IRAQ: Chaos Hardening Sectarian Fiefdoms
WASHINGTON, Apr 17 (IPS) - There are an estimated 2.7 million Iraqis who have been displaced within their own country. No house; no food; no security. Who do they turn to for help? The international community’s humanitarian organisations? The occupying United States government? The central Iraqi government based in Baghdad?
According to a report released Tuesday by Refugees International (RI), none of these has been able to provide sufficient assistance to the most vulnerable Iraqis. As a result, they are turning increasingly to local religious-political armed groups for their humanitarian needs — often Shia cleric Moqtada al-Sadr’s Mahdi Army, or the Sunni militias known as Sahwa or Awakening groups, made up of former insurgents armed and funded by the U.S. military, though other militias and strongmen exist as well.
The ongoing fragmentation of Iraqi society well beyond pre-U.S. invasion levels — caused by the flawed U.S. occupation and even encouraged by some of it and the nascent Iraqi government’s policies — has left militias and other neighbourhood strongmen the only ones able to effectively provide food, shelter, oil for heating and cooking, and the semblance of a judiciary system, according to the report entitled “Uprooted and Unstable: Meeting Urgent Humanitarian Needs in Iraq”.
“The trend more and more has been [that] Iraq, leaving aside Kurdistan, resembles Somalia, where you have warlords and militias independent fiefdoms,” said journalist Nir Rosen, who has spent significant time in Iraq, in a conference call to launch the report, which he co-authored. “These militias, be they Mahdi Army, be they Sunni Awakening groups or otherwise, provide security, provide housing, and other forms of assistance.”
The expansion of militias into a service-delivery and aid role stands to reinforce the fragmentation. And if the trend is to be reversed, the international community and the Iraqi government must act now — during the window of a relative lull in violence brought on by the U.S. counterinsurgency strategy — said the RI report.
But so far, the chaotic picture is roundly characterised by policies that continue to deepen rifts. The Shia-dominated Iraqi government tends to only offer aid to its Shia base, Sunnis told RI, and the Sunni militias — armed and even usually created by the U.S. — give help only to Sunnis in their local purview.
“Effectively there really isn’t even a state in Iraq. People often talk about the Iraqi government as if it actually functions — and it doesn’t provide very many services,” said Rosen. “To the extent that it does, it provides them on sectarian grounds. So we saw services being provided to a much larger extent in Shia areas.”
For example, due to the former U.S. Defence Secretary Donald Rumsfeld’s “light footprint” plan to control Iraq with a small number of troops on the ground, the security gaps for the first several years of the occupation allowed a de facto ethnic cleansing of communities — with Sunnis ejecting Shias from Sunni-dominated neighbourhoods and vice versa.
If they stayed in Iraq, the resettled refugees were often not able to transfer cards that identified them within the Public Distribution System (PDS) that was put in place in 1996 to deliver aid and which 80 percent of the population depended on before 2003.
The Ministry of Trade of the Shia-dominated central government that runs the PDS programmes is, according the RI report, “widely perceived as being compromised by sectarianism in favor of Shiites,” noting that “of those who were able to [transfer their cards], the overwhelming majority are Shiites.”
Furthermore, citing “corruption, inefficiency, and security problems,” the report said that those still within the PDS are receiving at best half of the aid they used to, and that portion is of a lesser quality.
Meanwhile, the report also addressed a series of problems with refugees who had left the country altogether and are slowly trickling back in. Returnees have also had widespread problems renewing their PDS cards.
RI said that returnees are encouraged by the Iraqi government and the U.S., which ballyhoo the returns as a sign of progress when in actuality the returns are both dangerous for the returnees and are contributing to the solidification of society’s fragmentation. The report urged the Iraqi government and the U.S. to cease both the encouragement and politicisation of returns.
Returnees often do not return to their homes in formerly mixed neighbourhoods because the risk of the same sectarian violence that drove them out still exists — having, in fact, become the modus operandi in many of the neighbourhoods. Instead, sectarian militias resettle returnees into homogenous neighbourhoods and subsequently top up whatever the aid deficiencies of international organisations and the Iraqi government, further contributing to the societal fragmentation and thereby weakening the nearly nonexistent central government presence.
As with PDS aid, sectarian bias exists in the Iraqi government’s distribution of electricity on the national grid as well.
