Violence and Displacement in Iraq:
The World’s Fastest Growing
Displacement Crisis
Testimony by
Kristele Younes
Advocate,
Refugees International
Before the
House Committee on Foreign Affaires
Subcommittee on Middle East and South
Asia
March 26, 2007
I want to thank the Committee for holding these
hearings on the plight of displaced Iraqis, an enormous and rapidly growing
humanitarian problem still not effectively addressed by the international
community or the US.
Last November, Refugees
International visited Lebanon,
Syria and Jordan to
assess the situation of Iraqi refugees there and discovered the fastest growing
refugee crisis in the world. The amount of displacement is huge and getting
worse. To date two million Iraqis have
fled the violence in their country; most have taken
refuge in Syria and Jordan. Iraqis were leaving the country at the rate
of 100,000 a month until Jordan recently moved to shut its borders, sharply
cutting the flow Within Iraq, 1.9
million people have left their homes and moved to safer areas within the
country. The UN High Commissioner for Refugees
(UNHCR) estimates that one million additional Iraqis will become internally displaced
by the end of the year. Right now, 15%
of the population of Iraq
is displaced, either internally or externally, but that number could be more
than 20% by the end of this year.
Some of the
refugees and displaced people are particularly vulnerable because they worked
for the U.S.
as translators and in other jobs and are now targeted by anti-U.S. groups. They risked their lives for the U.S. and
deserve special protection now.
Until Refugees
International began highlighting the size and pace of the
displacement crisis last year, little was being done to help the displaced or
the countries that are sheltering them. In the last few months UNHCR has
sharply increased its budget for the region and the U.S.
has announced plans to accept up to 7,000 Iraqis for resettlement in the U.S. These small steps begin to address the
growing displacement crisis, but much more needs to be done.
The
2007 Global Needs Assessment by the European Commission Humanitarian Aid ranks Iraq as among
the 15 most severe humanitarian crises in the world. Of those 15 crisis, the UN
Office for the Coordination of
Humanitarian Affairs rates Iraq as the
second lowest funded crisis-per affected person. Yet, no Iraqi, U.S. or U.N.
institution is taking this growing humanitarian and displacement crisis
seriously enough to mount an effective response. The most urgent need is a
program to protect the most vulnerable—people who had to leave their homes
because they worked for and with U.S. forces, diplomats and contractors.
The violence in Iraq is both extreme and
indiscriminate. Many are fleeing
within and outside of Iraq
to escape sectarian violence that is
causing de facto ethnic cleansing. Both Sunni and Shi’a are leaving
mixed neighborhoods because they no longer feel safe outside of their own
communities. Christians are leaving as well, because they also are threatened. Many Iraqis are targeted because of their
profession. According to the Brookings Institute, more than 2500 Iraqi
physicians have been killed since 2003, and many academics, artists and even
hairdressers are also threatened by
individuals who believe such occupations
are “anti-Islamic”. Many of the refugees are middle class and
non-sectarian—exactly the people Iraq needs to rebuild.
A colleague and I just returned from northern Iraq, where we
surveyed the growing internally displaced population and the problems they
face. We also visited Egypt,
which is hosting a growing number of refugees. Last week Refugees
International issued a report, The World’s Fastest Growing Displacement Crisis: Displaced People Inside
Iraq
Receiving Inadequate Assistance. I
would like to submit a copy for the record.
IRAQI REFUGEES
The UN estimates that
there are now over 2 million Iraqi refugees seeking safety in neighboring
countries and the
numbers continue to grow. Most enter under short term visas which have to be
renewed and which do not permit employment.
Syria and Jordan have received the greatest number: over 1 million in Syria and about 750,000 in Jordan. Others forced out of Iraq s are seeking refuge throughout the Middle
East, with growing numbers in
Lebanon, Egypt, Yemen
and Turkey. Syria
and Jordan
have tried to be gracious hosts, but the refugee influx is putting enormous
strains on their economies. Initially
many came with resources, but with the passage of time many have exhausted
their resources and those of their families and friends. Some of the newer
arrivals are poorer. The host countries are now admitting that they need help. The Iraqis who fled were able to
find safety in their country of asylum, but many now require assistance to meet
their basic needs. .
Today the Iraqi refugees are a regional challenge.
