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Wednesday, June 24, 2009

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Note: New content has been inserted in red, italicized, bold font.

Overview

 

Political: In Baghdad and other restive areas of Iraq, a spate of attacks in the past five days have killed more than 150 people with less than one week left before US combat troops are due to withdraw from Iraq’s cities. On Wednesday (June-24), a bomb killed at least 52 people at a market in eastern Baghdad’s volatile Sadr City slum and wounded some 104 people, making it one of the worst attacks in Iraq this year. The deadliest attack in Iraq for more than a year occurred on Saturday (June-20), when a suicide truck bomber struck outside a mosque near the northern city of Kirkuk, killing at least 72 people and wounding some 200. The string of attacks have reportedly cast some doubt on Iraqi forces’ ability to independently fight a stubborn insurgency, especially with the upcoming parliamentary elections due next January. However, Iraqi Foreign Minister Hoshyar Zebari was quoted by Reuters as saying on Friday (June-19), “The Iraqi government, about the security forces, are confident (they) are capable of taking over its full responsibility after the withdrawal of American forces.” The Iraqi government has warned that insurgent groups would likely try and take advantage of the US withdrawal and cause more violence. Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki urged Iraqis not to “lose heart” if insurgents step up attacks. According to the US-Iraqi security pact that was implemented this January, US troops are required to withdraw from cities by June 30 as a first step toward a complete pull back by 2012. The bilateral agreement includes a provision for the Iraqi government to request US assistance in case violence surges. (Reuters, June 19-24)

 

Tuesday (June-30) is the deadline for US troops to withdraw and the Iraqi government decided Tuesday (June-23) to declare a national holiday to mark the occasion. According to government spokesman Ali al-Dabbagh, ceremonies will be held on Monday (June-29), but the deadline itself will be the public holiday, the Associated Press reported. Starting July, only a small contingent of US troops will remain in Iraqi cities. They will be in Joint Security Stations to train and advise Iraqi security forces and the US military will still provide intelligence and air support if called upon. Exact numbers of how many US troops will remain has not been clarified, but Brig. Gen. Steve Lanza, spokesman for the US military in Iraq, was quoted as saying, “the amount of forces remaining in the cities for stability operations will be extremely small.” Since January, 151 former US bases have been handed over to Iraqi forces, Lanza said. (Reuters, AP, June-24)

 

UN: A conference was held on Sunday-Monday (June 14-15) by the Iraqi Council of Representatives and the UN Assistance Mission for Iraq (UNAMI) to discuss hydrocarbon revenue and water sharing. Titled, “The Future of Iraq,” the conference examined key challenges in water resources management and reviewed actions by the central and regional governments at various levels to alleviate problems and also called for UN support towards regional dialogue on the management of the Euphrates River. Participants also confirmed their commitment to work towards resolving issues regarding hydrocarbons. This conference was a continuation of a prior roundtable discussion on federalism and hydrocarbon resource management held in Baghdad and Erbil. (UNAMI, June-17)

 

Refugees/Internally Displaced Persons (IDPs): On World Refugee Day, which was on Saturday (June-20), Iraqi NGOs and UN agencies working to provide better support for Iraqi refugees appealed to the UN and all international organizations “to offer protection and facilitate resettlement of all Iraqi refugees who are affected by violence and to help increase the number of those who are accepted in secure (third) countries,” the UNs Integrated Regional Information Network (IRIN) quoted Basil Abdul-Wahab al-Azawi, head of the Baghdad-based Commission of Society Enterprises as saying. Iraqi refugees have endured dire living conditions and have watched their savings deplete because of prolonged displacement and hikes in the price of basic commodities in host countries. In a statement issued jointly with other international organizations, the UN called for financial support from donors for the protection, return and reintegration of Iraq’s IDPs and refugees. The UN High Commissioner for Refugees estimates some 2 million Iraqi refugees in neighboring countries, while the International Organization for Migration (IOM) estimates about 2.8 million IDPs in Iraq. (IRIN, June-21)

 

The UN High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) said Iraq remains too fragile for the estimated 1.5 million Iraqis living outside its borders to return home. Ron Redmond, a spokesman for the UNHCR, said “while overall security conditions are improving, they are not sustainable enough to have encouraged massive returns of Iraqis.” Of the returns that have already taken place, many of them have not been safe or sustainable. Forcing the repatriation of refugees would also put individuals at risk. Over 1.5 million Iraqis still live outside the country, mostly in Syria and Jordan, while another 2 million are internally displaced. (UNHCR, June-2)

