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Posts Tagged ‘Jordan’

Mercy Corps

Thursday, October 15th, 2009

Mercy Corps is a non governmental organization (NGO) that works with Iraqi refugees in Jordan. The Iraqi Voices Amplification Project team met with the staff of Mercy Corp at their headquarters in Amman.

Caritas, Amman Jordan

Sunday, October 11th, 2009


Caritas Jordan is a Catholic organization that provides a variety of services including basic health care to Iraqi refugees. We spent the morning with Caritas interviewing staff and the people they serve. Iraqi refugees often spend their savings escaping from Iraq. By the time families get to Jordan, their resources are spent.

refugee geography 101

Friday, October 9th, 2009

When Iraqis flee the war in their homeland, where do they go?  Fully seven different nations share a border with Iraq: Turkey, Syria, Lebanon, Jordan, Iran, Saudi Arabia, and Kuwait.  All but the latter (which made it clear from the get-go that it wouldn’t welcome refugees) are playing host, with varying degrees of reluctance, to Iraqi asylum seekers.   Here’s a nice visual overview of the situation:

_44120539_iraq_migr_map416_2

Needless to say, these numbers have a large margin of error.  It’s easy to under-count refugees, for two reasons.  The first has to do with politics.   Here in Jordan, for instance, the official figure is 500,000 and not a soul more.  Why?  Because the Jordanian government fears that publicizing a larger number will encourage more Iraqis to flock here, taxing the already overburdened national infrastructure and creating a kind of second Palestinian refugee situation.  (The official number is enforced, too: if you’re an NGO that wants to continue assisting Iraqis in Jordan, you had best subscribe to the view that there are only half a million of them.)

The second reason is more obvious: you try getting a precise head count on a population that is always in flux and often in fear.   If I’m doing my math right, the above map places the total number of refugees at 2,454,000, while many people now seem to put the figure closer to 2.2. million.  In other words, the numbers on the map are in the right ballpark, but only if you accept that the ballpark is pretty big.

What this map doesn’t show, though, is the complexity of factors that determine why individual Iraqis go where they do.  Over and over when you speak with refugees, they tell you that, before the war, Sunni, Shiite and Christian Iraqis lived together in harmony.  (Two days ago, one man swore to me on his Qur’an that he’d never even known there was a difference between Sunni and Shiite Muslims until the war.)  However much those remarks are colored by nostalgia and historical amnesia, it’s unquestionably true that pre-war Iraq was not riven by the fierce sectarian clashes that divide it today.

When Iraqis fled, though, they faced complicated calculations about where to go.  Some of these questions were basic: what country could they get to safely?  What forms of transportation were available to them?  Where did they have friends and family?  What could they afford?  Which nations had the laxest border requirements, the least expensive visas, the most lenient (or bribe-friendly) authorities?

But questions about cultural identity came into play, too — precisely the kind of questions that hadn’t mattered as much in pre-war Iraq.  For instance: who goes to Lebanon?  Well, for one, Iraqi Christians, who can benefit from its large and established Christian population.  For another, Iraqi Shiites, who head to the south of the country, where the charity arm of Hezbollah provides assistance to its sectarian brethern.  Who goes to Jordan?  First off, the wealthy: Amman ain’t cheap even for Westerners.  Second, the secular: although far more conservative than Lebanon, Jordan is also not an Islamist state, and it’s a comfortable place for non-religious Iraqis to live.

And so it goes on down the list.  In searching for a new homeland — or at least a temporary refuge — Iraqis must make complicated choices based in no small part on the same kind of divisions that have lately torn their country to pieces.  Those choices aren’t inherently dangerous (I’ve yet to hear a credible report of sectarian enmity and violence spilling over from the Iraq war into the refugee community), yet it’s impossible to feel that they aren’t, at the very least, invidious.  And they are a sad fate for a people that seem to be mourning, among their many other losses, the disappearance of a diverse communal life.

