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IRAQI
REFUGEES IN IRAN HELD UP BY RED TAPE AND BORDER CLOSURES, UN SAYS:
13/06/2008
(MaximsNews Network)
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UNITED
NATIONS - / MaximsNews Network / 13
June 2008 -- The
United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) says that some 300
ethnic Arab Iraqi refugees in Jahrom camp in southern Iran have been waiting
since last year for security clearance from the Iraqi authorities before they
can return, while another 200 refugees in the camp have also expressed
interest in returning to their home country.
Complicated clearance
procedures have delayed repatriation for some refugees – until recently
applications were sent via Amman, Jordan, to Baghdad for processing. In
addition, there have been sporadic closures of the borders at Shalamcheh and
Mehran since April for security reasons.
“I used to work in
a cement factory for shelter construction,” 50-year-old Iraqi Abdul Karim
told the UN refugee agency. “After I registered for repatriation, I sold all
my equipment, thinking it would take one to two months. Now we're hearing that
security clearance has not come. How long should we wait? My children and I
have no jobs. We didn't know it would take this long,” he added.
Mr. Karim is among
hundreds of thousands of mostly Shia Muslims who fled persecution under the
late President Saddam Hussein's regime and sought refuge in Iran between the
1970s and the early 1990s. Many returned home in the second half of the 1990s.
The fall of the
Baathist regime in 2003 led to another wave of returns from Iran, most of them
ethnic Arabs.
“Unlike the gradual
nature of the influx, repatriation took place overnight,” said Shokrollah
Kazemifar, the director-general of Iran's Bureau of Aliens and Foreign
Immigrant Affairs in Ahwaz, south-western Iran, near the Iraqi border. “Once
they decided to go, they demolished their homes and took everything.”
Gaitrie Ammersing,
UNHCR's protection officer in Ahwaz, noted several reasons for this: “Some
refugees say the security situation and job opportunities are gradually
improving in southern Iraq. They also tell us it is now much easier to obtain
Iraqi documents upon return.”
Others say it is
getting harder to survive in Iran. “Life is hard here. I work nearby but
it's not always easy to find jobs,” said Attaye Heidari, who has lived in
south-western Iran's Bani Najjar camp for the last 16 years. “I'm hard
pressed and thinking about return. I believe life will be better in Basra.”
More than 18,000
Iraqi refugees in Iran have been assisted home since November 2003, mostly to
areas such as Baghdad and the southern governorates. Numbers peaked in 2004,
with over 12,500 returns. Some 230 have repatriated from Iran to the north and
south of Iraq so far this year.
The UN refugee agency
does not encourage returns to Iraq at the moment, due to the fragile security
situation. But it provides some assistance to those who insist on going. This
includes interviewing them to make sure return is voluntary and providing a
cash grant to help them with transport and initial reintegration costs. And
recent developments may help speed their return.
“A new Iraqi consul
has been set up in Ahwaz, which should expedite the process instead of going
through Amman and Baghdad,” explained Carlos Zaccagnini, UNHCR's
representative in Iran, during a recent visit to the camp. “It will cost
US$25 for each family to apply for security clearance there.”
There are an
estimated 54,000 registered Iraqi refugees living in Iran today, the large
majority of them living outside camps, in urban areas.
Labels:
United
Nations, U.N. UN
High Commissioner for Refugees, UNHCR,
Iraq, Iran,
Refugees
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