The
Kurdistan Observer
www.kurdistanobserver.com
Rubin on Situation of IDPs in Iraqi Kurdistan
Banasiaw Dispatch
Michael Rubin
The New Republic
July 23, 2001
When Americans think ethnic cleansing, they think of Bosnia, Kosovo,
Rwanda. They don’t
think of Iraq. But that’s because most Americans don’t go to places
like Banasiaw, a
checkpoint along the border between the U.S.-patrolled safe haven in
northern Iraq and
Saddam Hussein’s distinctly unsafe terrain to the south. In Banasiaw,
the ethnically
cleansed-Iraqi Kurds, Turkmans, and other non-Arabs forced from their
homes by Saddam’s
men-constitute a brisk traffic. “We had two expelled families arrive
just today,” says a
Kurdish commander named Jamal. Two families today. Another four tomorrow.
They’ve
been coming for years. According to the U.S. Committee on Refugees,
the number of
internally displaced persons in northern Iraq increased from around
640,000 in 1994 to
almost one million in 1999. And thousands more are expelled every year.
Saddam’s ethnic cleansing isn’t new. In fact, he was once famous for
it. In 1988, during the
Iran-Iraq War, Saddam’s forces carried out the infamous Anfal Campaign-razing
some
5,000 villages in northern Iraq, relocating populations into well-guarded
“collective towns,”
and using chemical weapons against those who did not move fast enough.
By the end of the
year, approximately 182,000 non-Arabs had been massacred. But, over
time, Saddam has
grown more savvy about public relations. Today, by carefully controlling
press access, he
keeps his ethnic cleansing from international view. Indeed, to listen
to many in the United
States and Europe, you’d think the main cause of suffering in Iraq
today is not Saddam, but
the U.S.-led sanctions campaign against him. In the swelling towns
of northern Iraq,
however, they know better.
Abdullah, 44, a married father of six, tells a typical story. He was
an elementary school
teacher in the oil-rich city of Kirkuk, a veteran of the eight-year
Iran-Iraq War, and a
conscript in the Iraqi occupation of Kuwait. One day last spring, several
policemen and an
official from Saddam’s ruling Baath Party (which foments racism against
Kurds and
other non-Arabs) pushed their way into his house without warning. They
confiscated the
family's U.N. oil-for-food-program ration cards, then ordered Abdullah
and his elderly
parents to accompany them to the security headquarters "for five minutes,"
while his wife
and six children waited at home.
When Iraqi security finally released him-not five minutes but one week
later-they told
Abdullah that his parents would remain in jail until the entire family
agreed to abandon their
home and property. Abdullah relented. Three weeks later, the family
left, having lost their
house and two cars, not to mention the quarter-million Iraqi dinar
bribe they paid police in
order to get back their U.N. ration cards (so they could get food when
they arrived in the
northern Kurdish safe-haven).
Abdullah said his expulsion was due to "Saddam's oil strategy. He does
not want any Kurds
in areas of oil wealth." The Iraqi dictator, it seems, suspects Kurds
and Turkmans of
disloyalty and feels his country’s precious oil reserves would be safer
surrounded by ethnic
Arabs. The expulsions have grown so frequent, Abdullah added, that
"there is no Kurdish
family in Kirkuk who is not waiting for the knock on their door."
Many Kurds have no choice but to wait. According to several refugees
in Bardiqariman, a
tent city in the safe haven that held 1,660 people the day I visited,
the Iraqi government no
longer allows Kurds to hold good jobs unless they reregister their
ethnicity as Arab. Some
Kurds try to do just that, but it often doesn’t work. Saddam’s henchmen
still cleanse them
from oil-rich areas, but, in an ironic nod to their assumed identity,
many are banished not to
the Kurdish north but to non-oil-producing areas in the Arab south.
I asked one family in the
northern town of Kalar how they got there. After I pointed out a few
discrepancies in their
accounts, they admitted, embarrassed, that they had tried to change
their identity to Arab but
were expelled anyway. Torture isn’t widespread, but it isn’t exactly
unheard of either.
Qasim, 57, told me how security police snatched him and his family from
their house in
Khanaqin, then savagely beat him in jail while his wife and daughters
sat in the adjacent cell.
After one particularly harsh beating, Qasim's daughter Bisma explained,
blood oozed from
her father's ears; he has been deaf ever since. Other families tell
similar stories.
Seventy-three-year-old Nadeema cares for her son, who suffers from
brain damage_the result
of a severe beating by Iraqi officers in 1994 during a round-up of
young Kurdish men.
Despite her family's subsequent expulsion to Sulaymaniyah in the north,
she considers
herself lucky, explaining, "Most families in Khanaqin never saw their
sons again."
And the abuse can also be more subtle. Ruhnak, a 37-year-old woman,
told me that Iraqi
security officers arrested her and demanded she divorce her husband,
whom they accused of
working against the government. When she refused, they expelled her
four children from
school and told her they would stop her U.N. oil-for-food rations if
she did not leave
Khanaqin. She now lives in the city of Kalar across the border in the
safe haven.
According to Zahir Shukur Bapir, head of the governing Patriotic Union
of Kurdistan’s
Displaced Persons Bureau in Darbandikhan, the capital of the Kurdish-controlled
section of
the Kirkuk governorate, "Every governorate [under Saddam’s control]
has an Office of
Peoples' Issues from where they order expulsions." An emerging paper
trail backs up his
claim. In one two-year-old document, recently smuggled into the safe-haven,
one of
Saddam's governors issued detailed expulsion instructions, attaching
a list of 1,380 people to
be expelled over the course of three months. Separately, the September
19, 2000, edition of
the official Iraqi newspaper Sawt al-Ta'amim (Voice of Nationalization)
reported the
distribution of 10,000 plots of confiscated land to members of the
Iraqi military and security
forces. Saddam's government quickly pulled the paper from newsstands,
but dissidents had
already sent a few copies to the north.
Life for the Kurds expelled to tent cities in northern Iraq is bleak:
Temperatures exceed 100
degrees during the summer, then fall below freezing in the winter.
Drinking water is scarce.
Most displaced persons say they want to return home but cannot do so
while Saddam
remains in power. Most of the refugees think Saddam views the Bush
administration’s
ongoing effort to soften the sanctions regime as a sign of weakness.
And, as they know all
too well, Saddam usually responds to weakness with aggression. Asked
about returning
home, Muna, a recent arrival from Khanaqin, referred to Saddam's legendary
chemical
weapons attack in 1988: "We are too afraid of another Anfal," she said.
Perhaps the Bush
administration should be as well.
Michael Rubin, a Carnegie Council fellow and visiting scholar
at The Washington Institute
for Near East Policy, recently returned from nine months in northern
Iraq.
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