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A Georgian Holiday

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So my holiday is well and truly over, and I’m in Georgia for UNICEF on a ridiculously short contract, providing information management support for the WASH Cluster. Things are never that simple, of course, and so the work has turned out to be significantly more challenging than I expected. Right off the bat, the post-conflict situation in Georgia is a political crisis rather than a humanitarian crisis; yes, there are some tens of thousands of people displaced by the conflict, but almost none of them are in a life-threatening situation (until the winter comes, that is). Their livelihoods have been affected badly, which means that there are going to be ongoing concerns, but the scale of that problem in a middle income country doesn’t feel particularly desperate (especially now that we’re watching the footage of the monsoon floods in India which have displaced over 2 million people).

Of course that doesn’t mean that there isn’t any job here, or that I get to go back to the mountain tomorrow. There’s still a major co-ordination requirement – for IDPs that are stuck in collective centres, for IDPs that are returning home to their villages, for IDPs that have been moved into the tent camp(s) in Gori – and a real lack of decent information to support that co-ordination. Fairly obviously that’s where I come in, but the last week has not been a particularly productive one. Primarily this is because when I arrived there was absolutely no data to work with, and getting hold of it has proven to be an absolute nightmare. Information flows are incredibly weak, dialogue with the government is fragmented, the situation remains extremely fluid and there’s a lot of political sensitivies involved. On top of that, the WASH unit that I’m in didn’t exist until a couple of weeks ago; it’s been created solely because of the conflict and the need that UNICEF has to meet its obligations as the lead agency in the WASH cluster.

Bags of fun, which explains why I haven’t posted anything since I arrived. I promised myself that I was going to blog daily on the issues I was coming up against, but that’s clearly not worked out. However I will be writing a few pithy posts on specific issues, since as of two days ago data started appearing. It’s not great – patchy demographics, an improvised camp registration process, a few lists from government agencies and NGOs – but it’s a starting point. My job is to turn that data into something that can be used by the cluster to address the 5 strategic areas which we’ve identified, which are broadly:

  1. Site planning of tented camps in Gori
  2. Refurbishment of proposed Temporary Shelters
  3. Cleaning of schools and kindergartens at national level (esp. Tbilisi)
  4. Rehabilitation of existing Collective Centres (CCs) for longer-term caseload
  5. Provision of village watsan for returning IDPs

As you can see, it’s not a particularly coherent set of requirements, which will make co-ordination even more difficult. The first step is to work out where the IDPs are and where they’re going to be going; the next step is to work out where the agencies are and how they’re working. Sounds simple, right?

Right.

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Written by Paul Currion

August 31st, 2008 at 3:44 pm

6 Responses to 'A Georgian Holiday'

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  1. Hi Paul,

    I’m interested to know; once you have collected and cleaned the data, how you manage to present it.

    Cheers,

    Warren

    Warren

    1 Sep 08 at 0:30

  2. Good luck Paul. Don’t hesitate to put the call out if there’s something us folks out here can help with.

    Mikel

    1 Sep 08 at 22:01

  3. Admin boundaries would be a good start :) … I’m suffering from a serious lack of data, and Google Maps still doesn’t appear to have any coverage at all of Georgia!

    Paul Currion

    2 Sep 08 at 4:22

  4. Warren

    2 Sep 08 at 11:37

  5. Tragically most of the maps on ReliefWeb are (as usual) a mixture of uninformative and ill-designed (no offense intended to the people who produced them, under much pressure). And of course ReliefWeb doesn’t host the base data, which is what I really need right now.

    My head hurts. Why haven’t we got this right yet?

    Paul Currion

    2 Sep 08 at 11:42

  6. Paul – I have never been in a situation such as yours and so was wondering:

    If there is no data, no electronic data, I mean, what other means and approaches do you use in order to get hold of the data?
    -talk/listen to people?
    -meet people?
    -travel to places?
    -organise meetings?

    I guess simply in the context of coordination you get to know the picture of things and then data starts showing up, as part of that, too.

    I guess the people lead you to the data, so to say! :)

    Good luck!! :)

    Nadejda Loumbeva

    5 Sep 08 at 12:23

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