The surge in sectarian violence in Iraq that followed
last February's bombing of a Shit'ite shrine in Samaara is forcing tens of
thousands of people to flee their homes in southern and central Iraq. Many
are heading to the relative calm of the Kurdish Region in northern Iraq.
VOA's Jim Randle reports from the northern city of Irbil, where refugee
agencies and the regional government are scrambling to determine what kind
of help they need.
Abuzaid Suliaman, his wife, and some of
his children and grandchildren are crowded into one room of a relative's
house here in Irbil.
His family fled a spacious house in Baghdad when the fighting in their
neighborhood made it too dangerous to stay.
Suliaman is Kurdish, and he says, if Shi'ites or Sunnis questioned his
family and learned they were Kurds, they might be in danger.
So, he left Baghdad with six family members leaving behind almost
everything but the clothes they were wearing.
Thousands of Shi'ite and Sunni Arabs have been victims of intimidation,
and many, like the Suliamans, have decided to flee homes they owned for
decades and head for the relative safety of northern Iraq.
But the Kurdistan regional government's coordinator for U.N. affairs,
Dindar Zebari, says his government and U.N. agencies are already stretched
thin taking care of refugees from Kurdish areas across the border and
internally displaced, or IDPs, who are already here. He says, if they are
going to take in more, they will need more help from Iraq's central
government.
"Because most of the support and help that was given to Iraq was
concentrated in the south, and also in the center of Iraq, for the last
three years, and the issue of refugees and IDPs has not been taken care of
in our part of the country," said Dindar Zebari.
Dr. Giorgio Francia, an official with Qandil, the Swedish-based refugee
agency, says at least 10,000 families have fled to Irbil and surrounding
areas of northern Iraq in the last few months. That means about 50,000
people, or perhaps more, are in need of shelter, work and, in many cases,
schooling, as well as other services.
Francia says, so far, the flow of displaced
people appears manageable, but that may change, depending
on the security situation in central and southern Iraq.
"If there is a tremendous evolution for the worse in the south, they
will come in the mass," said Giorgio Francia.
Francia says a rapid flood of displaced people might force officials to
establish camps for IDPs. He says officials are reluctant to do this
because such camps can stay open for decades and make people dependent.
"But still, if there are 10,000 people squatting in public buildings,
you better create a camp, so everyone will have shelter, everyone will
have some form of health assistance," he said. |