Monday, April 16, 2007

The Biggest Surge Of All

By Cernig

There's the Bush surge, then there's the insurgencies counter surge. And the major result is a continuation of the biggest surge of all - Iraqis fleeing their home and even their country.

Now, Amnesty International is warning of a humanitarian crisis in the Middle east unless developed nations do something to help.
"Syria and Jordan, who together now host some two million Iraqis, have borne the brunt of the refugee exodus so far, but there must be a limit to which they can continue to do so in the face of the continuing surge by Iraqis desperate to escape the conflict," said Malcolm Smart, Director of Amnesty International's Middle East and North African Programme. "It is vital that other governments now step in and deliver -- not just pledge -- direct assistance in order to ensure that the refugees are adequately housed and fed, and have access to health care and education, in Syria, Jordan and the other countries which are now helping bear the consequences of the disaster in Iraq."

As well as direct aid to the Iraqi refugee communities and the countries hosting them, Amnesty International is calling on the US, EU and other states to establish generous resettlement programmes in order to assist Iraqi refugees, especially the most vulnerable and at risk, to start new lives well away from the conflict zone, and to afford all refugees and rejected asylum seekers effective protection. "The UK government and others which persist in returning failed asylum seekers to Iraq, arguing that the Kurdish north is relatively peaceful, should desist from this practice forthwith," said Malcolm Smart. "Iraqis' lives should not be put at risk in order for governments to demonstrate to a domestic audience that they can be tough on asylum seekers -- this is just playing with other people's lives."

Amnesty International is also calling for action to assist the hundreds of thousands of Iraqis who have become internally displaced. "The Iraqi government, the states contributing troops to the Multinational Force, and other governments and political and religious leaders in the region must redouble their efforts to find a political solution, one that brings an end to sectarian and other violence and allows Iraqis to return to their homes and live in peace," said Malcolm Smart. "Until and unless they do so, and find a solution which respects basic human rights, Iraqis will continue to pay the price with their lives and the stability of the entire region will remain under threat."
Four million people dispossesed is 14% of the entire population of Iraq and a large proportion are those who comprised the middle class - the educated and wealthy who could afford to move. That means teachers, small businessmen, scientists, engineers and others who are essential to the reconstruction of that nation. All reduced to refugees by mismanagement of the occupation, which means they aren't likely to look gladly upon the occupiers of their land but instead are more likely to channel their remaining energy (after survival) back into radicalism which will have reverberations for generations to come. I think it would be fair to say that aid for these refugees is an urgent matter of national security for the US, Britain and others.

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