“Sunni leaders and American officers assert that installations such as power stations and gas stations are often controlled by the Mahdi Army, which provides services to Shiites only,” said the report.
To fill the holes — and in a potent example of a U.S. policy that reinforces polarisation and the warlord model — the U.S military builds power stations which are then run for-profit by warlords or organised crime. If there is a reemergence of the Iraqi state, the RI report cites aid workers’ concerns the government will be weakened by the reluctance of these forces to give up their hold on a source of both clout and income.
While the RI report did cite good work being done by local NGOs and the increasing presence of international organisations such as the United Nations supporting them in light of the “humanitarian space” created by the drop in violence, the efforts are not nearly enough. It noted a positive step in a U.N. appeal for 263 million dollars from donors for humanitarian aid — with report co-author Kristele Younes asking in the conference call that the U.S. foot half that bill.
But because of widespread distrust of the U.N. and its thus far limited role, the struggle to deliver assistance remains an uphill battle.
“The security situation might get worse and we might see large-scale violence resume in important points throughout the country,” said Younes. “Those two reasons are really large enough and important enough for the international community, the U.S. government, international donors, and the government of Iraq to really step up and start looking at much better responding to the needs of the place — much better responding to the needs of Iraqis in general.”
Source: IRAQ: Chaos Hardening Sectarian Fiefdoms By Ali Gharib.
Indexed under: Baghdad, Corruption, Ethnic Cleansing, IDPs (Internal Refugees), IPS, Mahdi Army, Militias, Organised crime, Refugees, Refugees International, U.N., warlords
This from Wikipedia.
“Hezbollah not only has armed and political wings - it also boasts an extensive social development program. Hezbollah currently operates at least four hospitals, twelve clinics, twelve schools and two agricultural centres that provide farmers with technical assistance and training. It also has an environmental department and an extensive social assistance program. Medical care is also cheaper than in most of the country’s private hospitals and free for Hezbollah members”.
Its called “winning the hearts and minds” people. Ask the people of Lebanon.
Just in passing, note where the funding for Hezbollah comes from in my post above, just below the section about social services.
Oh yes markfromireland served there for a long a time and Dubhaltach was mostly brought up both in Lebanon and here in Irak. If you’re interested in Lebanese affairs you might be interested in this from our good friend Declan:
What I Did At The Weekend that link is to the old site because of the photos.
and this series which markfromireland did at the time (no photos so the links are to this site not the old one):
Getting Inside Their Heads (Part 1)
Getting Inside Their Heads (Part 2)
Getting Inside Their Heads (Part 3)
As I am sure you know the links between the Lebanese Shia and the Iraki Shia are close and have been in existence for centuries Nasrallah and al-Sadr are known to one another and are related while the Hizbullah have helped train some Jaish al-Mahdi commanders and fighters and are the model that al-Sadr would like to follow.
You will find quite a lot of information on Hizbullah in the postings around those dates if the subject interests you.
Also Sophia of Les Politiques (Web Log) (0n the blogroll to the right) writes often on Lebanon.
“As I am sure you know the links between the Lebanese Shia and the Iraki Shia are close…”
I confess that I did not know that, assuming you were addressing me in the comment. I thank you for the links. Unfortunately I get 404 errors on them.
I’d like to say that I enjoy visiting your blog, whilst not for the tragdy that it covers, but rather that I find it very informative. I shall continue to visit daily and do hope that you are able to keep us a little more enlightened.
THeDRiFTeR: Our apologies for the sisbehaving links - yes it was you she was addressing these links should work:
Getting Inside Their Heads (Part 1)
Getting Inside Their Heads (Part 2)
Getting Inside Their Heads (Part 3)
These links are to the old site (just in case)
Part 1: (Three weeks into the Israeli war on Lebanon …)
Part 2: The Party of God
Part 3: Dr. Rice’s Pangs
Ali
Thank you.
An excellent read that I have just now completed. It’s nice to be able to put todays events into some sort of historical context. Thanks again, very much, and should you have any more suggestions on reference materials, please feel free to use the email addy you require us to leave upon commenting.
Haleema and THeDRIFTeR-
Thanks so much for the discourse. It is the thing that has always brought me here. It is the only thing that gives me any hope.
And to Maryam, who took the time away from healing to answer my question on a different thread, thank you. I am aghast.