Brookings-SAIS Project on Internal Displacement Releases Report on the
Internally Displaced People of Iraq
U.S.Newswire
Oct 29, 2002
Contact: Colin Johnson of The Brookings Institution, 202-797-6310,
or Hilary Talley of the
Brookings-SAIS Project on Internal
Displacement, 202-797-6168
WASHINGTON, Oct. 29 /U.S. Newswire/ -- Among the legacies Saddam Hussein
would leave any successor are the one million or more forcibly displaced persons
who remain within the borders of Iraq. Over the past thirty years, the
government of Iraq has relied upon a policy of deliberate expulsion of people
from their homes in order to punish and subdue recalcitrant populations (i.e.,
the Kurds and Shiites), secure valuable land and oil-rich areas (i.e., Kirkuk,
southern marshes), and stamp out political opposition. As a result, an estimated
600,000 to 800,000 persons are displaced in the North and an estimated 300,000
in the Center/South.
A new 55-page study, The Internally Displaced People of Iraq, published by
the Brookings Institution-SAIS Project on Internal Displacement, points out that
these forcibly displaced persons represent ''the political fault lines of the
country.'' According to the authors, John Fawcett and Victor Tanner, addressing
the problems of these internally displaced people will have to be a priority for
any government of Iraq that aspires to stable and democratic rule. The report is
available on the Brookings website: www.brookings.edu.
The main victims of state expulsion policies are members of the Kurdish
minority in the North and members of the substantial Shiite majority in the
Center/South, including the Marsh Arabs. But also affected are the smaller
Turkmen and Assyrian minorities.
Although the original homes of most of those displaced in the North are
within the confines of the Kurdistan Regional Government, they cannot return to
their homes because of the Iraqi army's widespread destruction of their
villages, the planting of landmines, or continued hostility between Kurdish
factions. According to the study, an eventual solution for this group will lie
in de-mining, rebuilding the countryside, and the effective resettlement of the
displaced in cities.
Even more challenging will be finding solutions for those expelled from
Kirkuk, both an oil-rich area and Iraq's breadbasket. Prior to the government's
campaign to ''Arabize'' the area, Kurds and Turkmen comprised the majority, and
Assyrians lived there, too. Among the study's suggestions are a population
census, creation of an official body to put together property records, a
compensation fund for those arbitrarily dismissed from oil field positions, and
an organized return program.
Other recommendations in the study focus on the Shiites forcibly displaced in
the Center/South and the Marsh Arabs of the lower Tigris and Euphrates rivers,
most of whose habitat has been deliberately destroyed by Iraqi government
campaigns. Recommendations include return and resettlement programs,
environmental surveys, and a compensation scheme.
Overall, the study urges the United Nations to devote greater attention to
the most vulnerable parts of the Iraqi population, the internally displaced.
Although the Oil-for-Food Program generates $6 billion a year, the study finds
that UN agencies have insufficiently targeted the displaced. More than 400,000
displaced persons in the North are reported to live in ''collective centers,''
many in an advanced state of decay with insufficient infrastructure. A further
57,000 live in barracks, including more than 6,000 still in tents. More than
50,000 in the North are without access to health centers. In the Center/South,
displaced persons have difficulties registering for food rations.
The study calls for more targeted use of Oil-for-Food funds to help the
displaced, special visits by UN officials to assess the conditions of the
displaced, the publication of data on the displaced, and the designation of a UN
focal point for displaced persons in Iraq. It calls upon UN officials to be more
''outspoken'' in demanding access to and protection of the displaced, especially
in the Center/South as well as prevention of new expulsions. It says, ''The
international community and its institutional embodiment, the United Nations,
have an obligation to meet the needs of the internally displaced Iraqis, and to
seek to stem further displacement.''
The study is part of a series of publications and activities by the
Brookings-SAIS Project on Internal Displacement designed to focus attention on
internally displaced persons in areas largely closed off from the view of the
international community. The two authors are experts in humanitarian issues.
John Fawcett has worked for more than twenty years in the private sector for
groups engaged with humanitarian assistance and human rights, including the
International Rescue Committee and the International Crisis Group. Victor Tanner
is also an experienced aid worker and teaches Humanitarianism, Aid, and Politics
at the Johns Hopkins School of Advanced International Studies.
Copies of ''The Internally Displaced People of Iraq'' study can be found via
this direct web-link: https://www.brookings.edu/fp/projects/IDP/articles/iraqreport.htm.
Hard copies of the report are also available by calling 202-797-6105.
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