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Refugees Magazine Issue 98 (After the Soviet Union) - Bitter legacy of banishment
1 Dec 1994 In 1944, the entire Crimean Tatar nation - upwards of 250,000 to 350,000 people - was deported by Stalin to Central Asia. Today, the Tatars are going home, but their return is a difficult one. -
Refugees Magazine Issue 98 (After the Soviet Union) - Population displacement in the former Soviet Union
1 Dec 1994 Complex refugee and displacement problems have emerged in the former Soviet Union as a result of numerous ethnic conflicts, causing increasing concern at UNHCR and among the international community. -
Refugees Magazine Issue 98 (After the Soviet Union) - Conflict in the Caucasus
1 Dec 1994 The collapse of communism and the rise of ethnic strife have plunged the southern fringes of the former Soviet Union into turmoil, particularly in the Caucasus where some 1.5 million people have been forced from their homes. -
Refugees Magazine Issue 97 (NGOs and UNHCR) - New challenges, new vision
1 Sep 1994 The Danish Refugee Council looks at the Partnership in Action process, which is aimed at bolstering the traditional relationship between UNHCR and NGOs. -
Refugees Magazine Issue 97 (NGOs and UNHCR) - Bright spot in Africa
1 Sep 1994 UNHCR and its NGO partners in Swaziland recently said farewell to the final group of Mozambican refugees to return to their country. -
Refugees Magazine Issue 97 (NGOs and UNHCR) - Cyclone alert!
1 Sep 1994 Good planning, close coordination and sheer luck helped save many lives when a deadly cyclone recently lashed Bangladesh. -
Refugees Magazine Issue 97 (NGOs and UNHCR) - What they think of us
1 Sep 1994 The complaints most often made about UNHCR by NGOs involve the bureaucracy and poor communications. -
Refugees Magazine Issue 97 (NGOs and UNHCR) - Cooperation crucial in Rwanda crisis
1 Sep 1994 The huge refugee camp at Benaco, Tanzania, is testimony to what can be done when UNHCR and its partners work together. -
Refugees Magazine Issue 97 (NGOs and UNHCR) - Partnership in action
1 Sep 1994 From its creation, UNHCR's responsibilities to refugees were linked, in a statutory manner, with NGOs.