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‘Conflict, destruction’ prevent return to Iraq’s Yazidi heartland — NGO

Nearly two-thirds of Sinjar’s population remain displaced

By AFP - May 18,2022 - Last updated at May 18,2022

Sabean worshippers, followers of a pre-Christian religion which considers the prophet Abraham as one of the founders of their faith, take part in a cleansing ritual known as the ‘Golden Cleansing’, along the banks of the Great Zab River in the Kurdish town of Khabat, some 40 kilometres west of Erbil, in the autonomous Kurdish region of northern Iraq, on Wednesday (AFP photo)

BAGHDAD — Violence and sluggish reconstruction have prevented the return to Iraq’s north-western town of Sinjar of its predominantly Yazidi population after the abuses of extremist rule, the Norwegian Refugee Council (NRC) said on Wednesday.

Five years after the defeat of the Daesh group, which committed massacres against the Yazidis and used their women as sex slaves, the town’s Yazidi, Muslim Kurdish and Arab residents are no closer to returning home, especially after a surge in violence earlier this month.

The aid group said that “nearly two-thirds of Sinjar’s population — over 193,000 Yazidis, Arabs, and Kurds — remain displaced”.

The Yazidis are a Kurdish-speaking minority who were persecuted by Daesh for their non-Muslim faith after its capture of the town in 2014.

“Widespread destruction of civilian houses, new clashes, and social tensions” are preventing returns, NRC said in a report.

Out of 1,500 people surveyed by the aid group to determine how decisions to return home are made, about 64 per cent “said their homes were heavily damaged”.

“A staggering 99 per cent of those who applied for government compensation had not received any funding for damaged property,” it said.

“Families from Sinjar remain in displacement, with thousands still living in camps,” NRC’s country director for Iraq, James Munn, said. 

“We need durable solutions put in place so Iraqi families can once again start living their lives and plan for a safer future.”

The aid group called on the Iraqi government and the authorities in the autonomous Kurdistan region to “prioritise the rehabilitation of infrastructure and the restoration of services to allow for safe housing, land, and property, alongside public infrastructure”.

Some “80 per cent of public infrastructure and 70 per cent of civilian homes in Sinjar were destroyed” during the conflict years ago, the NRC said.

In early May, fighting broke out between Iraqi troops and Yazidi fighters affiliated with Turkey’s banned Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK), killing at least one Iraqi soldier.

The Iraqi army was seeking to apply an agreement between Baghdad and the Kurdistan region for the withdrawal of Yazidi and PKK fighters from Sinjar.

More than 10,000 people fled the latest fighting, adding to the population of displaced.

 

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