By Catholic News Agency
Courtney Mares
For Iraqi Christian and Yazidi communities still recovering from the destruction wreaked by the Islamic State, the coronavirus poses significant risks, NGOs have said in a joint statement.
Courtney Mares
For Iraqi Christian and Yazidi communities still recovering from the destruction wreaked by the Islamic State, the coronavirus poses significant risks, NGOs have said in a joint statement.
“The public health system in Sinjar and the wider Nineveh Governorate
was decimated by ISIS during its brutal occupation and genocidal
campaign in Iraq, beginning in 2014,” the letter stated.
“An impending humanitarian and security disaster looms large in Iraq.
… There is a significant attendant threat to global security if ISIS
uses this opportunity to regroup and return, but it does not have to be
this way. Iraqi authorities and the United Nations must act now,” it
continued.
Twenty-five NGOs working in northern Iraq issued a joint statement
April 16 calling on the World Health Organization to undertake an
assessment mission in the area, where testing has been limited, and
urging Iraqi authorities to prevent the Islamic State from regrouping.
Signed by the Iraqi Christian Relief Council, Free Yezidi Foundation,
Genocide Alert, and the Religious Freedom Institute, the statement
described how the pandemic is exacerbating existing security,
humanitarian, and health risks among displaced and rebuilding Iraqi
minority communities. It highlighted, in particular, the global risk of a
potential resurgence of the Islamic State.
Security threat
“COVID-19 and the precipitous drop in oil prices have caused the
Iraqi economy to collapse, leaving a dangerous security vacuum for ISIS
to exploit. Indeed, the resultant political turmoil and social strife
recall the very conditions that earlier incarnations of ISIS and its
supporters capitalized on during its initial surge almost a decade ago,”
it stated.
“According to International Crisis Group, ISIS in its weekly
newsletter Al-Naba called on its fighters to attack and weaken its
enemies while they are distracted by the pandemic,” it added.
U.S. military officials have expressed concern that the Islamic State
could use adverse conditions to its advantage in it recruitment
efforts.
“COVID-19 has also hastened the departure of some coalition forces
from Iraq, weakening counter-terrorism operations, while some ISIS
detainees have recently escaped prison in Syria,” the letter stated.
On March 30, Islamic State fighters imprisoned in northwestern Syria
revolted. The rioting prisoners took over one wing of the prison before
Kurdish forces intervened.
“There is an urgent need for reform in the civilian security sector,
in order to integrate regional militias into a unified Federal Police
that upholds the rule of law and protects all citizens, regardless of
religion or clan affiliation,” the letter said.
Health infrastructure needs
The economic strain has also hindered Iraqi minorities’ efforts to
rebuild their communities, including medical infrastructure needs.
“Many Yazidis (Ezidis/Yezidis) want to return to Sinjar, but
security, reconstruction and basic services are still lacking to allow a
dignified return. There are currently only two hospitals and just one
ventilator to assist the current population of around 160,000 people in
the region,” the NGOs’ statement explained.
Iraq’s healthcare system, which has suffered for decades from the
effects of sanctions and war, currently faces a critical shortage of
doctors and medicine, according to a Reuters investigation. Hospitals in
Iraq are already overcrowded and doctors overworked, while the
healthcare situation is slightly better in the semi-autonomous Kurdistan
Region of Iraq, which has its own health ministry.
There have been at least 1,600 cases of COVID-19 documented in Iraq,
which is under pressure to reopen its border with Iran, which has had
more than 85,000 confirmed coronavirus cases, according to Johns Hopkins
University Coronavirus Resource Center.
Humanitarian workers have also had trouble reaching those in need due
to movement restrictions, and have raised concerns about the risk of an
outbreak in internally displaced persons (IDP) camps.
Social distancing is very difficult in these high-density IDP camps
in Iraq, where 1.8 million people remain displaced due to insecurity and
reconstruction needs, according to the UN.
The 25 NGOs called for the government of Iraq and the United Nations
to provide testing capacity in the IDP camps in Sinjar, Tel Afar and the
Nineveh Plains.
“At present, it is impossible to apprehend the extent of the spread
of the virus because no testing for the disease is taking place in the
camps, while restrictions of movement impede the work of humanitarian
actors who provide basic essentials such as food, water and medicine,”
they stated.
Psychological risk for trauma survivors
Genocide survivors with trauma also face increased personal risk of
psychological harm amid isolation imposed by coronavirus measures.
As in much of the world, authorities in Iraqi Kurdistan have ordered
people to stay home, imposed a curfew, and have closed places of
worship, schools, restaurants, and most businesses.
“Another alarming corollary of the COVID-19 pandemic in Iraq is the
psychological impact on at-risk communities, including Yazidis, Turkmen
and Christians, such as Assyrians,” it said.
This is a particular concern for the Yazidi communities in which
thousands of women were victims of sexual violence by the Islamic State.
“Prior to the outbreak, Médecins Sans Frontières reported on a
debilitating mental health crisis among Yazidis in Iraq, including a
rising number of suicides,” it stated.
Suicides in this community have already been reported since social
distancing measures were put into place, the NGOs reported. They called
on the World Health Organization to address this “acute mental health
crisis.”
In their appeal to the WHO and Iraqi government, the NGOs insisted that the stakes were high:
“COVID-19 is a pandemic the likes of which we have not seen before.
Survivors of genocide and other mass atrocity crimes are now waiting for
this silent death to pass through the camps and their homes, unable to
fight back.”