Dear President
Talabani, President Barzani, Prime Minister al-Maliki,
Re: Deportations to Iraq and the KRG
We were encouraged to hear the Iraqi
Government spokesman Ali al-Dabbagh, telling the
Al-Jazeera news network on 17th October 2009, that,
‘we're against forcing them [Iraqi refugees] to be
deported’, and Dr Hadi Mahmoud, the Kurdistan Regional
Government spokesman, saying, on 15th December 2009, ‘we
will not accept asylum seekers who have been deported by
force into our airports’, as reported in the Kurdistan
Report.
Together with the refusal by the Iraqi
Government to accept many of those on the deportation
flight to Baghdad from the UK on 15th October 2009, we
welcomed these statements, as they seemed to indicate
that your governments were both taking a stand against
the inhumane policies of the European Governments that
force people from their homes in Europe, where many of
them have lived for many years, and where they have made
lives for themselves with family, friends and work here.
In addition, according to media reports and
evidence collected by the International Federation of
Iraqi Refugees, many of those who have been deported are
now living in hiding, in fear of the persecution they
originally left Iraq to flee. Some have been
assassinated. Others, such as Hussein Ali of Suleymania,
have committed suicide only days after being deported.
Others, such as Kadir Salih have been kidnapped and
killed, while others have had mental breakdowns. Many
more have had to leave the country and become refugees
again.
However, we have been dismayed to see
that since these statements, the Kurdistan Regional
Government has accepted at least sixty people deported
from the UK, and the Iraqi Government has accepted 77
people deported from Sweden and Denmark. This comes
after the KRG has accepted more than 2000 people
deported from Europe since 2005, and the Iraqi
Government has accepted more than 300 people into
Baghdad, after they were deported from their homes in
Europe.
These deportations have regularly
violated the human rights of those deported and have
taken place without any regard for morality. Without any
human principles or respect even for their own laws they
used handcuffs, anesthetic injections, beatings and
racist humiliation. On many occasions they used military
flights or cargo planes as though the refugees were war
criminals.
We also note that prior to being
deported, they have been imprisoned in detention centres
for as long as two years.
We also note the
comments of Tania Tal’at, a member of the Iraqi
Government, saying that the Iraqi government accepts
deportations due to a number of protocols signed with
the European Governments, through which, if you continue
to accept people deported from Europe, you would no
longer have to pay back loans borrowed from European
Governments by the Saddam Hussein regime. If this is
true, you are playing politics with the lives of Iraqi
refugees.
By terminating whatever agreements you
have made with the European Governments, and refusing to
allow them to deport anybody to any part of Iraq, you
would back up your principled words, which won you
credibility and support among the people of Europe, and
you would help to stop the injustice of the detention
and deportation of Iraqi people.
We are
therefore writing to request you take a stand and make
it clear you will not be party to the unjust and
inhumane immigration policies of the European
Governments, by legally committing your governments not
to accept anymore deportations, by closing your airports
to them, and by terminating the agreements with European
Governments to accept them.
We look forward to
hearing from you.
Regards
Harry
Arcola
London Coalition Against Poverty |
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