IRAQ:A visit to the Zharawa IDP camps
CPTnet
1 Aug 2008
IRAQ:A visit to the Zharawa IDP camps
by Peggy Gish
After a half hour at the checkpoint,
where Kurdish military guards examined our identification papers and
wrote down key information, we continued on the windy mountain roads.
Our driver, four CPTers, and our interpreter passed flocks of sheep
and goats and small towns and villages nestled on dry, rocky
mountainsides through the foothills of the higher Qandil slopes. We
were in northwestern Suleimaniya Govenorate not far from the Iranian
border.
Earlier, in the town of Zharawa, the
mayor told us that more than 120 families, totaling at least 600
persons, had been displaced from their homes closer to the border
since March by Iranian and Turkish military attacks. In this
particular area, more of the attacks have been from Iran. In early
April, the Kurdistan Regional Government (KRG) opened up Internally
Displaced Persons (IDP) camps for these families. "Their villages
have experienced bombing periodically in previous years, but this
year there has been continuous bombing, so they are afraid to return
to their homes," explained the mayor.
As we turned a sharp curve in the
narrow mountain road, we saw the first of the camps, about twenty to
thirty tent homes clustered in an almost treeless area of the valley.
We drove on and reached the second, where about seven family tents
stretched out along the shallow river in a narrow valley. UNHCR
labels on tents and ICRC labels on water tanks gave evidence that
these and other international aid agencies have been supplying
material aid. Trees gave shelter from the intense heat of the
mid-summer sun. Ducks and geese swam in the river. Chickens pecked
abound the camp.
We stopped at two family compounds to
speak with the residents, who seemed eager to talk about their
situation. "Life is hard. We don't have anything, and cannot go
back to our villages," one woman told us as we sat in her family's
tent. "The water is dirty. We can not plant our crops or take care
of our livestock. There are no jobs." Others added, "There is no
privacy. There are snakes and scorpions. We just heard that Turkish
aircrafts came and bombed our village again yesterday."
All those we talked with wanted us to
ask leaders of the governments involved to do what they could to stop
the bombing of their villages. "Ask your government to make this
stop so it is safe for us to return home," one told those of us who
are from the U.S. "We want the people of the world to know about
our problems."
Several officials in the Mayor's office made a similar request. "We need a diplomatic solution to the problems of the rebel groups in the mountains. We can make camps for the people, but it is better for the IDPs to be able to go back to their villages in safety. Tell your government to help that happen."