WUNRN
Institute for War & Peace
Reporting - IWPR
KYRGYZSTAN - AS FOREIGN GRANTS
DWINDLE, WOMEN'S NGO'S, AS
CRISIS CENTERS, STRUGGLE FOR FUNDS,
TURN TO GOVERNMENT
By Asyl Osmonalieva, Nargiza Ryskulova - Central Asia Human Rights Reporting Project - 29 November 2010
The few women’s crisis centres that exist in
In the absence of
domestic charity fundraising opportunities, the best hope seems to lie in
applying for state funding.
But with the
Kyrgyz government itself seeking bail-outs from
There are
currently 12 crisis centres for women across the Central Asian state, according
to Alexandra Yeliferenko, who heads an association bringing these groups
together.
Most are able to
offer legal advice, counselling, and where necessary food and medicines to
women who suffer abuse in the home or who find themselves destitute. Few,
however, can offer shelter to victims of domestic abuse.
“Crisis centres
don’t have the resources to maintain temporary refuges,” Tahmina Ashuralieva,
coordinator of a domestic violence protection project, said. “To do so, they
need premises and the cost of food, utility and staff wages.”
Until recently,
Sezim was the only group with the resources for a shelter for abused women,
located in Bishkek. Two more have now opened in the southern cities of
Rights activists
say the international donors that have provided training and grants for women’s
crisis centres over the last ten or 15 years are now encouraging them to
sustain themselves from other funding sources.
“The support
provided by international organisations has now come to an end, as they believe
that this is the state’s problem; that it’s up to the state to take care of its
own citizens,” Mahabat Turdumamatova, who heads the domestic violence and
gender discrimination department at the Kyrgyz ombudsman’s office, told IWPR.
Turdumamatova said
that under
“This doesn’t
always happen in practice,” she conceded.
Bubusara
Ryskulova, the head of the Sezim group, says her group has been given promises
by the Bishkek mayor’s administration, as has the Ak Jurok crisis centre in
“But that isn’t
enough,” she said, explaining that the need to assist vulnerable women was
greater than ever. “When unemployment is rising, the economic situation is
getting worse, the flow of labour emigration is increasing, and all this
increases stress levels, then it becomes essential that international donors
and the government support crisis centres.”
Yeliferenko agreed
that government funding was now the main option still remaining, but she noted
that despite the 2008 law, government spending constraints meant there were
currently few state-funded projects on offer to NGOs.
Aziza
Abdurasulova, head of the Kylym Shamy human rights group, agreed that more help
from the state was essential, but noted, “This is a problem that faces not just
crisis centres, but also the entire NGO sector in
Abdyrasulova
suggested
Aida Alymbaeva,
director of the Social Studies Centre at the
“The state is
already doing its bit by maintaining children’s homes, rehab centres and other
institutions,” she said. “We should now be working to develop a culture of
charitable giving in society. Responsibility for promoting such a culture rests
with business and with successful individuals.
Ryskulova doubts
that groups helping women in difficulties will become a magnet for private
donors.
“Charity isn’t at
all well-developed in our country,” she explained. “Sometimes people bring
humanitarian aid to our centre, but that happens very rarely. Wealthy people
sometimes provide assistance for disabled institutions or children’s homes, but
crisis centres are not generally a focus of attention for benefactors or
sponsors.”