Some local populations and
governments fear that the
instability in Iraq
might spread to the rest of the region. Some countries,
concerned about their security and worried that
large influxes of refugees could overburden their own fragile economies and
government services have closed their borders. It is now increasingly difficult
for Iraqis to get into Egypt. Lebanon
and Jordan
have proceeded to deport some individuals back. An Iraqi woman in Cairo told us she could not go to her mother’s funeral in Baghdad as she would not have been able to return to her
children in Cairo.
Faced with bleak future in the region, some Iraqis
are considering other options. In Amman, Jordan, Damascus,
Syria, and Cairo,
Egypt, many Iraqis told us
they are trying to purchase fake travel documents that would allow them to go
to Europe. Most Iraqis do not expect to be
able to return home soon and without some assistance they may be unable to
survive.
RI found two particularly vulnerable groups—people
who have worked for U.S.
or Western employers and Palestinians.
Many Iraqis who worked for the U.S. the military or other American
public and private agencies, are
seen now as siding with
the “occupiers” or “occupiers” themselves. When interviewing Iraqi refugees in Amman, we encountered Yasir, who
had worked as a security officer for several western civil society agencies in Baghdad. Last July he and his son were in front of
their house, when gunmen fired 10 shots at
them from a speeding car, severely injuring Yasir. He is confident he was targeted because he
worked for international aid organizations. Yasir heard from his neighbors that
the gunmen learned that he survived
the attack; so four days later he fled to Jordan.
RI
recommends that the U.S.
facilitate the admission to the United States
of those Iraqis who were endangered by their affiliation with the US effort in Iraq. The most rapid way to process
them in our view, would be the expansion of the special
visa numbers for US interpreters and their families, currently limited to 50 a
year from Iraq and Afghanistan. There should be no limit on protection,
particularly those whose lives are at risk because they helped the U.S., as long as they meet the security and
other standards for admission to the U.S. For others, RI recommends the creation of a
P2 category for refugee processing that would permit former employees to bypass
UNHCR and register directly for refugee resettlement consideration by the U.S. . A third method to handle this population with special
ties to our country would be the enactment of either a special immigrant visa
or the creation of a humanitarian parole admission that would permit these
families to receive benefits similar to refugees and to have the ability to
adjust their status.
Palestinians received special treatment from Saddam
Hussein, who often moved Shi’a out of their houses to give Palestinians a place
to live. Now, labeled as Saddam
loyalists, they are targeted and attacked by almost all factions and the
subject of a “fatwa” calling for their killing. The 15,000 still in Iraq are in danger and in need of rescue and
resettlement as are those who managed to escaped as
well as those still stuck camping in no man’s lands between Iraq and neighboring counties.
Their statelessness increases
their vulnerability.
Most of the Iraqis who have left the country are
middle class; they had to have some means to reach the border and get out of Iraq. Also
getting a passport in Baghdad
is an expensive, dangerous ordeal. Most
Iraqis now are urban refugees, living sometimes on their own, often with
family members or friends. Many arrive
in a state of shock. One Shi’a Sheikh in Beirut
told us, his voice shaky, that he could not sleep at night, traumatized still
by his kidnapping. Neither Syria nor
Jordan, which house the largest Iraqi populations, have signed the 1951 Refugee
Convention, so people find it difficult to get official refugee status.
Syria, Jordan
and Egypt
deserve international recognition for accepting the Iraqis in such large
numbers. But the burdens can cause
tensions.. Real
estate prices and rents are rising quickly in Damascus
and Amman and certain areas of Cairo; schools and hospitals are
crowded. Jordan
has tightened its borders since bombings in Amman in November 2005, and it is
particularly difficult for Iraqis, especially men between the ages of 18-35, to
enter. Syria, which used to grant free
health care to refugees, has started to charge. Although Egypt is a
signatory to the Refugee Convention, it does not allow refugees access to
public healthcare or education.
In all three countries, refugees are finding it
difficult to get jobs as they are not legally allowed to work. Omar, a doctor
we met in Amman
told us he would be willing to clean houses if only someone would hire him. The
UN is now attempting to assess the numbers of refugees in need. But largely
urban refugee populations can be difficult to reach, since many refugees are reluctant to
register with the UNHCR or local authorities for fear of deportation.
