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Iraqi Government Blocks Residents Fleeing
Fighting, Humanitarian Crisis in Anbar Province
a Human
Rights Watch Report
Al-Jazeerah, CCUN, May 5, 2014
The Iraqi government is exacerbating a humanitarian crisis in Anbar
Province by hindering residents from leaving areas where fighting is taking
place and impeding aid from getting in, Human Rights Watch said today. The
government should immediately facilitate safe passage for residents who want
to flee the fighting and halt restrictions on the delivery of humanitarian
aid.
Eight residents of Fallujah or Ramadi, Anbar’s two main cities,
told Human Rights Watch that, between January and April 2014, they saw
government forces shoot residents who were trying to leave or return to
Anbar, killing some of them. It is unclear whether armed opposition forces
were in those areas at the time of these attacks but witnesses gave
consistent accounts of what they said was, at the very least, indiscriminate
government fire.
“The government should be helping people trapped by
the fighting, not keeping them in harm’s way and denying them aid,” said
Joe Stork, deputy Middle East director at Human Rights Watch. “Anbar
residents are caught in a nightmare and the government is only making it
worse.”
Fighting in Anbar between government forces and various Sunni
armed groups, including the Islamic State of Iraq and the Sham (ISIS), has
been ongoing since January 2014. According to the United Nations, the
fighting has displaced more than 400,000 of the province’s estimated 750,000
people, many of them still trapped in conflict areas. From the 72,910
families registered as displaced, at least 51,000 are still in in Anbar.
The fighting in Anbar posed major obstacles to the voting there during
national elections on April 30, Human Rights Watch said. Voter turnout in
Anbar was reportedly under 30 percent.
Human Rights Watch has
repeatedly
condemned ISIS for its deliberate attacks on civilians across
Iraq, which likely amount to crimes against humanity. The armed group
has claimed responsibility for attacks targeting civilians, including an
April 25 attack on an election campaign rally in Baghdad that killed more
than 30 people and at least eight attacks on polling centers on April 28,
when army and other security officers voted.
On election day,
violence reportedly prevented many people from voting, particularly in Sunni
and mixed Sunni-Shia areas. A suicide bomb in Tikrit killed five people and
a bomb in Kirkuk killed two women. Explosives destroyed two polling
stations in Beiji and shells were fired at polling stations in Diyala, local
media reported. Polling stations in several majority Sunni areas in Baghdad
province, including Adhamiyya, Abu Ghraib, Latifiyya, and Yousifiyya,
remained closed throughout the day, according to local politicians and to
residents’ reports to Human Rights Watch.
In March, the UN mission
chief in Iraq
reported that armed groups in Ramadi had placed booby-traps in
residential buildings and along roads, preventing displaced families from
returning to their homes.
Human Rights Watch interviewed 42 Anbar
residents, 35 of whom had been forced to flee their homes and 7 of whom had
remained in Ramadi and Fallujah, as well as 4 government officials and
representatives from 6 international humanitarian organizations working in
Iraq. Human Rights Watch could not visit Anbar province due to the ongoing
hostilities.
Human Rights Watch was unable to establish accurate
casualty figures from the four months of fighting. On April 25, the director
of Fallujah General Hospital
told the media that the hospital had recorded the killing or wounding of
1,418 people since the start of the fighting, mostly from shelling of
Fallujah’s residential neighborhoods. An employee of the hospital told Human
Rights Watch on April 27 that the hospital had recorded 262 deaths since
January, “most of them civilians.” Between 40 and 50 percent of those
recorded by the hospital as having been killed were women and children, he
said.
On March 27, the UN
reported that the medical directorate for Anbar province had tallied the
killings of 336 civilians and wounding of 1,562 civilians since the conflict
began, and on May 1 announced that the Anbar Health Directorate reported 135
killed and 525 injured in Anbar in April, with 57 killed and 265 injured in
Ramadi and 78 killed and 260 injured in Fallujah.
Anbar residents,
medical professionals, and aid workers told Human Rights Watch that casualty
figures are likely to be much higher because many people cannot reach
hospitals due to the fighting. Some do not go to the hospitals because they
fear harassment by government forces or government attacks on the hospitals,
they said.
