PAUL BURKHARDT
03/22/2007
Associated Press
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UNITED NATIONS (AP) - The failure of the United States, the
United Nations and the Iraqi government to help Iraqis who flee their
homes to escape violence is compounding what has already become "the
world's fastest growing displacement crisis," a refugee advocacy group
said in a report Thursday.
The report by
Refugees International found a growing number of internally displaced
persons in the Kurdish region of northern Iraq, where many Iraqis have
fled, are not receiving adequate help to find food or education if they
reach the more secure area.
More
than 1.9 million Iraqis have become homeless within the country, with
one million more expected to follow this year, the report said,
citing numbers from the U.N. High Commissioner for Refugees.
"The U.N. and
U.S. and Iraqi governments are still in denial about the crisis on the
ground in Iraq," said the report's author, Kristele Younes, of the
Washington-based group.
She said methods
of providing food and education have not been adapted to accommodate
the growing number of Iraqis repelled by violence in their country.
"They expect
people to use food (ration) cards, even though those cards are nearly
impossible to transfer outside of your area of permanent residence,"
Younes said.
The report said
the cards also serve as part of a voter registration system for
post-war Iraqi elections.
"They expect
families to send their kids to school, even though there aren't enough
Arabic-language schools for the children now in the Kurdish region," it
said.
While the
Kurdish region is protected by its own security forces and less
susceptible to the violence throughout the country, "getting in is not
easy," the report said.
In
one example, it said Kurds from areas whose status has yet to be
settled "are systematically discouraged or prevented from moving into
Kurdish governates" and forced to turn back to dangerous areas.
The report also
found Iraqis demoralized by the absence of the United Nations.
"The Iraqi
people are frustrated that they don't see the U.N. anywhere," Younes
said.
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The report said
that relief agencies, such as the Iraqi Red Crescent Society, "continue
to function at a national level, albeit in a fragile way."
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