Until recently the international response had been
slow and inadequate. In 2006, for instance, the UNHCR budget for Iraqi refugees
in Syria
was $700,000—less than one dollar per refugee. Now there are some encouraging
signs the world is beginning to recognize and respond to Iraq’s growing
displacement problem. UNHCR appealed for an initial $60 million budget to staff
up its ability to screen vulnerable refugees in need of resettlement and to develop
a comprehensive regional program. It has already increased the size of its staff in the
region. UNHCR will hold an international
conference at the ministerial level on Iraqi refugees in Geneva next month. RI hopes that the US
will be represented by our Secretary of State to demonstrate U.S. interest
in burden sharing, particularly with the countries of the region. The UN
Refugee Agency is talking with donors and the countries of the region and other
UN and international organizations and NGOs about the size and type of programs
that would be most effective. We urge the United Nations to make assistance and
protection of refugees whether inside or outside of Iraq a major priority this
year and to quickly undertake programs to alleviate pressures on countries of
asylum by assisting in the provision of humanitarian aid to those communities
most in need.
RI commends
the Administration’s offer to resettle some 7,000 refugees found eligible under
US
law and its request to Congress for additional funding in 2007 and 2008 for
resettlement and for overseas assistance to these IDPs and refugees. But the
amounts requested and the admissions offered are far too small, given the level
of need.
RI
appreciates the close collaboration between US AID and State Department’s
Refugee Bureau in developing programs for those displaced inside Iraq. We would recommend the tripling of these
efforts as well as tripling the numbers considered for resettlement. RI remains
concerned that some refugees victims of violence,
rape, death threats, and kidnappings may be found inadmissible to the US because they have been forced in self-defense
to provide “material support” to an organization the US deems to be terrorist, and thus
be barred from admission. We hope the
Congress this term will carefully reconsider such bars to admission for those
who are the innocent victims of terrorists.
The
U.S. has a special
obligation to help the refugees of Iraq. The US must provide increased, fast and adequate
funding to all relevant agencies, so that programs for the most vulnerable can
be put in place immediately, in and outside of Iraq.
Finally, host countries, particularly Jordan and Syria, need multilateral and
bilateral assistance in shouldering the burden of the refugee population. This means programs to help in sharing the
costs of those who stay, and assist both Iraqis and vulnerable individuals in
the host communities. Building the capacity of the host countries systems in
particular is a priority. In Jordan,
for instance, the Kingdom’s 3200 schools are overcrowded with over 1.5 million
students. Funding and assistance to build new schools would go a long way
towards improving access to education for both Jordanian and Iraqi children.
In
January, RI warned the Senate Judiciary Committee that the worst outcome would
be for Iraq’s
neighbors to close their borders to Iraqis, thus shutting off a safety valve
that is saving lives. Jordan, Lebanon
and Egypt have now severely
restricted entry to Iraqis, and Syria
remains alone in absorbing over 40 000 new arrivals every month. We must now
increase our diplomatic efforts to urge
countries in the region to help end the conflict and to stop threatening
to deport innocent Iraqis back to an environment of violence and unrest. We
urge the US to work with its
allies and countries in the region to make it possible to assist displaced
Iraqis in need to find temporary refuge and safety whether inside Iraq or in the
region, and to find new places for those most vulnerable refugees who cannot
remain in the region.
INTERNALLY DISPLACED IRAQIS
The UN estimates that there are now 1.9 million
displaced within Iraq.
This includes one million people forced from their homes before 2003 and an
additional 727,000 displaced since the 2006 February bombing of the Samarra mosque. UNHCR is projecting internal displacement might increase by as much as one million more
people this year. Iraq
is becoming Balkanized. Formerly mixed
neighborhoods are disintegrating into Sunni and Shiite redoubts, all afraid of
one another, and leaving minorities such as the Christians or the Mandeans with no safe place to go to. A Sunni imam born and
raised in Basra,
a largely Shiite area, told us: “I used to have Shiite friends and neighbors.
But everything changed. After I was beaten up and threatened several times, I
had to leave to protect my family.”
According to estimates by the Iraqi
Red Crescent Society, he is one of 160,000 Iraqis who have moved to Iraq’s most stable region, the three
governorates of Dohuk, Erbil
and Suleimaniya in the north. During a two week survey of conditions in
this largely autonomous area administered by the Kurdish Regional Government, Refugees International found that many of the
internally displaced are struggling to survive. They are victims of
inattention, inadequate resources, regional politics, and bureaucratic
obstacles. But as one woman who fled
north from Baghdad
said, “Here at least, we are safe.”
