cottage for an extremely
vulnerable family of six, including two handicapped children, who
originated from Azerbaijan. They had been living for almost two
decades in a dilapidated shipping container in Ararat province close
to neighbouring Turkey.

In order to start the project, which began last October and wrapped
up earlier this year, Mission Armenia consulted refugees about their
requirements. This detailed needs assessment focused on refugees who
had been left out of prior assistance projects.

The project was designed and implemented by Mission Armenia in
close cooperation with UNHCR and community representatives. Mission
Armenia provided all administrative and human resources as well as
transportation needed to implement and monitor the project.

The model established in this pilot project will enable UNHCR to
design and implement in future years a countrywide programme addressing
social and economic needs of the most vulnerable refugees.

UNHCR hopes to continue assistance to extremely vulnerable refugees
in 2008 and 2009.

"The project implemented with the funds donated by Dr. Kanai should
be seen as a pilot and model for UNHCR’s strategies and activities
in the years to come," said the report on the project.