By Kurdistan 24
Hiwa Shilani
September 23, 2019
The US Agency for International Development (USAID) announced on Saturday new financial support of $6.8 million for displaced minorities in Iraq who have been the victims of the Islamic State.
Hiwa Shilani
September 23, 2019
The US Agency for International Development (USAID) announced on Saturday new financial support of $6.8 million for displaced minorities in Iraq who have been the victims of the Islamic State.
The announcement was made by Vice President Mike Pence on Friday, and
 it was confirmed by the director of USAID, Mark Green, on Saturday. 
According to Pence, the funding is "to support ethnic and religious 
minorities displaced by the genocide perpetrated by the so-called 
Islamic State in Iraq and Syria (ISIS)," according to a statement from 
USAID.
USAID also explained that the award will be administered through Catholic Relief Services (CRS) and The Solidarity Fund Poland.
The new steps follow on Pence’s complaint last year that USAID was 
too slow and too bureaucratic in delivering assistance to those who 
needed it—a problem that would be alleviated by working with private 
charities, rather than UN agencies.
An additional $528,500 is to be provided through a Memorandum of 
Understanding (MoU) between USAID and the government of Poland to assist
 displaced people living inside the camps and within host communities in
 northern Iraq.
The assistance will include providing health-care to the Internally 
Displaced Persons (IDPs) through "funding two stationary clinics and one
 mobile medical team."
The award comes within the framework of the Trump administration’s 
emphasis on promoting international religious freedom, which includes a 
policy of protecting religious minorities in Iraq.
USAID is an independent agency of the US government, and it is 
primarily responsible for administering civilian foreign aid and 
development assistance. With a budget of over $27 billion, it is one of 
the largest official aid agencies in the world and accounts for more 
than half of all US foreign assistance.
So far, the US has provided some $380 million to support persecuted minorities in northern Iraq.
Since December 2017, when Baghdad announced the military defeat of 
the so-called Islamic State, reconstruction efforts have stalled. A 
large percentage of those who fled the fighting, including many members 
of Iraq’s minority communities, remain displaced in the Kurdistan 
Region, elsewhere in Iraq, or abroad.
A lack of security remains the biggest obstacle to the return of 
displaced Iraqis, as Delovan Barwari, US representative of the Barzani 
Charity Foundation, explained to Kurdistan 24. The Yezidis’ area of 
Sinjar is not safe for them, and the Nineveh Plains is not safe for 
Christians, many of whom come from that area.
Sinjar is under the sway of “the Popular Mobilization Units (PMUs) 
and elements of PKK (Kurdistan Workers’ Party) fighters and Yezidi 
militias that are supported by them,” Barwari stated.
And “the Christian situation in the Nineveh Plains is not much better
 than Sinjar,” he said. “Two rogue militias are responsible for the 
insecurity in the Nineveh Plains:” the Liwa al-Shabak and the Katai’ib 
Babiliyun.
Indeed, a recent report from the Pentagon’s Inspector General’s office described precisely that problem.
However, Brownback identified the lack of security as a major 
problem, as he suggested that reconstruction efforts “won’t be 
sustainable in the long term or grow, until the security issue is dealt 
with.”