News

Thousands of Arab families in Kurdistan Region are not allowed to return: HRW

Shkoi Kurdistan-

More than 1,200 Arab families displaced by the Islamic State (ISIS) are being prevented from returning to home to five villages in Nineveh province by the Kurdistan Regional Government (KRG) authorities, according to a Human Rights Watch (HRW) report.

“Kurdish authorities are preventing thousands of Arab villagers from returning home without any lawful reason,” said Belkis Wille, the organisation’s senior crisis and conflict researcher.

HRW is accusing the KRG of only allowing Kurds to go back to villages in Rabia sub-district, west of Dohuk province.

“The fact that the KRG has permitted neighboring Kurdish villagers to go back suggests that the Arabs are being blocked as punishment,” Wille said.

The affected villagers come from the villages of Jidria, Mahmoudia, Qahira, Suadia, and Sufiya, lying just within territory controlled by the KRG.

The five Arab villages were controlled by ISIS on August 3, 2014, but were all retaken by Kurdish Peshmerga forces within days, the report added.

HRW said they have conducted interviews with five residents from each village, all of whom confirmed that Peshmerga forces continue to control the area, and have prevented them from returning.

“They estimated that 1,200 families have been prevented from returning to the five villages,” the report read.

The organisation contacted the KRG coordinator for international advocacy, Dindar Zebari, on Thursday, who said that the areas are not suitable for the residents to return due to security concerns. 

According to Zebari, local community leaders have said villagers cannot return to the villages for several reasons, including the presence of armed groups.

”Zebari said local community leaders said they could not return to the area because of concerns of the presence of unnamed “armed groups” and ISIS sleeper cells, Turkish airstrikes, Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK) presence, and Covid-19 movement restriction,” the report added.

However, HRW confirmed that all the residents that have been interviewed in the report are “desperate to return to their homes.”

Show More

Related Articles

Back to top button
Close