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Refugees
in Limbo: The
Plight of Iraqis in Bordering States
Madona Mokbel

An
Iraqi woman in Jordan shows the pictures of her husband’s
torture, which she carries with her at all times. Afraid
of being deported since she does not have refugee status,
she plans to show them to police as her reason for fleeing
Iraq. (Annie Tritt) |
Long lines
of Iraqis form early in the morning at the compound of a Damascus
non-profit agency that provides social services for Iraqi refugees.
About 100 men, women and children patiently wait their turn to
meet with the agency’s case workers. Some of the older women
begin to tire and move slowly away from the line to sit on benches
located along the compound’s old walls. Most of the men remain
standing in the queue. They are busy attending to their young
children, while their wives are caring for the babies. Most look
anxious, and they fidget, wary of the long wait ahead. To pass
the time, some make small talk, but generally the crowd is quiet.
Many of these
people are middle-class Iraqis who have fled their homeland to
escape the horrors of war and the ongoing sectarian violence.
Ahmad is an engineer; Wa’il is a pilot; and Samia is a schoolteacher.
Now they are merely faceless refugees whose dignity has been
stripped away; subsisting on rapidly dwindling resources, they
are forced to plead for aid. Many go to the agency to seek help
for their sick, and often traumatized, children, or to enroll
them in the few educational programs available. Others are there
to request basic staples to feed their families. But all are
in desperate need of help, and aid is slow in coming because
the rest of the world seems oblivious to their plight.
In February
2007, UN High Commissioner for Refugees António Guterres declared
the exodus of Iraqis the biggest population shift in the Middle
East since the displacement of Palestinians following the establishment
of the state of Israel in 1948. If the trend continues, the International
Organization for Migration said in the same month, the unrelenting
violence in Iraq could force an additional one million Iraqis
to flee before the year is out. Most of the Iraqi refugees have
settled in Jordan and Syria, but there are sizable communities
in other neighboring states. According to the UN High Commissioner
for Refugees (UNHCR) and local NGOs, the number of Iraqis in
Jordan and Syria is over two million, and it is estimated that
about 40,000 live in Lebanon, 100,000 in Egypt, 54,000 in Iran
and 10,000 in Turkey.
The massive
flight of Iraqis has created a humanitarian crisis of dire proportions,
yet it was not until recently that governments, the UN and the
global media began to appreciate the scope of the tragedy. Initial
investigations have revealed an uprooted and destabilized people,
who fell from relative prosperity to disenfranchisement within
a short time. Many Iraqi refugees are now living on the margins
of society in the host countries, and their overall condition
is deteriorating. Most are restricted from obtaining gainful
employment, and have limited access to services such as education
and medical care. As a result, increasing numbers of Iraqis have
now depleted their savings. The extremely vulnerable among them
live in deplorable conditions, unable to meet basic needs for
shelter, sanitation, nutrition and education for their children.
In spite of these conditions, however, the majority of the exiled
Iraqi population express no desire to return to Iraq. The mayhem
they have witnessed in person back home still plays on the nightly
news, and naturally, concern for their own safety has so far
outweighed all other considerations.
Iraqi refugees
face many of the same challenges in every bordering state, but
in each state there are also distinct elements.
Jordan

Malak
(right), eager to learn, carries a book in which she
has foreigners write every word she asks about, in English
and Arabic. The family had gone to the doctor earlier
in the week and the doctor was concerned about Malak’s
weight and thought it might prevent the family from obtaining
a visa. Malak weighs just 31 pounds at age 7. It is called
“failure to thrive” and common among Iraqi children.
