Artsakh to Widen Food Rationing as Blockade Continues

Artsakh to Widen Food Rationing as Blockade Continues

Authorities in Artsakh (Nagorno-Karabakh) announced on Monday plans to ration more staple food items two months after Azerbaijan blocked Artsakh’s land link with Armenia and the outside world.

The authorities handed out first ration coupons to Artsakh’s population last month to try to alleviate increasingly serious shortages of food caused by the blockade. Every local resident has since been able to buy one liter of sunflower oil and one kilogram of rice, macaroni, buckwheat and sugar a month.

Armen Mangasarian, Artsakh’s social affairs minister, said that “it is planned to expand from February 21 the list of essential goods provided with coupons” when he addressed a meeting of a Artsakh task force dealing with consequences of the blockade.

“Currently, organizational and technical works are being carried out in that direction,” read an official statement on the meeting. It did not specify the additional foodstuffs that are due to be rationed.

Ruben Vardanyan, the Artsakh premier who chaired the meeting in Stepanakert, was quoted by the statement as saying: “Although the challenges are profound, the society is responding to them with dignity.”

The two-moth blockade, compounded by disruptions in electricity and natural gas supplies from Armenia, has also halted much of economic activity in Artsakh. More than 5,000 of the territory’s estimated 120,000 residents have lost their jobs as a result, according to the Arsakh government.

The government decided earlier this month to pay each of them 68,000 drams ($170) in compensation. In addition, unemployed parents of children are to receive 40,000 drams per child.

The United States, the European Union and Russia have repeatedly called on Azerbaijan to reopen the Berdzor (Lachin) corridor blocked by Azerbaijani government-backed protesters on December 12. Baku has ignored these appeals, continuing to defend the protesters demanding an end to “illegal” copper mining in Artsakh.

Armenia has condemned the blockade as a gross violation of the Russian-brokered ceasefire agreement that stopped the 2020 Armenian-Azerbaijani war.

Source: Azatutyun.am

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