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Iraqi Kurdistan welcomes Syrian Kurdish brethren, for now |
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Iraqi Kurdistan welcomes Syrian Kurdish
brethren, for now
11.8.2012
IRIN |
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Syrian Kurdish refugees at Domiz camp in Iraqi
Kurdistan have opened their own falafel stand in the
camp. Domiz is home to 2,500 refugees who fled the
conflict in Syria for the autonomous Kurdish region
in northern Iraq. Photo: © Heba Aly/IRIN
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Domiz Camp, in the autonomous Kurdish region of
Iraq, is home to 2,500 Kurds who fled the conflict
in Syria. Photo: Heba Aly/IRIN
"If it’s not the same
situation as Iraq, with a separate government, I
will not go back… Until Syrian Kurdistan is
autonomous, it will be more of the same."
August 11, 2012
DOMIZ CAMP, Kurdistan region 'Iraq', —
Escaping the summer heat of this Syrian refugee camp
in Iraqi Kurdistan, Nureddin Raouf al-Abdullah
enters his two-bedroom home, cell phone in hand.
Artwork hangs on the wall, and a TV sits in the
corner.
“Don’t worry,” he tells visitors from the UN Refugee
Agency (UNHCR) when they inquire about concerns in
the camp. “We can control the disputes in our own
community. We don’t need to report small issues.”
Abdullah - recently elected to a refugee committee
in the camp - exudes a confidence that reflects his
comfort in this camp.
Domiz, 60 kilometres from the Syrian border, is a
camp like no other.
Established in April, after Syrian Kurds started
fleeing the conflict in Syria in larger numbers, it
is already home to more than 2,500 of the 10,000
Syrian refugees who have settled in the autonomous
Kur dish region of northern Iraq. New arrivals keep
streaming in, at times as many as 100 a day.
“Considering how the situation is worsening in
Syria, we could have a big influx,” says Bushra
Halepota, head of UNHCR’s office in Erbil, the
capital of Iraqi Kurdistan. “It’s a natural home for
Kurdish people in the region.”
A home away from home
Every tent at Domiz is pitched on a concrete
foundation, with a 60cm concrete wall perimeter.
Each family - issued a six-month residency upon
arrival - has its own cooking unit, shower and
latrine made of brick and corrugated sheet metal, as
well as an air cooler and refrigerator, distributed
by the government. Some refugees have purchased
satellite dishes. Others have opened shops and food
stands both in and outside the camp.
The Kurdish Regional Government (KRG) is providing
special summer courses taught in Arabic so that
refugee children are ready for the new academic year
in September. About a quarter of the men have
already found work - some within days of arrival -
as casual labourers in the city. Richer refugees
also hire poorer refugees as labourers to extend the
perimeter walls around their tents. The refugee
committee is even thinking of setting up a
recruitment office in the camp where contractors can
look for workers.
“Their basic needs are well met for now,” Halepota
told IRIN.
In Iraqi Kurdistan, Syrian Kurds have found a home
they never had in Syria.
“I came here to my land and my people,” said Lukman
Hassan, who came to Domiz from the southern Syrian
town of Dera’a, which is much closer to the
Jordanian border. “I don’t have relatives here, but
they’re all my family.”
Syrian Kurds say they have been robbed of land,
property, jobs, rights, even citizenship back in
Syria. Tens of thousands of Kurdish families who had
lived in Syria for generations only received
citizenship in April in an attempt by Syrian
President Bashar al-Assad to placate the minority.
“They had nothing left in Syria,” said Abdullah, of
the refugee committee. “That’s why they came at such
a scale.”
The trouble is that they are so enamored with Iraqi
Kurdistan they may not want to leave.
“We will stay, even if the government [in Syria]
changes,” said a Syrian Kurdish farmer who arrived
in Domiz last month but declined to give his name.
“The other neighboring governments will not help us,
because we are Kurds. Even the new Syrian government
won’t help us.”
Hassan told IRIN he thought it would be four or five
years before a new government in Syria stabilizes
and he is willing to return home.
“We want a government like that of Kurdistan, with
freedom and safety. We just want our rights,” he
said. “For 40 years, I had no rights. I need to be
able to feel human again.”
