The comprehensive resource for vacations and
hotels marketed to the LGBT community








 


 


 

 


HOMEARCHIVEEMAIL US | TRAVEL SECTION

 


IRAQ

Amnesty: Iraqi Authorities Failing to Protect ‘At Risk’ Civilians
 
UK among countries defying UN over returning refused asylum-seekers despite violence

 

LANGUAGE OPTIONS

This article is only available in English. For online instant translation in selected other languages, see below.

 

 

 

 
 
■ The Amnesty International report.  Click on image to read the full report.
 



LONDON, April 27, 2010    At risk groups in Iraq Such as men perceived to be gay, religious and ethnic minorities, journalists, and women and girls, have particularly been targeted, with the Iraqi authorities failing to protect them, Amnesty International says in a 28-page report published today.

And Amnesty is calling on the Iraqi authorities to urgently step up the protection of civilians amid a recent surge of violence in the country.

Ongoing uncertainty over when a new Iraqi government will be formed has led to a recent spike in attacks, with more than 100 civilian deaths in the first week of April alone.

The report, Iraq: Civilians Under Fire, also points out that the UK is among several European countries defying current United Nations guidelines over not returning refused asylum-seekers to extremely dangerous parts of Iraq.

For example, in October the UK forcibly removed 44 Iraqis to Baghdad.  In the event this led to a reported stand-off with Iraqi soldiers boarding the plane on arrival; 34 of the group were eventually flown back to the UK.

“Iraqis are still living in a climate of fear, seven years after the US-led invasion,” Amnesty International Middle East director Malcolm Smart said last night.

“The Iraqi authorities could do much more to keep them safe, but over and over they are failing to help the most vulnerable in society.

“The continuing uncertainty as to when a new government will be formed following last month’s election could well contribute to a further increase of violent incidents of which civilians are the main victims.

“The uncertainty is threatening to make a bad situation even worse.  Both the Iraqi authorities and the international community must act now to prevent more unnecessary deaths,” he stressed.

Amnesty’s report shows that a disproportionately high number of minority communities – numbering hundreds of thousands – have been forced to flee their homes as a result of ongoing insecurity in Iraq.

These include thousands of Christians, as well as members of the Sabean-Mandaean religion, Yazidis and women and girls targeted for “un-Islamic” behaviour.

Gay men or those perceived to be gay have also fled.  For example Hakim, a 34-year-old man from Najaf, told Amnesty that his partner had been kidnapped and abused by members of the Mahdi Army in October 2008, apparently after their secret relationship was discovered.

Following his release, both men received death threats from the Mahdi Army, including a note delivered with three bullets.

Many of those at risk have been killed.  For instance dozens of women have been murdered in Basra on “moral” grounds (either by Islamic groups or relatives), while at least 25 men and boys were killed in Baghdad in the first quarter of 2009 because they were perceived to be gay: many were first tortured, and bodies were mutilated after death and dumped in the streets.

The perpetrators were reportedly relatives and followers of the Mahdi Army; Muslim clerics have issued frequent public statements condemning homosexuality in Iraq.  Meanwhile, at least eight Christians were killed in Mosul in February in apparent sectarian attacks.

Journalism and political activism are also very high-risk pursuits, reports Amnesty.  For example, Safa ‘Abd al-Amir al-Khafaji, the head teacher of a girls’ school in Baghdad’s al-Ghadi district, was shot and seriously wounded in November after announcing she would contest the recent elections as an Iraqi Communist Party candidate.

Meanwhile, women human rights defenders in northern Iraq have told Amnesty that they’ve been accused of being “unbelievers” and threatened for their work campaigning for women’s rights over marriage and inheritance.

While Iraqi security forces, foreign troops or family members are responsible for some human rights abuses, most killings of civilians have been carried out by armed groups, including al-Qa’ida in Iraq, and Amnesty is urging the authorities to do more to protect those most at risk, including by consulting members of at-risk groups to see how best to protect them.

SEE ALSO

Urgent Housing, Support Appeal to Parisians for “Brave and Heroic” Gay Iraqi.  An urgent appeal to assist a gay Iraqi who fled his country for Europe a year ago was launched this morning by Iraqi LGBT. Help is being sought in Paris where the young destitute man is being sent.  (UK Gay News April 6 2010)

Outrage as UK Government Refuses to Act on Asylum Application of Iraqi Gay Leader. The refusal of the UK government to give priority to the asylum application of gay Iraqi is hindering the work of Iraqi LGBT, the London-based group that assists gay Iraqis who face persecution – and death – in their country.  Ali Hili, who runs Iraqi LGBT without pay, told UK Gay News this evening that he has had to turn down invitations to speak in the USA as, being an asylum seeker, he has no passport.  (UK Gay News, March 23 2010)

LINK

  website

 

 

 

CLICK HERE FOR PRINTER FRIENDLY PAGE



Seed Newsvine
 


Add to Mixx!


How to contact UK Gay News
Email:
editorial(at)ukgaynews.org.uk  

 

AIM messenger:  UKGayNews; 
Skype messenger:  ukgaynews

     

Creative Commons License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Licence.  

Posted: 27 Apr 2010 at 00:00 (UK time)

   
             
       

Fasthosts powered web hosting