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Iraqi Minorities Being Harassed, Killed And Driven From The Country

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  • Iraqi Minorities Being Harassed, Killed And Driven From The Country

    IRAQI MINORITIES BEING HARASSED, KILLED AND DRIVEN FROM THE COUNTRY
    by Michael Jansen

    The Irish Times
    February 28, 2007 Wednesday

    IRAQ: Half the members of Iraq's minority groups have been driven from
    the country by persecution, kidnappings, murder and the widespread
    violence which has gripped the country since the 2003 war.

    The London-based Minority Rights Group has revealed in a report that
    "the very existence of some of these groups in their ancient homeland
    is now under threat."

    The report, Assimilation, Exodus, Eradication: Iraq's Minority
    Communities since 2003, written by Preti Taneja, says that the
    country's minorities, 10 per cent of the total population before
    the war, now make up 30 per cent of the 1.8 million refugees living
    outside the country.

    The minorities include Chaldean, Syriac and Armenian Christians;
    Turkomen, ethnic Turks who are both Sunnis and Shias; Bahais;
    Mandaeans, a pacifist faith whose prophet is John the Baptist;
    Yazidis whose religion is an offshoot of Zoroastrianism; and Faili
    or Shia Kurds; and Shabaks, a Farsi-speaking mainly Shia ethnic group.

    The small Jewish community, which had a few hundred members before
    the war, has dwindled to 15 indivi- duals in Baghdad.

    Christians, most of whom are ethnic Assyrians, are being targeted
    because fundamentalist Shias and Sunnis accuse them of co-operating
    with the occupation.

    This allegation is made because many Christians have close ties to
    family members who live in the West and some Christians served as
    interpreters for the foreign occupation forces.

    The remnants of the small Jewish community, which arrived in
    Iraq during the time of the Babylonian capitivity, are seen as US
    collaborators and Israeli agents.

    Places of worship are being bombed, clerics attacked, individuals
    siezed and held for ransom, women abused and forced to don conservative
    Muslim dress.

    Christian shops selling alcohol are set alight and their owners
    killed. Yazidis and Faili Kurds, who live in the north, are being
    pressed by Kurdish parties to follow their agendas or claim Kurdish
    identity.

    Turkomen living in Kirkuk are being driven from their homes by Kurds
    seeking to transform the city into a Kurdish domain and annex it to
    the Kurdish region. Bahais, seen by Sunnis and Shias as heretics,
    are denied citizenship.

    The 2005 constitution was drafted without input from minorities who
    are deprived of rights they enjoyed under earlier constitutions.

    Minority groups were protected under Saddam Hussein in exchange for
    backing for his regime.

    Palestinian residents, who received privileged treatment under the
    old regime, are also being harrassed, killed and driven from Iraq.

    Hundreds have been trapped in squalid camps in no man's land on the
    Iraqi-Jordanian border.

    The plight of Iraq's minorities is "ignored and unaddressed inside
    Iraq and in the international arena," the report says.

    It calls upon the Iraqi government to protect minorities, create
    an independent body to investigate human rights abuses, and promote
    minority participation in public life.

    Neighbouring states are asked to halt financial and other aid to
    militias that persecute minorities and the international community,
    particularly countries in North America and Europe, are called upon
    to provide sanctuary for Iraqis, including entire communities.

    The report says, Iraqis in danger of persecution and attack should
    not be returned to their homeland.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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