(Annie Tritt) |
The number
of Iraqis living in Jordan is estimated at 750,000 persons.[1] According to UNHCR, the influx of Iraqis has
leveled off somewhat in recent months, partly because of tighter
restrictions at the borders. In February 2007, Iraqis seeking
entry into Jordan were advised they must carry the recently issued
new type of Iraqi passport in order to be admitted. Due to excessive
regulations, however, countless Iraqis find these new passports
difficult to obtain, and consequently false travel documents
have begun to circulate. Diligent Jordanian customs officials
are turning away anyone carrying what appears to be a fake or
illegally obtained passport.[2] In
addition, the Jordanian government has imposed a new policy prohibiting
males between 20 and 40 years of age from entering.[3]
The Jordanian
authorities consider Iraqi asylum seekers to be “guests,” a designation
implying temporary visitor status. Through early March, no more
than 23,000 had registered with UNHCR,[4] due
in part to that agency’s incapacity to process the sheer number
of people. These few registered Iraqis could in the future benefit
from the protection offered by refugee status, as they are deemed
by UNHCR to be persons of concern, thus qualifying for UNHCR’s
“durable solutions”—repatriation, integration in the host country
or resettlement to a different country. Since Jordan has not
designated any Iraqis as refugees, integration would not seem
to be a visible option, however. And the vast majority of Iraqis
in the country remain in complete legal limbo.
Jordan has
hosted Iraqi refugees since the early 1990s, including political
exiles, upper-class elites and intelligentsia fleeing Saddam
Hussein’s regime. This group is, for the most part, well-established
and relatively comfortable in Jordan. Others in the 1990s wave,
however, and most of the new arrivals, are not so prosperous.
The majority of the latest wave are from the now obliterated
urban, professional middle class, while others are laborers and
farmers from war-torn areas. Most of the refugees are Muslims,
both Sunnis and Shi‘a, but significant numbers of Christians
have also fled. Whatever their circumstances in Iraq, many refugees
are now struggling to get by because they had to leave in a hurry,
abandoning homes, possessions and most of their savings.
With a population
of only six million, Jordan is chafing at having to absorb more
than 750,000 new people, most of whom have come between 2004
and the present. Press reports attribute the overburdening of
infrastructure and social services to the increasingly large
numbers of Iraqis. Iraqis are also blamed for the rise in the
cost of housing and the greater incidence of traffic jams, among
other things, particularly in neighborhoods around the capital
of Amman, where most of them reside.[5]
Syria

Zahra,
45, an Iraqi in Jordan, is told that no one can help
her with her breast cancer. She needs chemotherapy but
has no means of paying for it. “I am going to die,” she
says. Her daughter, Ashwaq, is diagnosed as having failure
to thrive. (Annie Tritt) |
Syria has
historically implemented relatively generous policies for Iraqi
asylum seekers, granting free admission to schools and, to a
limited extent, access to government health care facilities.
As a result, compared to other neighboring countries, Syria has
the larger share of Iraqi refugees. While exact figures are not
available, the number of Iraqis living in Syria has been estimated
at 1,400,000. The bulk of the Iraqis, many of whom have been
in Syria since 2003, are concentrated in neighborhoods in greater
Damascus. There are also other populations in locations in northern
Syria, such as al-Hasaka, Qamishli and Dayr al-Zawr. UNHCR confirms
that the increasing numbers of Iraqi refugees have made a significant
impact “on Syria’s social services, economic infrastructures
and the daily lives of many Syrian citizens.”[6] Observing this impact, the Syrian government
has implemented increasingly restrictive immigration rules and
greater limitations on access to health and social services.
Before the
summer of 2007, most Iraqis arrived legally in Syria through
the country’s open (for citizens of Arab countries) border policy
that allowed them a six-month renewable visa. But now, according
to UNICEF, refugees get a 15-day permit; when it expires, they
must leave the country for a month before they can return. The
Syrian government has also further restricted Iraqis’ right to
work legally, and many end up working in informal sectors of
the economy. According to some reports, the unemployment rate
among Iraqi refugees is over 50 percent for men and over
80 percent for women.[7] Syria’s
policy shift created anxiety among Iraqi refugees, because they
are now at risk of deportation to Iraq. Hence, UNHCR reports
a dramatic increase in the number of Iraqis wanting to register
with the agency over the past several months. As of March 2007,
55,000 had registered and many more were lining up attempting
to do so.[8] Upon registration at UNHCR, Iraqis are issued
a letter declaring them prima facie refugees, qualifying
them for consideration for durable solutions. Many Iraqi refugees
have expressed a strong interest in resettling to countries in
the West, creating concerns within UNHCR about a secondary exodus.
