LONDON, September 24, 2007 – The Iraqi refugee crisis
is reaching breaking point, says a new Amnesty International report today
(24 September) following a research mission to Syria and Jordan which host
the bulk of Iraq’s refugees.
Help from the international community has been “seriously
inadequate,” concludes the report, focusing particularly on countries like
the UK which participated in the invasion of Iraq and hence “carry
particular responsibilities to Iraqis”.
As often reported in the last three years by UK Gay
News, the plight of gay Iraqis is of particular concern – an aspect
often forgotten.
The report,
Millions in Flight: The Iraqi Refugee
Crisis, commends the Syrian and Jordanian governments for largely
keeping their borders open to date but accuses other states of doing too
little to help them meet the needs of almost two million Iraqi refugees whom
they now host.
As a result, the two countries are taking steps to
tighten border controls and so cut off the main escape routes for people
fleeing from sectarian and other violence in Iraq.
The new report highlights the “negative measures”
employed by some countries, identifying the UK as forcibly returning more
Iraqi refugees than any other country in Europe.
The organisation opposes forcible returns to any part of
Iraq, including the North, noting the persistence of violence and
instability and the potential for civil war to spread to the Northern
Governorates. It also criticises the UK policy of cutting-off support to
refused asylum seekers who cannot return home, a policy that has left some
Iraqi asylum seekers destitute.
“The international community has largely ignored the
plight of millions of Iraqis displaced inside and outside Iraq,” Amnesty
International UK Director Kate Allen said.
“With Syria and Jordan now preparing to tighten border
controls, desperate people fleeing violence and death threats may have no
escape route available.
“It’s staggering that the UK is sending people back to
Iraq when it should be helping Syria and Jordan to cope with this refugee
crisis. As one of the countries involved in the invasion of Iraq, it has a
moral obligation to help those displaced by the bloodshed that has
followed,” she pointed out.
Amnesty is also co-hosting an event at the Labour Party
conference, Iraqi Refugees: Our Responsibility? with Human Rights
Watch and the Refugee Council.
The event is at 12.45 today at the Wessex Hotel,
Bournemouth. An Iraqi man who served with the coalition forces in Iraq and
is now seeking asylum in the UK following threats against him will be
speaking at the event.
At least four million Iraqis are now displaced and their
numbers are continuing to rise at an estimated rate of 2,000 people per day,
making this the world's fastest growing displacement crisis. Syria now hosts
1.4 million Iraqi refugees and Jordan 500-750,000 – making up 10% of
Jordan’s population - while 2.2 million people are displaced but still
remain within Iraq.
"The international community – including the UK – must do
more to assist Jordan and Syria by providing increased financial, technical
and in-kind bilateral assistance and by accepting greater numbers of
especially vulnerable refugees for resettlement,” Ms. Allen said.
“The modest steps taken by the international community
simply do not measure up to the magnitude of the crisis.”
Although many pledges for assistance have been made, some
have not yet been honoured and the level of support delivered has been
seriously insufficient given the actual needs on the ground.
Amnesty International is also calling for on-going
assistance to the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR), as
well as national and international humanitarian organisations to enable them
to continue to provide and expand their current work to protect and assist
Iraqis in need.
The report criticises the slow pace of resettlement of
those considered most vulnerable among the Iraqi refugees in Jordan and
Syria, including victims of torture and other grave abuses.
It notes that between 2003, when the US-led invasion
toppled Saddam Hussain, and 2006, the number of Iraqi refugees who were
resettled in third countries fell by more than a half, despite rising
political violence. According to UNHCR, 1,425 Iraqi refugees were resettled
in third countries in 2003 but only 404 in 2006.
Click
HERE for the full Amnesty report.
■ Last week, two gay Iraqis won their appeals
against deportation back to Iraq and have been granted asylum in UK.
One of them, "Ibaa" was employed as a translator by both the American and
the British. See article
Two Gay
Victims of Iraqi Terror Win UK Asylum
(UK Gay News, September 20, 2007).
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Posted: 24 September 2007 at
00:00 (UK time) |