-Caveat Lector-

http://www.observer.co.uk/iraq/story/0,12239,776623,00.html

'Saddam will not stop me being a Kurd'

Stripped of their homes and rights, refugees wait in the desert for
war - and a chance to settle old scores

Jason Burke, Barda Qaraman refugee camp, Northern Iraq
Sunday    August    18, 2002

The Observer

When they came for Mohamed Omar he wouldn't go. Not when they
ordered him to report to the local police station to 'readjust' his
nationality, not when they told him they would confiscate all his
property, not when they threatened to imprison him and to deport his
family.

Now Omar has spent the past three months in jail and his family
have been sent to live in a town out in the desert nearly 300 miles to
the west. His home, where his family had lived for generations, has
been given to a local supporter of Saddam Hussein. Omar is a Kurd,
from the minority who dominate the northern part of Iraq. The man
who has taken his house is an ethnic Arab, like Saddam and almost
his entire regime.

Omar is a victim of Saddam's Arabisation programme. When the
Gulf war ended, an autonomous Kurdish region was established in
the north of Iraq under the protection of British and US warplanes.
Since 1991 Saddam has forced tens of thousands of Kurds, whom
he sees as a threat, out of the areas that he still rules and into the
new self-governing enclave.

Once the Kurds have gone, their homes and properties are given to
loyal Arabs from the Ba'ath party - Saddam's political vehicle. The
demographics of key strategic regions of Iraq are thus dramatically
altered.

Omar was one of the very few to resist the Arabisation programme.
His story was told to  The Observer by friends and neighbours who
had all decided to flee rather than risk the consequences.

'He is the only man I know who refused to do what they said,' said
one. 'We all say no at first but to resist them is useless. They will
just jail you, break up your family or worse.'

Even refugees who reached the relative safety of the Kurdish
autonomous areas more than a year ago are still frightened. Many
refused to give their real names and did not want to be
photographed. 'I have relatives over the border. It would put them in
danger,' one man said. The name Mohamed Omar is false. The
details of his case are not.

But though they are keen to help the Kurds, one consequence of
Saddam's Arabisation programme is troubling the British and US
officials drawing up plans for a military strike to remove him. It is an
issue that could make the construction of a stable state   after a
conflict extremely difficult. For though tens of thousands of Kurds
have been forced from their homes, few have given up hope of
returning to them. The prospect of a nationwide settling of old
scores is very real.

Like many of those in the eastern part of the Kurdish autonomous
zone, Uria Mustafa comes from Kirkuk, a city of 550,000 in the
centre of a major oilfield.

The 28-year-old confectioner was forced to leave his house in June.
Two months earlier local government officials had told him it was
time he became a member of the Ba'ath party. He would have to
sign legal papers to 'correct' his nationality to Arab, they said. Uria
refused. 'I was born a Kurd and I will die one,' he said. Uria's elder
brother was then seized by armed officials and taken to jail. The
family were told that only when they arrived at a police station with
all their goods in a truck and handed over their identity cards, ration
books and the deeds to their home, would they be able to leave.

Uria followed his instructions - though he bribed an official to be
allowed to keep his precious ration book. He even signed the paper
saying he was 'volunteering' to go. With an armed guard the family
were dumped in the desert on the frontline 80 miles to the north.
The house was given to a Ba'ath party employee. 'I want it back,'
Uria said.

A new family arrives at the Barda Qaraman refugee camp, set on a
desolate rocky hillside south of the city of Sulaymania, each week.
In August, temperatures reach 50 C. A health clinic operates twice a
week and there is a small government-run primary school.

Officials from the Kurdish Democratic Party (KDP) and the Patriotic
Union of Kurdistan (PUK) - the two political groups that govern the
3.5 million Kurds in northern autonomous zones - estimate 3,000 to
4,000 people are deported by the Baghdad government each year.

Successive governments in Baghdad have mounted military
campaigns against the Kurds which have forced huge population
shifts.

Saddam has pursued Arabisation systematically. In 1988 he used
chemical weapons against the north-eastern town of Halabja and
destroyed thousands of villages.

Combined with the deportations, continuing violence has made a
huge demographic impact. According to one PUK official, Arabs
comprised only 10 per cent of the population of Kirkuk province 50
years ago. Now Kurds are in the minority.

Most of those in the Barda Qaraman camp were happy at the
prospect of US military action. 'I have to ask myself if God is really
good enough to   grant us that,' said Umaid Latif, 43. All were
looking forward to reclaiming their homes and property. The Arabs
living in them would have to flee or they would be expelled, they
said. 'We will not go out to revenge ourselves but they are all Ba'ath
party people. Once the regime has gone they will have to go. They
will become refugees themselves, Latif said.

But for some at Barda Qaraman, military or political manoeuvring is
of little interest. The most recent arrival in the camp, a 52-year-old
peasant farmer who did not want to be named, said he   was 'just a
poor man and not interested in such things'.

He and his wife and their six children had arrived two days earlier.
He was still suffering from the month he had spent in a prison after
his initial refusal to be deported. There were 175 people in his cell
and insufficient food.

'I cannot express what I feel. I am not an educated man. We have
always been poor,' he said. 'Now we are here, and now we are just
waiting for some luck.'

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