Lebanon

Sayyida
Zaynab, Damascus. (Klavs Bo Christensen) |
Similar to
Jordan and Syria, the numbers of Iraqi refugees in Lebanon have
risen significantly in 2006 and 2007. In early 2007, the estimated
population of Iraqis in Lebanon was approximately 40,000, up
from 25,000 in the previous year.[9] There
are also undisclosed numbers of Iraqis who are smuggled over
land from Syria into Lebanon. This group is automatically barred
from access to public schools and forbidden to work.
Many Iraqis—most
of them Shi‘a fleeing Saddam’s regime—have been living in Lebanon
since the 1990s. Since 2005, there has been a steady flow of
Iraqis coming to Lebanon from central and southern Iraq. They
are mainly of middle-class background; many are Christians, although
there are sizable Shi‘i and Sunni communities. Most are single
young men, but there are also some large families. Unlike their
cohorts in Syria and Jordan, Iraqis in Lebanon are not concentrated
in particular city neighborhoods. While 80 percent of them
live in the capital, Beirut, there are significant populations
in the south, in the Bekaa Valley and in the north around Tripoli.
In June 2007, UNHCR reported that 6,500 Iraqis were registered
asylum seekers, an upsurge from the previous year. It is believed
that the rise in registration is due in part to a new UNHCR policy
to give Iraqis the prima facie status that obtains in
Syria. Upon registration, Iraqis are issued a one-year refugee
certificate that confers official status and serves as an identification
document.
Furthermore,
as a result of lobbying efforts by UNHCR, in June 2006 Lebanon
implemented a policy of non-refoulement, the principle that protects
refugees from being forcibly returned to the country where their
lives may be in danger. While Lebanon has not gone so far as
to give full protection to Iraqi refugees, there is an unspoken
policy of leniency. No Iraqis have yet been deported, though
many are arrested at checkpoints and other public places, usually
for lack of identification, or because the arresting officers
are not aware of the tolerant stance the government has adopted.
Similarly,
judges may display a subjective approach to the application of
Lebanese immigration laws. Some acknowledge the refugees’ “protected”
status and release them immediately, while others apply a stricter
interpretation of the law and find them guilty of overstay. The
punishment for overstay is usually one month in jail plus a small
fine. Lately, the number of detained Iraqis has grown exponentially,
increasing from as few as 50 in May to 375 in early June.[10] The deteriorating security
situation in Lebanon is heightening suspicion of foreigners,
in particular those without legal status in the country.
Aside from
their legal predicament, Iraqis in Lebanon face high unemployment
because of government restrictions on the issuance of work permits.
In order to survive, many end up working in informal sectors
of the economy as illegal day laborers, making them vulnerable
to abuse and exploitation. Many of the jobs now filled by Iraqis
were left vacant by Syrian laborers after the Syrian army pulled
out of Lebanon in 2005. Lebanon’s high cost of living, coupled
with inadequate incomes, makes it difficult for them to cover
their basic needs. Moreover, they suffer discrimination at the
hands of Lebanese citizens, many of whom face equally dim job
prospects in Lebanon’s unstable economy, rendered still shakier
by the summer 2006 war.
Housing
and Education
As non-citizens,
Iraqis are not eligible for most of the benefits offered to the
nationals of these host countries. Nonetheless, their presence
in large numbers has put severe strain on the host countries’
social, economic and health systems. There are no refugee camps
to house them; rather, they live in high-density neighborhoods
mostly in and around capital cities. Many occupy marginal housing,
paying spiraling rents for overcrowded accommodations without
proper ventilation, electricity or water. In a number of cases,
report Caritas workers in Jordan and Syria, poor housing is the
direct cause of health problems, particularly among children.
UNHCR, its
implementing partners and other NGOs have made an effort to provide
humanitarian assistance for the most vulnerable families. Caritas,
for example, offers home visits to “extremely vulnerable individuals”
during which case workers identify particular needs and allocate
assistance accordingly. (Criteria for extreme vulnerability include
mental or physical disability or trauma, being a female head
of household or single parent, being an unaccompanied elderly
person or minor, being elderly or a family with children in extreme
poverty or in need of specialized care, and being children or
women victims of violence.) The assistance can consist of repairing
a broken window, installing a lock on the door of a family home,
providing heaters, blankets and mattresses, and many other basic
necessities.
