The Christian Science Monitor: As Ethnic Refugees Flood Iraqi Kurdistan, A Strain on Hospitality
Members
of Iraq's Yazidi minority and other groups have flooded into Iraqi
Kurdistan for safety. But their needs are vast, and the region is coming
under strain.
ERBIL AND
DOHUK, IRAQ — Watched by the world's media, refugees have flooded Iraqi
Kurdistan, a relatively safe zone in a country disintegrating along
sectarian lines. But that disintegration, and the paucity of relief
services here, present fresh challenges for the US and its allies in
stabilizing Iraq.
In recent weeks, more than
100,000 people have fled to the Kurdish-controlled city of Dohuk from
villages in Sinjar, mostly ethnic Yazidis fleeing the Islamic State
(IS), a Sunni extremist group. A previous wave of Arab Christians came
from Mosul after it fell to IS in June.
Before
the crisis erupted, Dohuk Province had an estimated one million
residents. The head of the local council in Dohuk City says the
population has now almost doubled with the influx of minorities like the
Christians, Yazidis, and Shabak.
"The number of
displaced is always climbing up...Dohuk has become a giant refugee
camp," says Faheem Abdullah. "All our work now is focused on emergency
relief, and providing basic services."
The number
of refugees arriving from IS-controlled Nineveh province has slowed in
the past 24 hours. President Barack Obama said today it appears that
almost all of the Yazidi refugees who had been trapped on Sinjar
Mountain have made their way to safety.
But with
so many new mouths to feed and a lack of shelter, alarm bells are
ringing. The UN said Thursday it had designated northern Iraq as a
"Level 3 Emergency," its highest rating for humanitarian emergencies.
"It
is a vast, unmanageable crisis and it is going to get even more
difficult because this war won’t be resolved soon," says a veteran
international relief worker who is now based in Erbil.
Moreover,
the underlying causes of Iraq's refugee crisis are likely to prove more
difficult than feeding and housing the newly homeless.
Iraqi
state television reported Thursday that Prime Minister Nouri Al-Maliki
had agreed to step down, which could pave the way for a more inclusive
government in Baghdad. But there are no quick fixes to the state of the
Iraqi military, which has failed to check the advance of IS in northern
and western Iraq.
Overwhelmed
Mr.
Abdullah, the Dohuk councillor, has opened his own home to four Yazidi
families from Sinjar. His neighbor is hosting two families from
Qaraqosh, a Christian town 12 miles east of Mosul.
More
than 225 schools have been turned into shelters in Dohuk City and
Zakho, where the borders of Iraq, Syria and Turkey converge. Funding
comes from the semi-autonomous Kurdish Regional Government (KRG),
international organizations, and private donations.
"Hospitality here has been much stronger than any humanitarian aid that is in place," says the international relief worker.
The
first major wave of displaced people in Dohuk came from Mosul and
Christian villages of the Nineveh plains, where fear of the IS has
emptied out entire areas. The second wave is made up primarily of Yazidi
families who fled from Sinjar and other areas seen as vulnerable.
The
KRG has spent $15 million addressing the Sinjar crisis so far. With no
money coming from Baghdad and wrangling over oil revenues, cities like
Erbil and Dohuk are burning through their emergency funds, say Kurdish
officials. In 2013 the region spent $80 million on Syrian refugees
alone.
Huge needs, limited help
So
far Baghdad has provided military helicopters to assist with air drops
of food and water and the evacuation of small numbers of people.
Thousands continue to arrive daily via Syria. There are long
registration lines at improvised camps, and some families are simply
setting up on the side of the road.
Abdullah
Hamid, who manages the Bajet Kandala Transit Center, says the camp’s
population quadrupled in a fortnight to about 23,000 people.
"The
families stay here for three days and they are relocated to other areas
where they may have relatives," Mr. Hamid says, warning of a potential
health crisis due to a shortage of potable water and sanitation.
The
arrivals from Sinjar, some of whom walked for days in grueling heat,
arrive in a weakened state. Many have been traumatized by their
experience.
One woman collapsed in hysteria at
the mention of the Daash – the Arabic acronym for IS. Another woman
committed suicide jumping off a cliff with her two babies, according to
an aid worker.
"The only difference between being here and in Sinjar is that here we have water," says Sardar Bapir, a new arrival.
Shelter
Families
with nowhere left to go turn to houses of worship, makeshift camps near
natural water springs, and unfinished construction sites.
"The
problem is that they come here with absolutely nothing so it is very
difficult to provide for all their needs," says Salah Goran, an aid
worker.
"We have many kinds of donors, some who
just volunteer their time to cheer up the children," adds Valy, a
volunteer at a church for Christian refugees in Erbil
Many
people in the surrounding area, are bringing boxes of food to help out
and even opening up their houses, so that the displaced can take
showers.
"Most people are supportive but we also
have some ethno-centrist members of the community who want to throw out
all the Arabs from the region because they see them as a security
threat," says Valy.
Christians and other
minorities feel betrayed by long-time Arab neighbors, perceived to be
allies of IS militants. Kurdish Peshmerga forces have repeatedly come
under fire from Arab villagers on their way to the front line.
Erbil
residents wanted to hold a demonstration calling for the eviction of
Arabs last week, but the authorities denied permission. In the Kurdish
city of Suleimaniyah residents rallied on August 8 to demand that Arabs
be placed in internment camps.
"Anti-Arab sentiment is on the rise here," says another international aid worker.
This post originally appeared in The Christian Science Monitor
end quote from:
Syria Deeply | - |
The head of the local council in Dohuk City says the population has now almost doubled with the influx of minorities like the Christians, Yazidis, and Shabak. "The number of displaced is always climbing up...Dohuk has become a giant refugee camp," says ...
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