The UN has
reported that “on at least one occasion” government shelling hit
Fallujah General Hospital. The Fallujah hospital employee Human Rights Watch
interviewed said government mortars and tank shells had hit the hospital a
number of times since January, including the emergency room, intensive care
unit, radiology department, and central air conditioning unit. He said that
no one was killed in the attacks but that four Bangladeshi hospital staff,
three Iraqi doctors, and some patients had been wounded. Human Rights Watch
could not confirm the employee’s account but reviewed five photographs of
what appeared to be a mortar lodged in the destroyed air conditioning unit.
The hospital employee said armed men he did not know guard the hospital
compound and other institutions in Fallujah, but he had never seen them
enter the hospital or use the grounds as a base. A doctor from the hospital
interviewed in March, as well as Fallujah residents who have been in the
hospital periodically over the past four months, also said they had not seen
armed men inside the hospital.
Since early March, the army has closed
all roads leading into Fallujah, except for a narrow footbridge from
Saqlawiyya, a town to the northwest. One Fallujah resident said the
government was also allowing foot traffic across a bridge to the south of
Amiriyat al-Fallujah, but only for about one hour at a time.
The
government should stop preventing people from fleeing the fighting in Anbar,
and provide shelter, food, medical supplies, and other necessities to
displaced people inside the province, Human Rights Watch said.
“Armed
groups should be held accountable for what amount to crimes against
humanity, but their crimes in no way excuse government forces punishing
civilians in Sunni areas,” Stork said.
For more information on
attacks on civilians trying to flee, blockage of humanitarian aid, and
details on the humanitarian crisis in Anbar, please see below.
Shooting at Fleeing Residents
Human Rights Watch interviewed eight residents of Fallujah and Ramadi who
said that in January and February 2014 they had witnessed government attacks
in which residents trying to leave or return to Anbar were injured or
killed. It is not clear whether armed opposition forces were in those areas
when the attacks took place, but witnesses gave consistent accounts of what
they said was, in the very least, indiscriminate government fire, and may
have amounted to deliberate attacks on the fleeing residents.
In one
case, 33-year-old Said (whose name, as with others interviewed, has been
changed for his protection) said government soldiers for no apparent reason
shot at his car and about 10 other cars, all with residents fleeing the
city, as they tried to leave Fallujah through the al-Muadhafeen checkpoint
east of the city at about 3 p.m. on January 30. Human Rights Watch
interviewed Said at a hospital in Erbil, where he was being treated for a
bullet lodged near his spine. He said:
Out of nowhere, the shooting started. It sounded like it was coming from
everywhere. There were helicopters flying overhead firing on the cars and on
Hay al-Askari and al-Dhubat al-Thaltha [two eastern Fallujah neighborhoods].
Eight APCs [armored personnel carriers] along the highway were shooting at
the cars, and mortars were coming from the al-Mazraa base [an Iraqi army
base that is part of the Mazraa/Tariq military compound east of Fallujah],
which is about 3 kilometers from the highway. They all started shooting at
once.
It all happened so quickly, without warning, and it only lasted
five or six minutes. People in three or four other cars were also injured, I
saw one person shot in the hand and one in the head. He was a child. But I
don’t know what happened to them. Said said he saw no anti-government
fighters in the area at the time and did not know why the government
attacked.
Another Fallujah resident, Abdulwahhab, said that in
mid-February he witnessed army troops kill the mother and father of two
children as they were trying to leave Fallujah for the town of Sicher, about
5 kilometers to the north, also with no sign of opposition forces in the
area: They were waiting in their car – a mother, father, and their two
young children – at the checkpoint that leads north to Sicher when the army
began shooting. The mother and father were shot dead, but the kids survived.
They waited for the firing to stop and then they walked to Sicher. My
friend, who lives close by, told me the bodies of the husband and wife
stayed there in their car for two days before residents finally came and
buried them.
Abdulwahhab said that in late January he saw soldiers shoot and kill a
truck driver for no apparent reason as the driver was trying to leave
Fallujah for Saqlawiyya, north of the city. “The army claimed they thought
he was ISIS,” Abdulwahhab said. “When they say that they can do whatever
they want.”