The demand
for humanitarian assistance is steadily rising because it is
difficult for the Iraqi refugees to work legally. UNHCR estimates
that about 15 percent of the refugees qualify as extremely
vulnerable individuals. Their modest savings gone, some Iraqis
are contemplating secondary migration to other contiguous countries
like Egypt and Turkey, and a number of them have uprooted their
families again in search of better prospects.
Another problem
faced by many of the Iraqi refugees relates to the education
of their children. In Jordan, access to public schools was initially
restricted to those with a valid residency permit. Under international
pressure, the Jordanian government claimed several times to have
relaxed these restrictions, but the policies were confusing and
ambiguous, and several Iraqi parents reported that in practice
the restrictions remained in place.[11] Finally,
after receiving funding from UNHCR and UNICEF, Jordan announced
on July 26, 2007 that all Iraqi students could enroll in public
schools. Although Syria and Lebanon offer free access to education
for school-aged children, the influx of refugees, many of whom
have large families, has given officials pause. As the state-run al-Baath newspaper
complained: “75,000 Iraqi students have enrolled in Syrian schools…overburdening
the education sector and overcrowding schools.”[12]
Even if accepted,
many of these refugees cannot afford books and uniforms, or transportation
to get to school. Indeed, it is estimated that about 30 percent
of children in Syria are currently unable to attend school,[13] contributing to rising delinquency among Iraqi
adolescents,[14] and boding ill for the skill and education levels of these
children in the future. The dire economic situation of Iraqi
refugees is forcing many youths to leave school and seek menial
jobs in order to supplement the family’s meager income. There
are also reports of girls as young as 12 being driven into prostitution
for the purpose of earning a living for themselves and their
families.
Another factor
explaining why Iraqi refugee children do not attend school is
the lack of official documentation issued to children by their
Iraqi schools. This paperwork is a requirement for registration
in public schools, particularly in Syria, and in many cases,
Iraqi students are being placed in lower grades than where they
belong. For these reasons, some families are forced to seek private
schooling for their children, if they can afford it. NGOs such
as the International Catholic Migration Commission, operating
through Caritas and Terre des Hommes, have been instrumental
in assisting Iraqi children with buying books and uniforms. In
addition, these organizations support non-formal education, where
students are able to acquire vocational training and other employment
skills. Children are also benefiting from recreational and educational
activities such as a weekend retreat in the countryside. It is
believed by NGOs that such interventions help keep these children
from falling into delinquent behavior.
Health
and Psychological Care
While health
care is partially subsidized in Jordan, it is not free in Syria
and Lebanon. Consequently, many Iraqi refugees are not able to
afford basic medical care. Local NGOs report a steady increase
in demand both for outpatient and inpatient assistance. To alleviate
the problem, Caritas offers subsidies of expenses like doctor
fees and medication, and the group has also established strong
ties with a number of medical institutions, including clinics
located in areas with high concentrations of refugees. In Lebanon,
critical cases are directed to private doctors, but given the
high cost of health care, preference is given to emergency intervention,
as well as delivery of babies and natal care.
In addition
to inflicting physical wounds on Iraqis, war and displacement
is having devastating psychological effects on those who have
lost loved ones or witnessed horrendous violence. Such effects
were apparent among the previous wave of displaced that left
Iraq in the Saddam Hussein years.[15] Today,
NGOs report a number of refugees fleeing the present Iraq war
who complain of symptoms akin to post-traumatic stress disorder.
Care Jordan, an international NGO operating locally, is proposing
to broaden the scope of the almost non-existent treatment programs
to include more referrals to counselors and social workers specializing
in psychological care for trauma victims.
Moreover,
the sustained contact with refugees recounting horror stories
experienced prior to leaving Iraq is having an adverse effect
on the case workers themselves. Many report having nightmares
and other post-traumatic symptoms, such as burnout and depression.
They, too, are in great need of psychological support in order
to continue serving the increasing numbers of refugees efficiently.
