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Over 400 confirmed cholera cases so far
Report, IRIN (Oct 7, 2008)
The number of confirmed cholera cases has risen to 418 in central and southern Iraq, with six dead since an outbreak began on August 20. The Iraqi Health Ministry and the World Health Organization have blamed the country's rundown water and sanitation infrastructure for the outbreak. Cholera is a gastro-intestinal disease typically spread by contaminated water. It can cause severe diarrhea, which in extreme cases can lead to fatal dehydration. Treating drinking water with chlorine and improving hygiene conditions can prevent the disease. GO

Government of Iraq's $80 billion budget ignores displaced Iraqis
Statement, Refugees International (Sep 29, 2008)
Refugees International accused the Government of Iraq of ignoring the welfare of four million displaced Iraqis after an Iraqi parliamentary committee made its third request this year for funding to assist them. As the Iraqi parliamentary committee on displacement and migration requested $4 billion of next year's $78.8 billion budget, Refugees International called on the Government of Iraq to immediately provide the requested funding and design a strategy to adequately respond to the crisis. Refugees International also urged the U.S. government to provide the Government of Iraq with the support needed to take these essential steps as the humanitarian needs of internally displaced Iraqis and Iraqi refugees continue to increase. GO

Number of cholera cases nearly doubles
Report, IRIN (Sep 29, 2008)
More than 300 confirmed cholera cases have been registered in central and southern Iraq since an outbreak began on August 20, with almost 50 percent of the cases occurring in the past week, the health ministry's cholera unit has said. The Iraqi Health Ministry and the World Health Organization have blamed the country's rundown water and sanitation infrastructure for the outbreak. GO

Plane-load of Iraqis due to be repatriated this week
Report, IRIN (Sep 29, 2008)
The Iraqi embassy in Amman is organizing the repatriation by plane of dozens of Iraqi families who wish to return home, despite warnings from UN agencies about the security situation. Iraqi diplomats in Amman said they had chartered a plane to repatriate the Iraqis later this week, during the Muslim holiday of Eid al Fitr. Disabled people and the elderly will be among the Iraqis leaving in what, according to the Iraqi ambassador, will be the first official return by air to the homeland since the US-led invasion in 2003. GO

Parliament demands financial help for IDPs, refugees
Report, IRIN (Sep 25, 2008)
A parliamentary committee on displacement and migration demanded the Iraqi government allot US$4 billion in next year's budget to meet the needs of more than four million internally displaced persons and refugees. GO

Voter Apathy Among Iraq Displaced
Zaineb Naji, Institute for War and Peace Reporting (Sep 24, 2008)
Internal refugees in Iraq are showing little interest in taking part in the country's delayed provincial elections despite extensive campaigns to increase voter registration. Iraq's electoral commission has registered 72,000 displaced voters, just 2.6 per cent of the total figure for those uprooted by the conflict. Internally displaced persons, IDPs, are required to register on a special list in order to vote in the upcoming provincial council elections. They will be able to vote in ballots either in places where they now live or came from. Iraqis living outside the country will not be allowed to take part in the poll. GO

From exile to peril at home: Returned Refugees and Iraq’s Displacement Crisis
Report, Human Rights Watch (Sep 23, 2008)
In the last months of 2007, tens of thousands of Iraqi refugees left Syria to return to their country. Whether they returned in Iraqi government-sponsored bus convoys or on individual journeys, some in Baghdad and Washington touted their move as a sign of success in bringing order to Baghdad and a vote of confidence by the returnees in Iraq’s safety and stability. Elsewhere, governments like Jordan and Sweden that had provided sanctuary to Iraqi refugees may have seen in the returns a signal that the time had come to begin compelling Iraqis to return, rather than providing them with asylum and assistance. GO


 
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