Megan Hoelle and C. Eduardo Vargas Travel to the Middle East to Meet Iraqi Refugees

Monday, September 8th, 2008
Megan Hoelle and C. Eduardo Vargas meet with Mr. Guirgis I. Saleh, General Secretary of the Middle East Council of Churches

Megan Hoelle and C. Eduardo Vargas meet with Mr. Guirgis I. Saleh, General Secretary of the Middle East Council of Churches

During the month of August 2008, Megan Hoelle and C. Eduardo Vargas traveled to Jordan, Lebanon, and Syria to explore future projects in these countries aimed at amplifying the plight of Iraqi refugees. Intersections is dedicated to advocating for the needs of Iraqis who have been displaced due to the current conflict. In particular, Intersections is exploring projects that would bring the individual stories of Iraqis back to the United States, in an effort to mobilize public interest in improving the Iraqi situation. As Vargas stated, “many people in the United States view the Iraqi conflict from a purely political and military perspective, however we seek to show the human side of this engagement and will work diligently to help those Iraqis displaced as a result of it.”Fruitful meetings and site visits with such organizations as Caritas Internationalis, Catholic Relief Services, Mercy Corps, The Middle East Council of Churches, UNHCR, and the U.S. State Department helped Hoelle and Vargas gain first-hand knowledge of the current situation in the three countries. Currently, there are an estimated 50,000 Iraqis living in Lebanon, a market-oriented country that does not provide free social services to its citizens. Iraqis living there are viewed by the government as illegal migrants and are subject to arrest at any time. Lack of legal status for refugees in all three countries is a major concern, interfering with the possibility of obtaining local employment, thereby making the refugees completely dependent on personal savings and humanitarian assistance.

The situation deteriorates the closer one is to Iraq. It is estimated that between 400 – 500 thousand Iraqis are living in Jordan. In this kingdom, the government allows Iraqis to enroll in public education; however due to complex regulations, fear of being deported and lack of degree recognition by other countries, many Iraqis opt not to attend school and are kept out of the workforce.

Hoelle outside UNHCR in Amman, Jordan: As of July 2008, UNHCR Jordan had registered over 54,000 individuals. An estimated 500,000 Iraqis are living in Jordan.

Hoelle outside UNHCR in Amman, Jordan: As of July 2008, UNHCR Jordan had registered over 54,000 individuals. An estimated 500,000 Iraqis are living in Jordan.

In contrast to Jordan and Lebanon, Syria has been a more welcoming country for Iraqi refugees. Although legal status as refugees has not been conferred and employment opportunities are few and far between, the government and security forces turn a blind eye to their Iraqi “guests” and they are able to participate in quotidian Syrian life. Here Iraqis tend not to live in the same fear as their counterparts in Lebanon and Jordan. However due to the limited resources this country has, and their tight control and inhospitable attitude towards international humanitarian organizations, the refugees have less access to the humanitarian aid received in other two countries.Hoelle and Vargas also met with Iraqis to hear first-hand accounts of the violence they experienced before leaving Iraq, the challenges faced as urban refugees in these new countries and their hopes of being resettled to a third country to start life anew. Hoelle summed up the refugees’ stories by relating how “shocked I was by how commonplace stories of rape and abduction were. Almost every family had experienced some sort of atrocity and were now stuck in a state of suspended animation, waiting to be resettled-an option that only a few of them will be lucky enough to receive-and wondering when they would be able to start really living again.”

For more information about Intersections work with Iraqis, please visit our website.

To see pictures from our trip to the Middle East, click here.

To read more about the current situation of Iraqi refugees, see the links below from the organizations that we met with.

UN High Commissioner for Refugees
www.unhcr.org http://www.unhcr.org/country/jor.html
http://www.unhcr.org/country/lbn.html
http://www.unhcr.org/country/syr.html
http://www.unhcr.org/country/irq.html

Caritas Internationalis
http://www.caritas.org/
http://www.caritas.org.lb/en/homepage.html
http://www.caritas.org/worldmap/mona/lebanon.html http://www.caritas.org/worldmap/mona/jordan.html

Mercy Corps
http://www.mercycorps.org/

http://www.mercycorps.org/countries/jordan

The Middle East Council of Churches
http://www.mec-churches.org/

Catholic Relief Services
http://crs.org/ http://crs.org/Lebanon/