The Human
Face of the Tragedy
Statistics
may convey the magnitude of the Iraqi disaster, but the depth
of the human tragedy cannot be measured purely in data. The Iraqi
people are trapped in the fallout of the 2003 invasion with no
prospect of relief any time soon. Indeed, their choices are to
take their chances in Iraq, amidst the daily carnage of war and
sectarian conflict, or to migrate to a neighboring state and
live without official status, in dreary and uncertain conditions,
subject to exploitation and poverty.
The intensity
of civil war has left indelible psychological scars on the Iraqi
refugees, many of whom have witnessed horrific brutality, and,
in most cases, had one or more family members victimized or even
murdered. Husni, a storeowner from Baghdad, is one of the refugees
standing in the line at the aid agency in Damascus. He weeps
while telling of what led to his flight from Iraq. Holding his
ten-year old son’s hand, he said, “I am here to ask for diapers
for my son. He started wetting his bed after witnessing his sister
and his cousin being killed by a suicide bomber.” A haggard man
standing behind him interjects, “My mother and father were murdered
in their beds. We are Sunnis and they are targeting anyone who
they suspect of collaborating with opposing factions. But my
parents were simple folk with no political affiliation.” Another
man in line, Mansour, was a pharmacist at one of the main hospitals
in Baghdad. His voice indignant, he says, “Look at me…this is
where I ended up! I am an educated man. I had a good job back
home, and now I am reduced to a beggar! I can’t afford to buy
medicine for my own sick child.” Pointing to his wife, sitting
on a bench a few feet away, he whispers, “Her father and two
brothers were killed last month by insurgents. She is barely
eating, and most times she stays in bed not wanting to get up
and face another day.”
Maryam’s name
is called. She has been waiting in line for over three hours.
An elegantly dressed middle-aged woman, she sits passively across
the table from the social worker. The dark circles around her
hollow eyes reveal deep sadness and pain. She answers the questions
in an almost inaudible monotone: She was an engineer working
at the central Baghdad power station. She was kidnapped along
with four others by armed men, who questioned her and her colleagues
about their political affiliations and accused them of directing
electricity away from Shi‘i areas. Maryam pauses for a minute,
her chest heaving as she struggles to overcome the urge to cry.
Then, with a quavering voice, she recounts the horrifying events
that followed: “One my colleagues was a young woman just out
of engineering school. The kidnappers kept touching her inappropriately,
which prompted one of my male colleagues to object. At that point,
the thugs turned to him and dragged him to the other end of the
room. He was placed in front of a machine that had hooks and
clamps. They skinned him alive…and then they took my female friend
to another room and took turns raping her. I heard her muffled
screams all night long.” Maryam is sobbing uncontrollably. Catching
her breath, she goes on to say that after she was released two
days later, she went home and hustled her elderly mother and
disabled aunt, who lived with her, off to the airport, to board
the first flight to Damascus. Later, she heard that her house
was ransacked and all her valuables stolen.
Compelling
stories like these are heard all too often at these centers.
The violence in Iraq does not discriminate between combatant
or civilian, man or woman, young or old, Sunni or Shi‘i. They
are all unwilling participants in a war that has thrown their
country into chaos and lawlessness, causing unthinkable damage
and trauma.
Scratching
the Surface
Apart from
the obvious destruction wrought by the ongoing conflict in Iraq,
the demographic disintegration of an entire country has serious
implications for the whole region. The escalating civilian death
toll of many tens of thousands, compounded by the internal displacement
of an estimated 10 percent of Iraq’s population and the
other 10–12 percent that have fled the country, are likely
irreversibly to alter Iraq’s historically established ethnic
and religious balance, as well as rob Iraq of its professionals
and other sources of economic vitality for years to come.
Moreover,
the sheer numbers of Iraqi refugees, in proportion to the population
of surrounding countries, may gravely affect the geopolitical
stability of the region, resulting in further tension, as well
as social, economic and political chaos in an area already hampered
with uncertainty and discord. Syria, Lebanon and, in particular,
Jordan already have large populations of Palestinian refugees,
who (for the most part) have been living in a limbo of their
own since 1948. Furthermore, many of Iraq’s neighbors are already
dealing with internal crises, and therefore have limited capacities
to absorb large numbers of refugees, or even to host them for
any sustained period without domestic consequences.
