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Refugees Caught Between Deportation and Death Threats
by Ali al-Fadhily Hundreds of thousands of Iraqis driven out of their country by violence are now faced with detention abroad, or a homecoming to death threats.
More than two million Iraqis, in a population of about 25 million, have taken refuge in many countries. Only a few have won official status as refugees. Most refugees in Syria, Jordan, Lebanon, Egypt and many other countries stay on as illegal residents, facing threats of deportation and imprisonment.
"To deport an Iraqi refugee is to issue a death warrant," Ali Jassim, an Iraqi journalist recently deported from Lebanon told IPS in Baghdad. "The Lebanese authorities are applying regular migration rules to Iraqis, meaning that most Iraqis in Lebanon will be deported."
BAGHDAD, Dec 6 (IPS) - The Human Rights Watch report titled 'Rot Here or Die There:
Bleak Choices for Iraqi Refugees in Lebanon' released Dec. 4 says
Lebanese authorities are arresting Iraqi refugees who have no valid
visas, and detaining them indefinitely to coerce them to return to Iraq.
"Iraqi
refugees in Lebanon live in constant fear of arrest," Bill Frelick,
refugee policy director for Human Rights Watch told reporters.
"Refugees who are arrested face the prospect of rotting in jail
indefinitely unless they agree to return to Iraq and face the dangers
there."
There are at least 40,000 Iraqi refugees in Lebanon, according to the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR).
Complaints
of mistreatment by Lebanese authorities pushed many Iraqis to flee
Lebanon for Syria earlier, but this is no longer possible. As of Oct.
1, the Syrian government requires Iraqis to obtain visas.
The Iraqi refugees already in Syria are struggling.
The
World Food Programme (WFP) reported Dec. 4 that about a third of Iraqis
in Syria are skipping one meal a day in order to feed their children.
WFP officials said nearly 60 percent of Iraqi refugees reported
purchasing cheaper, less nutritious food in the face of a dramatic
increase in food prices.
"My 55-year-old brother is now under
Lebanese police custody," Zahra Naji, a schoolteacher in Baghdad told
IPS. "He can choose to come home in order to be released, but he will
definitely get killed by militiamen who keep coming to our house
looking for him because he was a Ba'ath Party member before the U.S.
occupation of Iraq."
Jordan has at least 750,000 Iraqi refugees, according to UNHCR. The majority of these do not have legal residency permits.
To
get those, Iraqis need either to be investors who can deposit more than
100,000 dollars, or others who can get government jobs. Approvals for
full residency to Iraqis are scarce, and now few Iraqis are allowed
into Jordan.
Many in Jordan have been deported for all sorts of reasons.
"It
is true that Jordanian migration offices have stopped deporting Iraqi
illegal residents if they do not represent a threat to Jordan, but any
minor trouble could lead to deportation," said Omar Ahmed Saleem, a
28-year-old student who was recently deported. "I had a fight over a
soccer game with some Jordanian guys, and so the police decided I would
be deported."
Omar said he could not return to his family home in Baghdad, and was staying with a friend in a different area of the city.
"I
cannot go to my family house because of my (Sunni) first name, 'Omar'
which is like a death warrant on me because sectarian militias are
still active in my area (the Sha'ab Quarter)," he told IPS.
Tens
of thousands of Sunni Iraqis have been killed simply because their
names were Omar, Bakr, Othman or other such, targeted by the Shia Badr
and Mehdi militias.
"Jordanian migration officers ask Iraqis
sometimes whether they prefer to be deported to Syria or to Iraq,"
Sammy Hamid, an Iraqi technician who was deported from Jordan recently
told IPS in Baghdad. "I worked as a taxi driver and I knew they would
deport me if they caught me, but I could not find any other job. The
new Syrian visa regulations made it certain that I come to Iraq and
take my chances."
Sammy now faces detention by the Iraqi
Ministry of Interior on charge of revealing national secrets while
working as a freelance cameraman who covered many violent events. He is
now forced to live away from his home and work as a porter.
"Now I am a porter instead of a reporter," Hamid laughed as he told IPS of his plight.
But the situation remains deadly serious for millions of displaced Iraqis.
"Millions
of Iraqis are suffering the consequences of the U.S. occupation, and we
hope our Arab brothers will think twice before deporting Iraqis," Ammar
Shakir, a human rights activist in Baghdad told IPS. "No matter what
crime an Iraqi refugee might have committed, the punishment should not
be deportation that might lead to death."
According to UNHCR,
there are more than 2.25 million Iraqis internally displaced within
their country, besides more than 2.5 million who have fled Iraq.
Ali al-Fadhily,
our correspondent in Baghdad, works in close collaboration with Dahr
Jamail, our U.S.-based specialist writer on Iraq who travels
extensively in the region)
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