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electronicIraq.net
Aid & Development
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.
Yet in nearly all cases, the Iraqis who returned from Syria
were, in effect, fleeing for a second time: this time from pressure
that their reluctant host country brought to bear by tightening
residence requirements, and under the burden of supporting themselves
in Syria with little chance of employment and dwindling savings. Those
who returned to Baghdad found a city carved into sectarian enclaves.
Armed groups — some with a presence in Iraqi security forces, others
erstwhile enemies and present allies of the US military — have redrawn
the human map of the city. The violence in Iraq that spurred flight to
Syria is down, but security arrangements intended to prevent its
recurrence are tenuous and are staked on a project of political
reconciliation whose success is uncertain.
In February 2008, Human Rights Watch conducted interviews with
33 Iraqis who had returned from Syria to Baghdad in the last months of
2007. Their stories link two scenes of Iraq’s tragedy of flight: refuge
abroad from the threat of sectarian violence and displacement at home
with neither safety nor basic humanitarian needs assured. These stories
also underline the need to address the crisis of refugees and the
internally displaced — who together now comprise some 4.7 million
Iraqis — as a matter of humanitarian and political urgency, rather than
ignoring it as politically inconvenient in the narrative of a newly
stable Iraq.
The returnees interviewed by Human Rights Watch resided in 18
separate areas of Baghdad; the majority had returned from Damascus and
its outskirts within the previous several months. All but one
respondent cited one or both of two principal reasons for returning:
the effective ban on legal employment for Iraqis in Syria and a
stricter residency regime introduced last year, when the number of
Iraqis had swelled to as many as 1.5 million.
In early 2007, Syria, which has traditionally admitted
nationals of Arab countries without visas, briefly stopped issuing the
three-month entry permits that it had granted to Iraqis and replaced
them with a document that could only be renewed after leaving the
country. In October 2007, Syria began requiring Iraqis to enter with a
visa granted for specific purposes such as education or commerce.
Nearly all of the returnees who spoke to Human Rights Watch
attributed the decision to flee Iraq in the first place to the surge of
sectarian violence that had swept Baghdad following the attack on a
Shi‘a shrine in Samarra in February 2006.
Firas, 37, a Sunni, fled to Syria in 2006 from a neighborhood
that became heavily populated with Shi‘ites who were themselves fleeing
Sunni militias in an adjacent district. The demographic transformation
of the area and the presence of sectarian militias left men of the
opposing confessional group particularly threatened. “My brother and I
left after the Shi‘a militias took control of the area,” he said. “We
are Sunnis. A month after we left, my father, mother, wife, and child
were all driven out.”
Husayn, a pensioner in his fifties who, along with his wife and
six children, returned from Syria in December 2007 and now lives in a
western Baghdad neighborhood, described the logic of his path from a
predominantly Sunni part of that district to Syria, then back and
across a new internal border. “I rented in a Shi‘a neighborhood, closer
to Shu’la (a Shi‘a area) because I’m Shi‘a, and it was the safest
thing,” he said.
Like most of the displaced in Baghdad, Husayn sought safety
through residence in a homogenous area, but said even that safety was
relative and fragile: “There isn’t anywhere completely safe in Iraq,”
he said, “and here on the ‘border’ we’re between the Shi‘a militia and
the Sunni armed group.”
The majority of returnees assumed displaced status after
finding their homes destroyed or occupied by others. Ali, 47, fled a
mixed southern Baghdad neighborhood where warring militias targeted
members of the group associated with their opponents in January 2007,
moving with his wife and two children to Syria. They returned seven
months later, renting in a predominantly Shi‘a area.
“We left after I was directly threatened by al-Qa‘ida, which
took control of some of Saydiyya a bit at a time until they reached our
area. I found an envelope in the house containing a bullet and a
threatening letter,” he said. “I feel safer The violence in Iraq that
spurred flight to Syria is down, but security arrangements intended to
prevent its recurrence are tenuous and are staked on a project of
political reconciliation whose success is uncertain.
35 now, but I’m still slightly afraid of the snipers who target
the area because it’s Shi‘a ... I can’t even think of going back;
there’s someone from al-Qa‘ida living in my house now, and he’s joined
up with the Sahwa [the US-funded Awakening groups].”
The phenomenon of return appears to have been short-lived; by
May of this year, UNHCR estimated that only slightly more Iraqis
entered Syria each day than left for Iraq. But the prospect holds
obvious appeal for the US and Iraqi governments: at a conference on
Iraqi reconstruction in May, US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice
stressed the importance of refugee returns. Iraqi Prime Minister Nuri
al-Maliki, whose government organized some returns from Syria in 2007
with the lure of cash, spoke of future incentives to bring refugees
back.
The accounts of the Syria returnees make it clear that
conditions that would justify a call for returns are not in place.
“Push” remains stronger than “pull;” Iraq remains incredibly violent by
any standard other than one based on the carnage of its recent past,
and no structure exists to meet the humanitarian needs of the current
displaced population.
Until those conditions take hold, Iraq’s neighbors should
refrain from forcibly repatriating refugees. Other countries, such as
the United States — which has admitted only symbolic numbers of
refugees despite its particular responsibility for their crisis —
should admit substantially more refugees and increase financial support
to Syria, Jordan, and other countries that have borne the brunt of the
refugee crisis. And Iraq’s own government should start tending to the
displaced population it has and has done little to protect or assist,
rather than making political gestures on the subject — and at the
expense — of refugees.
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