The autonomous Kurdish region, protected by its own
security forces, is largely immune to the violence in other parts of Iraq. Kurds, Christians, Sunni and Shiite Arabs are
all trying to resettle there. Getting in is not easy, as the displaced need to
have a guarantor, a Kurdish resident of one of the three Northern Governorates, who can attest
to their morality and identity. Single Arab men rarely get admission, Refugees International
found that it is harder for Muslim
Arabs to gain entry than for Kurds, or for Christians- who sometimes get
preferential treatment.
In addition, Kurds from disputed areas such as
oil-rich Kirkuk
or Khanaqein, whose status is to be settled by
referendum later this year as stated in both the Constitution and national law,
are systematically discouraged or even prevented from moving into the Kurdish
provinces. Kurdish authorities actively discourage
Kurds from leaving Kirkuk
and other disputed towns and forces them to stay for the referendum rather than
resettle in existing, recognized Kurdish
territories. Left with no other alternatives, these Kurdish families have to
return to their place of origin, where they can face serious danger.
Some
displaced are getting into the Kurdish provinces. Other relatively safe
Governorates, such as Karbala and Basra, have been forced de facto to shut their borders because
they say their infrastructure can not accommodate an influx of internal
refugees.
Whereas many Iraqis tell us they worry most about
security, in the stable Kurdish area the biggest concerns are economic. Those
who reach the Kurdish provinces must surmount difficulties in finding housing,
shelter, employment, and education for their children. They face an inflation
rate of over 70 percent and fuel and electricity prices that have increased 270 percent
in the course of 2006.
Most internal refugees can not find work, except
for professionals such as doctors or engineers, who are welcomed and sometimes
even sought after by
Kurdish authorities. Some displaced stay with host families; others are staying
in public buildings, depending entirely on the host community’s willingness to
help. “We depend on our neighbors’ generosity to feed our children,” a
displaced Kurd said,
Only 1% of the displaced in Iraq are in
camps. Although some local officials told RI they favored setting up camps, we
agree with the UN and others that integration into local communities is
preferable. Most of the new arrivals have to pay rent, which has risen
drastically in the past couple of years, particularly in the main urban areas.
High rents are exhausting the resources of displaced families. In the town of Shaklawa alone, in the Erbil governorate, we heard that 10 families had to
return to their place of origin in February because the cost of living was too
high. A Sunni Arab woman from Baghdad living in
Erbil told Refugees International
that she and her husband had decided to return to Baghdad with their two children despite the
threats they had received for being Sunni. “My husband can’t find work here,
and the rent is too expensive. Everything is cheaper in Baghdad. God will protect us, I hope.”
Before 2003, 80 % of Iraqis depended on a monthly
Public Distribution System(PDS) for food and fuel under the U.N.’s Oil for Food program. With
the economy in chaos and high unemployment, the program now run by the Iraqi
government, is more needed than ever.
To qualify for PDS ,
Iraqis need ration cards that are distributed in their towns of residence. The cards have also served as the basis for
the voter registration system for post-war Iraqi elections, so they have
acquired political significance. Since
voter roles depend on the issuance of ration cards, towns are reluctant to
allow families to take their ration cards when they move. Without ration cards, these people cannot get
food. In theory, after acquiring a
residence permit from the Kurdish Regional Government (KRG), displaced people
can return to their place of origin to file a request to transfer the food
ration cards, but many find it too expensive or too unsafe to return. If they
do return to initiate a transfer of their ration card, the application must go
to Baghdad, but
neither the central government nor the Kurdish authorities have much interest
in promoting migration, particularly of Arabs.
No family RI interviewed said it had been able to transfer its food
ration card. The displaced blame the
lack of access to food and fuel rations on bureaucratic resistance, general
inefficiency, and rampant corruption. RI believes it is essential that
institutions such as the US Agriculture Department or the UN World Food Program
immediately seek to assist the Iraqi government to overcome these problems and devise an,
improved and more effective public distribution system to get these resources
to the displaced.
Displaced people in the KRG can go to public
hospitals, but their children frequently cannot enter school. To be admitted into a school, children must
present an official certificate from their former school attesting to the grade
they have completed. Many families left in a hurry and were not able to obtain
these papers before they fled.