Abu Mohamed, from Hay al-Askari in Fallujah, told Human
Rights Watch over Skype that he decided to leave Fallujah with his family in
early January after a mortar hit their home. The main roads were closed, he
said, so he used dirt roads into the desert until he encountered two damaged
cars from which people were pulling dead bodies. Abu Mohamed said the people
told him that a government helicopter had shot at the cars:
I stopped and I helped them get the bodies out. I counted six dead, three
of them children – two very small, and one 12- or 13-year-old girl, and two
women and a man who looked to be about 22 years old. There were also wounded
people, some of them severe and some not. Abu Mohammed said he drove on
and, about 20 minutes later, he saw two government helicopters flying
overhead. “We were terrified,” he said. “We thought they would shoot us like
they did those other two cars.” After the helicopters landed, the troops
inside threatened Abu Mohamed’s family with arrest but then let them go, he
said.
The employee of Fallujah General Hospital told Human Rights
Watch that on two occasions in mid-January he saw security forces shoot at
cars with men, women, and children as they were trying to leave Fallujah on
the eastern highway. He said that since the beginning of the conflict, the
hospital has treated members of at least 12 families who were shot by
government forces at checkpoints.
Blocking Humanitarian Aid
Human Rights Watch spoke with representatives of six international
humanitarian organizations. Each talked about government restrictions on aid
deliveries into Anbar, including convoys blocked at checkpoints.
On
April 3, UNICEF delivered hygiene kits (packages that include soap,
toothpaste, and other necessities) to Fallujah, which the UN
called “the first successful distribution by a UN agency within the city
limits.” On March 7, UNICEF
reported that a first aid convoy had managed to reach Amiriyat
al-Fallujah, south of Fallujah, the previous day. The April 3 delivery is
the only humanitarian delivery, as far as Human Rights Watch has been able
to determine, that has reached Fallujah since fighting began in January.
According to the
UN, on January 30 army personnel stopped convoys from the International
Organization for Migration (IOM) and the World Health Organization (WHO) at
a checkpoint, detained an unidentified IOM employee for 24 hours and an
unidentified WHO employee for over a month, and confiscated their goods,
even though the organizations had army clearance to enter the area.
Five Anbar residents separately told Human Rights Watch that in January and
February they saw government soldiers at checkpoints prevent trucks carrying
aid from entering Anbar. The employee at Fallujah General Hospital said that
he had seen security forces turn away both humanitarian agencies’ deliveries
and individual residents attempting to bring in food and other supplies.
“We’ve received next to nothing from international organizations,” the
hospital employee said. “And when we try to bring in goods ourselves we’re
harassed and turned away.”
The hospital employee said he tried to
bring two containers of vegetable oil into Fallujah in January but soldiers
sent him back to Baghdad and accused him of “bringing the oil for
terrorists.”
Humanitarian Needs
The four months of fighting in Anbar has created severe humanitarian
needs, aid agencies and the UN said. Preliminary findings of a World Food
Programme assessment released on April 20 indicated that 79 percent of
displaced people in Anbar lack sufficient food. A
detailed assessment of displaced people’s needs in Anbar released by IOM
on April 9 found that 40 percent of internally displaced people are under 15
years old. Over one-fifth of the more than 400,000 registered internally
displaced people in Anbar are sleeping in schools, abandoned buildings, or
public spaces, and lack money for food, the assessment said.
All of
the seven displaced people still in Anbar interviewed by Human Rights Watch
said they had not received any form of Iraqi government aid, and that aid
from humanitarian organizations was negligible.
On March 27, the head
of the UN mission in Iraq, Nikolai Mladenov,
reported that many of the families displaced by the crisis remain
trapped in areas of active conflict. Access by the UN and other
organizations to those affected has been significantly constrained, he said.
In addition to the logistical problems of getting aid to those in need,
Mladenov said that donor funding for the UN and nongovernmental
organizations in Iraq is running out. As a result, he said, the UN will
“very soon be unable to continue its humanitarian assistance to those
fleeing the fighting in Anbar.” On April 17, the UN
reported that “Most UN agencies have run out of cash and supplies
required to aid the IDP families” because of lack of sufficient donor
response, including from the Iraqi government, to the UN’s request for
US$103.7 million for its Anbar Strategic Response Plan launched in
mid-March.
The influx of displaced people in various parts of Anbar
province has stretched resources such as shelter, food, and medicine, and
led to inflated prices, people in Anbar told Human Rights Watch. A teacher
in Heet, a city in western Anbar, told Human Rights Watch on February 16
that Heet was experiencing shortages of food, medical supplies, kerosene,
and benzene. The number of displaced people in Heet has more than doubled
since then, according to IOM figures, with at least 11,655 displaced
families in Heet as of April 2.