Others have gone further, calling for a federalist
system in Syria.
“If it’s not the same situation as Iraq, with a
separate government, I will not go back,” the farmer
said.
“Until Syrian Kurdistan is autonomous, it will be
more of the same,” Ibrahim said. “We want control of
the Kurdish areas. We want our land back.”
Resources
So far, KRG has had an open-door policy towards the
Kurdish refugees. It has already invested nearly
US$2.5 million in the first three months of the
response and issued a directive last year that all
refugees and asylum seekers should be treated as
equals. The Minister of Education visited the camp’s
school in July.
Mohamed Abdulla Hamo, head of the government’s
Displacement and Migration Office at the camp, said
there were “no boundaries” to the number of Syrian
Kurds the government would accept. The World Food
Programme is already planning on having at least
15,000 mouths to feed by the end of the year,www.ekurd.net
and other humanitarian actors are preparing for more
arrivals.
But the prospect of a longer stay is “dangerous” to
the head of KRG’s foreign relations department.
“This is supposed to be temporary,” Minister Falah
Mustafa told IRIN. “Of course, for us, they are our
brothers and sisters. They are not strangers to us.
If there is anything we can do to make their lives
easier, and to make them feel at home, we will do
it. But of course, these kinds of things would be
done with resources.”
Though KRG has had support from the international
community, it has limited resources. Due to a lack
of funds, UNHCR has had to restrict its assistance
and minimize plans to expand the camp (it aims to be
able to house 7,000-10,000 people).
Support for livelihoods, higher education,
employment, secondary-level healthcare and warming
systems to help refugees cope with the upcoming
winter are all also dependent on additional funding.
In the UN’s regional appeal for Syrian refugees,
UNHCR has appealed for $15 million to respond to
refugees in Iraqi Kurdistan.
But Halepota said outside funding has fallen flat,
with UNHCR depending on its own internal funds thus
far: “We will need money very soon to continue the
response.”
Politicization
But given the politicization of the Kurdish
population, analysts say KRG may have more than
financial considerations in mind.
Syria’s Kurds are now caught between a number of
factions vying for influence in the Syrian conflict.
Many Syrian Kurds are supporters of the Kurdistan
Worker’s Party (PKK), deemed a terrorist
organization by the West for its fight for
independence from Turkey. For years, the PKK has
been shelling Turkey from its base in northern Iraq,
and KRG – which is trying to cultivate a strong
relationship with Turkey – has struggled to keep the
militants under control.
Making matters even more complicated, the KRG has
been training Syrian Kurds to defend their land in
Syria in the event of a security vacuum if Syrian
President Bashar al-Assad is ousted from power. This
has left aid workers worried that the camp could
similarly become politicized.
UNHCR says the single men arriving in Domiz left
Syria because they had defected from the army,
feared military recruitment or were wanted for
participating in protests. UNHCR screens them case
by case and has found that they meet the definition
of a refugee.
“There is this whole issue of the demographics - who
is coming in - and this huge concern over the single
[men],” said Aurvasi Patel, UNCHR’s assistant
representative for protection in Iraq. “But by and
large, they are people of concern to UNHCR. We have
no indication that they are carrying arms, or belong
to any armed group, but we are monitoring the
situation.”
Hamo, of the government’s displacement department,
acknowledged the refugees represented a range of
interests, saying they could be linked to the PKK,
the Syrian regime or the fight for Kurdish autonomy.
He said KRG has learned from past experiences
hosting Turkish refugees linked to the PKK, who drew
the KRG into conflict and caused security problems
for the region.
“From the humanitarian side, because we are in an
emergency, we are receiving the [refugees],” Hamo
told IRIN. “But if it reaches a level that
jeopardizes the security of the region, then we will
have a different approach.”
“As far as we’re concerned, the important thing is
for the problem to be resolved,” Minister Falah
said, “because the final solution is where people
would be back in their homes.”
IRIN, humanitarian news and analysis, a service of
the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian
Affairs.
[This report does not necessarily reflect the views
of the United Nations]
Copyright ©, respective
author or news agency,
irinnews.org
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does not take credit for and is not responsible for the
content of news information on this page
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