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The
fate of over 300 Iraqi nationals, many of whom fled to Pakistan
after the 1990 Gulf war, remains uncertain. With the ouster of Saddam
Hussein's regime, the refugees - of which a sizeable number are
based in Balochistan - are looking to return to Iraq and have appealed
to the governments of Pakistan and the United States, as well as
assorted international organisations, to help repatriate them as
soon as possible. With the situation in Iraq as it stands, however,
this may not happen any time soon.
Several
hundred Iraqis have crossed into Pakistan over the last 12 years
illegally, via Iran, in the hope of being accepted as refugees by
the United Nations High Commission for Refugees (UNHCR), reportedly
so that they could eventually find asylum in Europe or the United
States. However, because of the increasingly stringent curbs on
immigration, only a few of them have succeeded in this objective,
with the majority of them having to live in Pakistan in the hope
that they would make it to the west some day.
While the UNHCR granted some of the Iraqis refugee status, and a
limited monthly stipend, the rest who are in a majority, have had
to eke out a living by mustering their own resources.
Individuals granted refugee status by the UNHCR receive 2200 rupees
each month, while a family gets between 3000 and 6000 rupees, depending
on the numbers.
While the Iraqis' intent to find their way to greener pastures in
the west is commonly known, none of them admits that they fled their
country to seek better prospects elsewhere or that they planned
to apply for political asylum. They contend that they fled Iraq
only to escape persecution by Saddam Hussein and his henchmen. Since
most of them neither managed to make it to the west, nor earned
refugee status, they have been in dire economic straits, often living
off charity, and with two or more families sharing a single room.
Despite numerous appeals and protest demonstrations staged in front
of the UNHCR Quetta office, however, the UNHCR officials have maintained
a lukewarm attitude towards the refugees. An incident involving
an Iraqi man - a father of six - who attempted to throw petrol bombs
at the UN office two years ago, increased the miseries of the Iraqis
manifold since, following the attack, they began to be viewed with
suspicion by the UN authorities, who inevitably felt less sympathetically
inclined towards them.
"What should I have done - my family had nothing to eat. I
had only two options: either to see my already malnourished children
die or to shake up the officials of this agency that supposedly
works for humanity," said 51-year-old Abdur Rahman Majid, the
perpetrator of the attack.
Majid says that he was so desperate, he even contemplated suicide.
He claims he did not have any intention to harm anybody or the UN
building, merely to draw their attention towards the Iraqis' plight.
Majid was arrested and handed over to the police after the incident,
but was released on bail after a month.
Many others complain about the attitude of local UNHCR officials
and claim they employ "delaying tactics" while processing
the refugees' cases. "The local officials have no human feelings,
they do not even talk to us properly. When we go to the UNHCR office
they drive us away like beggars or animals," said Sajid Mahdi
Abbass.
While some of the Iraqis have found employment as labourers, they
say locals and Afghan (refugees) are preferred over them, due to
the language barrier. A few of them opened small businesses, including
hair-dressing salons, but maintain they do not earn enough even
for basic necessities. Some years ago some Iraqi women were forced
into prostitution. However, following a police crackdown, they left
Quetta for an unknown destination.
Given their circumstances and bleak prospects for migration to western
countries, the Iraqis are now setting their sights back home. They
hope that under US control a new Iraq will emerge which will enjoy
good relations with western countries, and in turn open new doors
for them.
"We will remind President Bush of the pledges he made in his
speeches before and during the war. He promised that Iraqi refugees
would be allowed to come home once Saddam was gone. Now he should
honour this commitment," said Basim Karim Majid, a father of
five, who lost his eyesight because he could not afford the required
treatment.
The Iraqis are demanding that either the UNHCR organise a voluntary
repatriation programme for them as it has done for the Afghan refugees,
or that the government of Pakistan or the US arrange their early
repatriation to their country.
"We do not have enough money to travel even up to the neighbouring
town, but if the funds were provided, we would not stay here even
a single minute longer - we'd head home," says 48-year-old
Abbass.
Recently, a number of Iraqi nationals gathered in Islamabad to seek
an appointment with either Pervez Musharraf or Prime Minister Jamali
to urge them to organise their early repatriation. However, security
officials did not allow them to meet either.
"Twenty-five of us Iraqis from Islamabad, Lahore, Karachi and
Quetta gathered to seek the attention of the Pakistani authorities,
but we failed in our effort," said Fawad Shahab Ahmad. He added
that, apart from repatriation, the Iraqis also wanted to draw the
authorities attention to 25 Iraqis who were languishing in a Rawalpindi
prison for the last six years under the Foreigners Act. Two of them
died of natural causes, and three of them had to be sent to a mental
hospital.
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