Short-term
repatriation prospects for these refugees are very slim, and
even with improved security in Iraq, many will undoubtedly be
forced to remain in exile for a number of reasons. Widespread
killing and destruction has left them with no family, home or
job to return to, and some may fear retribution from opposing
factions or recrimination from the new power centers.
One consequence
of the war in Iraq is the disruption of the proclaimed US vision
of a “new Middle East,” one that is democratic and enlisted in
efforts to fight terrorism. The ethnic and religious polarization
in Iraq, felt across the region because of the refugee exodus,
is not conducive to political stability and indeed may engender
further terrorism. Indeed, the Iraqi middle class usually thought
necessary for democracy to flourish will be far more difficult
to rebuild when many of its members have fled the country. In
addition, middle classes in host countries are made anxious by
the masses of refugees in their midst, who they believe are causing
disruption to the social fabric, increasing ethnic and religious
divisions, and generating competition for jobs and other scarce
resources. In this sense, the US project in Iraq may have hindered
more than it helped the cause of democracy in the region.
The unfolding
human tragedy of the Iraqi refugee crisis is great, but the greater
tragedy lays in the world’s apathy and indolence in response.
The large numbers of refugees assert a claim on their host countries’
limited resources, and increasingly tax these countries’ limited
patience and hospitality. Nonetheless, these refugees are not
the responsibility of Iraq’s neighbors, although these countries
have been forced to shoulder the main burden of hosting them.
International
aid is trickling in from Europe and the United States, but it
is only scratching the surface of this enormous and continually
mounting problem. The US, for instance, announced in March $18 million
in contributions to the work of UNHCR and other charitable organizations
operating in the region, and the European Commission is donating
ten million euros. After persistent appeals from UNHCR, the State
Department agreed to resettle about 7,000 Iraqis to the US; Canada
also raised its projected intake of Iraqi refugees from 500 to
1,400 for 2007.[16] So far Sweden has been the most welcoming, having absorbed
about 9,000 Iraqis in 2006 alone, almost half of the 22,000 that
other Western nations received in that year.[17] Recent reports, however, indicate
a tightening of asylum policies there as well.[18] Unless other countries take
a proactive role in alleviating this crisis, the Iraqi refugees
will remain in a perpetual state of hopelessness, their plight
potentially sending a ripple effect throughout and well beyond
the Middle East.
Endnotes
[1] Interview
with Robert Breen, UNHCR representative in Jordan, March 5, 2007.
[2] Ibid.
[3] IRINnews.org,
June 17, 2007.
[4] Interview
with Breen.
[5] See,
for instance, Christian Science Monitor, November 29,
2006 and Daily Star, February 20, 2007.
[6] UNHCR, Assessment
on the Situation of Iraqi Refugees in Syria, Damascus,
March 2006, p. 4.
[7] US
Committee for Refugees and Immigrants, World Refugee Survey
2007 (Washington, DC, 2007).
[8] Interview
with UNHCR community service officer, Damascus, March 4, 2007.
[9] This
estimate was gleaned from several sources, including a Danish
Refugee Council study in 2005, local NGO reports, and data obtained
from the Lebanese General Security Service based on the number
of visas issued to Iraqis, as well as estimates of those who
have stayed after their visas expired.
[10] BBC
News, June 24, 2007.
[11] Human
Rights Watch, The Silent Treatment: Fleeing Iraq, Surviving
in Jordan (New York, November 2006), pp. 58–62.
[12] Quoted
at IRINnews.org, March 25, 2007.
[13] UNHCR, Iraqi
Refugees in Syria, p. 32; interview with Breen.
[14] Interview
with Caritas representative, March 3, 2007.
[15] C.
Gorst-Unsworth and E. Goldenberg, “Psychological Sequelae of
Torture and Organized Violence Suffered by Refugees from Iraq:
Trauma-Related Factors Compared with Social Factors in Exile,” British
Journal of Psychiatry 172 (1998).
[16] Toronto
Star, March 20, 2007.
[17] New
York Times, June 13, 2007.
[18] Reuters,
July 6, 2007.

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