Ramadi residents and an employee in
Ramadi’s general hospital told Human Rights Watch that they have access to
only about 20 percent of the usual medical supplies, leading to inflated
prices and limited options for treatment.
Fighting in Anbar
Fighting in Iraq’s western Anbar province began on December 30, 2013,
when Iraqi government forces surrounded a protest camp in a central square
in Ramadi. Sunni protesters had been demonstrating for over a year against
what they alleged were ongoing abuses by security forces. The government
raid on the protest camp prompted fighting between security forces and local
Sunni armed men.
Fighting quickly spread throughout the cities of
Fallujah and Ramadi. A journalist who travels regularly to Ramadi told Human
Rights Watch that many neighborhoods there have been badly damaged by
fighting between SWAT, Special Forces, and the Iraqi army on one side and
local armed groups with some fighters from ISIS on the other.
The
Ramadi neighborhoods of Hay al-Dhubat, Hay al-Adel, Hay al-Bakr, Hay al-Malaab,
Sharia 60, Hay al-Hajji al-Fakra, and Albu Jabbar have been partially
destroyed and are deserted, he said. Human Rights Watch viewed photographs
from the Hay al-Bakr, Hay al-Dhubat, and Hay al-Malaab areas that showed
nearly all the buildings leveled and streets covered in rubble.
In
March 2014, Mladenov, the UN mission chief,
reported to the UN Security Council that armed groups in Ramadi had
placed booby-traps in residential buildings and along roads, preventing
families from returning to their homes. Armed groups, including ISIS, remain
based on the outskirts of the city and heavy fighting has contributed to
shortages of food and medical supplies.
Armed opposition groups,
apparently including ISIS, remain in and around Fallujah. Since January,
government forces have fired mortars on the city from the eastern al-Mazraa/al-Tariq
military base, about 5 kilometers from Fallujah’s city center, shot from
APCs stationed along the city’s eastern highway, about 2 kilometers from the
center, and used helicopters to shoot missiles, concentrating on the
northern and eastern areas of Fallujah, according to Fallujah residents and
information provided to Human Rights Watch by a government official. An
April 17
UN humanitarian report on Anbar said that “[r]enewed artillery
bombardment on several districts in Fallujah continue with reports
indicating that shelling targeted most of the central, south and eastern
parts of the city.”
The conflict in Anbar province has spread to
other areas of the country, with intermittent fighting in Diyala, Mosul,
Salah al-Din, and Abu Ghraib in February, March, and April.
Legal
Standards
The actions by government security forces to prevent people from leaving
areas of fighting and the government’s failure to assist or facilitate
assistance for displaced people in Anbar violate Iraq’s international legal
obligations.
Iraq has ratified the International Covenant on
Economic, Social and Cultural Rights (ICESCR) and International Covenant on
Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR), international human rights treaties that
protect the right to life, the right to access to adequate shelter and
medical care, the right to food, and the right to health. Failure to
facilitate humanitarian access to people fleeing the fighting in Anbar may
violate or contravene these provisions. Security force attacks on people
seeking to flee Anbar and other forms of government harassment also violate
Iraq’s international obligations, which require authorities to ensure
freedom of movement.
The government’s facilitation of access to aid
and accountability for security forces attacks on displaced people was a
litmus test for the government’s commitment to its international obligations
in the period leading up to the elections. The accounts of residents,
displaced people, aid workers, and officials to Human Rights Watch make it
clear that Iraqi authorities failed that test. The fighting shows no sign of
abating, and nor does the hardship for families the violence has trapped and
displaced.
***
For more Human Rights Watch reporting on Iraq, please visit:
http://www.hrw.org/middle-eastn-africa/iraq
For more information
please contact:
In Baghad, Erin Evers (English, Arabic):
+964-770-641-0980 (mobile); or
everse@hrw.org. Follow on Twitter @ErinHRW
In Berlin, Fred
Abrahams (English, German): +49-176-314-652-69 (mobile); or
abrahaf@hrw.org. Follow on Twitter @fredabrahams
In Washington,
DC, Joe Stork (English): +1-202-299-4925 (mobile); or
storkj@hrw.org In Cairo, Tamara
Alrifai (English, Arabic, French, Spanish): +20-122-751-2450 (mobile);
or alrifat@hrw.org. Follow on
Twitter @TamaraAlrifai
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