By Amnesty
International
17/06/08 "Amnesty
International"
-- 15/06/08 -- The
international
community is
evading its
responsibility
towards refugees
from Iraq by
promoting a
false picture of
the security
situation in
Iraq when the
country is
neither safe nor
suitable for
return, Amnesty
International
said today.
In its new
report, Rhetoric
and reality: the
Iraqi refugee
crisis, which is
based on recent
research and
interviews with
Iraqi refugees,
the organization
said that the
world's richest
states are
failing to
provide the
necessary
assistance to
Iraqi refugees,
most of whom are
plunged in
despair and
hurtling towards
destitution.
"Governments
have done little
or nothing to
help Iraqi
refugees,
failing in their
moral, political
and legal duty
to share
responsibility
for them," said
Amnesty
International.
"Instead, apathy
and rhetoric
have been the
overwhelming
response to one
of the worst
refugee crises
in the world."
Amnesty
International
said that the
Government of
Iraq and states
involved in the
invasion of Iraq
in 2003, in
particular the
USA and the UK,
highlight
"improved"
security or
"voluntary"
returns to Iraq
out of political
expedience, to
demonstrate that
their military
involvement has
been a success.
"Rhetoric cannot
hide the reality
that the wider
human rights
situation in
Iraq remains
dire," said
Amnesty
International.
"People are
being killed
every month by
armed groups,
the
Multinational
Force, Iraqi
security forces
and private
military and
security guards.
Kidnappings,
torture,
ill-treatment
and arbitrary
detention
pervade the
daily lives of
Iraqis. People
continue to
attempt to flee,
something that
is now very
difficult with
the recent
imposition of
visa
restrictions on
Iraqis by Jordan
and Syria."
According to the
latest estimates
of the United
Nations High
Commissioner for
Refugees (UNHCR),
the number of
Iraqis who have
fled their homes
has now reached
4.7 million, the
highest since
the US-led
invasion of Iraq
and the
subsequent
internal armed
conflict.
While Syria and
Jordan have
shouldered most
of the refugee
influx, they
have now
resorted to
drastic measures
such as
restricting
entry and
deporting people
who may be at
risk of
persecution,
partly due to
the lack of
support from the
international
community.
Having exhausted
savings, many
refugees are now
living in
complete
destitution and
facing new
dangers, such as
being forced
into so-called
"voluntary"
return to Iraq
and child labour
-- many families
have been forced
to send their
children to work
in the streets
in a desperate
bid to help them
survive.
For some
refugees, the
difficulties
they are facing
in the host
country are
prompting them
to make the
difficult and
dangerous
decision to
return to Iraq,
either
temporarily to
collect a
pension or food
ration or for
other such
reasons, or more
permanently
because of their
desperate
situation, not
because they
feel they are no
longer at risk
of human rights
abuses in Iraq.
They are making
this decision as
they feel they
have no other
option.
A 62-year-old
retired Shi’a
army officer,
Majid, a widower
with seven adult
children all
living in
Baghdad, told
Amnesty
International in
February that
after attempting
to find
protection in
Syria, with only
the 50 lira
(US$1) in his
pocket, he had
to return to
Iraq. Even
though he was
extremely
scared, he had
lost hope,
saying "If I
die, I die."
Majid fled Iraq
in February 2008
after two of his
nephews, Mansour
and Sami, aged
17 and 19, were
beheaded by
members of an
armed group
north of
Baghdad. He
exhausted his
savings in Syria
and was soon
left with
nothing.
Weeping, he
explained to
Amnesty
International
that he had no
alternative but
to return to
Iraq.
Many European
countries are
now attempting
to deport
Iraqis,
sometimes to
some of the most
dangerous parts
of Iraq such as
the south and
central regions.
In addition to
taking direct
actions forcing
Iraqis to
return, they are
using indirect
methods such as
cutting off
basic assistance
and services to
rejected
asylum-seekers
in order to
force them to
“voluntarily”
return to Iraq.
Sweden, which is
host to the
largest number
of Iraqi
refugees in
Europe and once
a positive
example to its
neighbours, has
now changed its
approach and is
denying the vast
majority of
Iraqis
protection and
forcibly
returning some
to very
dangerous areas.
Amnesty
International is
greatly
concerned that
the failure to
respond to this
crisis will
worsen an
already dire
situation.
Amongst other
things, it is
calling on the
international
community to:
• urgently and
substantially
raise
sustainable
financial
assistance;
• end practices
such as forcible
returns that put
lives at further
risk;
• cease
practices that
result in
coerced
“voluntary”
returns;
• allow
individuals to
seek paid
employment; and
• extensively
increase
resettlement
places for the
most vulnerable
refugees to
start a new life
in a third
country.
Amnesty
International is
also calling on
the governments
of Syria,
Jordan, Lebanon
and Egypt, as
well as those of
other countries
in the region,
to allow
unrestricted
access to people
fleeing Iraq,
cease all
deportations to
Iraq, and grant
refugees access
to the labour
market.
"The
international
community must
make a true
commitment to
assist Iraq's
displaced people
by substantially
boosting
sustainable
financial
assistance,
ending forcible
returns,
stopping
practices that
result in
coerced
voluntary
returns and
offering
increased
numbers of
resettlement
places," said
Amnesty
International.