Another obstacle for displaced children is the lack
of Arabic language schools in the Kurdish region. A large number of the
displaced are Arabs or Kurds who have been living in Arab areas for decades and
thus many can not speak Kurdish. Arabic schools in the KRG are only in the main
urban areas. Many of the displaced have chosen to settle in smaller towns or
villages where the cost of living is lower. As a result, their children are not
able to go to school. Even in the main cities, access to Arabic language
schools is a problem since there are very few.. In Erbil, there are only two Arabic schools in the city, which
operate on two shifts to allow as many children as possible to attend classes.
In Suleimaniya, three schools with three shifts each
are unable to meet the needs of the growing Arab community. The
government as well as UN agencies such as UNHCR and UNICEF need to address displaced
children’s education and health needs. To do so, they will need increased
resources.
In Baghdad
the national Ministry of Displacement and Migration (MoDM)
is reluctant to admit the level of displacement. This lack of political will,
combined with the deficiencies in Iraqi bureaucracy and the country’s
generalized insecurity, means a lack of government services to the displaced.
In fact, the Iraqi Government’s refusal to declare a humanitarian crisis is
leading international donors to question whether their funds are really needed
to assist the displaced. Many argue that since the Iraqi Government has
billions of dollars of unspent funds, it should not be the international
community’s role to provide additional funding. Kurdish authorities have
provided ad hoc assistance. Some
mayors are able to provide the most vulnerable with some form of assistance. Others
in need receive nothing.
International non-governmental organizations, local
relief agencies and religious groups are providing some assistance to the
displaced. The Iraqi Red Crescent Society (IRCS) continues to function at a
national level, albeit in a fragile way. In Erbil Governorate it has provided some assistance to 8,000 families. Depending
largely on volunteers, the IRCS is doing the best it can with limited
resources. RI believes that increased aid e to the International Committee of
the Red Cross (ICRC) and its local partner ICRS from the U.S. and other donors
could dramatically improve conditions for the displaced in Kurdish and other
areas of Iraq.
So far, the U.N.’s response has been almost
non-existent. After the U.S.-led invasion in 2003, the U.N. started operating
on the assumption that the Iraqi challenge would be rehabilitation,
reconstruction, and development. Only last month did U.N. agencies officially
declare Iraq
a humanitarian crisis, where the emphasis must shift to saving lives, not
spurring development. Some critics told us U.N. agencies are reluctant to let go
of the “development approach,” as they fear
loss of budgets and resistance
from their donors.
Among
Iraqis, the U.N. has a low reputation.
Many blame it for the painful sanctions imposed on Saddam Hussein’s Iraq because of
the Gulf War. Since 2003, Iraqis don’t
think the U.N. has done much to ease current security and humanitarian
problems. In addition it suffers from a
lack of resources and in our view excessive security restrictions in the KRG
region, which have severe consequences on the ability of staff to operate
effectively.
The U.N. Refugee Agency, which has
primary responsibility for displaced people in the Kurdish and southern
regions of Iraq,
only has about $9 million to spend in 2007.
“If we were looking at responding to real needs, then even $150 million
would not be enough,” said one UNHCR official. The International Organization
for Migration is charged with assisting internally displaced in the rest of Iraq, but the
IOM is also short of funds. RI urges the U.S. and other donors
to provide these two organizations and
their implementing partners with more resources.
Since the bombing of the U.N. headquarters in Baghdad in 2003, the agency has operated largely out of Amman, Jordan. For security reasons U.N. officials in Baghdad stay mainly in the heavily fortified Green Zone,
“and when they come out, they are escorted by the Multi-National Force,” says
one non-government relief worker in Iraq. Even in the Kurdish area, where conditions
are secure and travel safe, U.N. workers stay largely in their compounds, which
are difficult to access. When they leave, they travel in armored vehicles,
making it difficult for them to interact, collect data and manage programs.
The U.S.
and Iraq are finding it
difficult to stop the violence in Iraq. Until they do, the flood of internally
displaced and refugees will continue.
While we don’t yet know how to stabilize Iraq, we do know how to protect and
support displaced Iraqis. We must
continue and increase our efforts to do it now multilaterally and bilaterally.
Refugees
International is an independent, non-profit humanitarian
advocacy organization based in Washington,
D.C. Refugees
International generates lifesaving humanitarian assistance
and protection for displaced people around the world and works to end the
conditions that create displacement. We do not accept government or United
Nations funding, relying instead on contributions from individuals, foundations
and corporations.