 

Civil Society/Rule of Law: The number of deaths in Iraq since March 2003 is estimated by Iraq Body Count (IBC) as between 92,393 and 100,868 for civilians and 4,632 for coalition forces, including 4,314 US troops.  While 4,900-6,375 Iraqi military personnel are estimated to have died during the 2003 war, reliable figures are unavailable for the new Iraqi security forces established in late 2003. (Reuters, June-24)

 

Since the 2003 invasion of Iraq, the civilian casualty count dramatically decreased in May to its lowest number, according to Iraq’s Health Ministry figures that were released on Sunday (May-31). May’s death toll was 134, which is slightly below the previously record low tallied in January. (Reuters, May-31) However, the month of May also saw the number of US military deaths sharply increase. With 24 US soldiers killed, bringing the overall death toll to at least 4,306 since March 2003, May had the most deaths of any month since September 2008, the BBC reported. (BBC, June-1)

 

Humanitarian Situation and Access: In Iraq’s southern province of Dhi Qar on June 17-18, the UNs Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) held a training workshop for 31 NGOs on grant application procedures and project implementation and management funded by the UNs Expanded Humanitarian Response Fund (ERF) for Iraq.  OCHA Iraq acting Head of Office, Yasmine Rockenfeller, said the workshop aimed at “enhancing the capacity of Iraqi civil society to respond to humanitarian needs in their own communities.” She added that the ERF provides necessary funding for emergency assistance in support of the neediest in Iraq. The Iraqi NGOs in training will launch these projects, strengthening the relationship between the UN and Iraqis. In April and May, OCHA conducted two other training sessions in Baghdad and Erbil, and have trained a total of 100 Iraqi and international NGOs operating across Iraq. (OCHA, June-22)

Iraqi Environment Minister Narmin Othman reported that there are some 25 million landmines in Iraq and more than 25 million unexploded ordnance (UXO), including cluster bombs, saying it is “Iraq’s biggest environmental problem.” According to the UN’s Integrated Regional Information Networks (IRIN), Othman has appealed for more international support to clear landmines and UXO in Iraq. Because the government is not dependable, international support is imperative to get qualified specialists and financial support, Othman told IRIN on Saturday (June-6). Not knowing how much support was needed, Othman said “billions of dollars” were needed. Currently, three companies are working with the ministry in mine clearance operations, while 17 others are expected to have their licenses within days. Under the 2007 Ottawa Convention, which bans all landmines, Iraq must be declared free of landmines by 2018. (IRIN, June-8)

 

Economy/Oil: Iraqi crude oil production averaged 2.44 million barrels per day (MBPD) as of June 10, which is an increase of 0.03 from the week of May 27. (USDOS, June-10) Iraqi crude oil exports averaged 1.80 MBPD as of June 10, which is a decrease of 0.08 from the week of May 27. (USDOS, June-10)

 

On June 10, Iraq’s Ministry of Oil announced that oil-bidding rounds to bolster oil and gas field output will proceed as scheduled on June 29. Iraqi Oil Minister Hussain al-Shahristani has endured harsh criticism in recent weeks for failing to boost production of oil, especially as the fall of oil prices severely affect the budget. Al-Shahristani expects the country’s production to go up to 4 million barrels per day once the fields are developed. The US Department of State said 32 of the 35 pre-qualified companies will be participating in the bid round. (USDOS, June-10)

 

Water/Power: The daily supply from the grid from May 25 – May 31 was 55 percent higher than the same time frame in 2008 and met 70 percent of estimated demand, compared with 48 percent during the same time frame a year earlier. (USDOS, June-10)

 

Due to sectarian violence and insurgency, attempts to repair Baghdad’s dilapidated sewage pipes and treatment plants was delayed and Iraqis will have to wait three more years for the puddles of sewage to stop and for the treatment of all sewage accumulating in rundown pipes, Baghdad announced on Monday (June-15). With the initiative starting in 2006, it was expected to be completed in five years (2011). According to municipality spokesman Hakim Abdul Zahra, efforts continued after the security situation improved. The amount being spent on sewage works was not clearly indicated, but main projects include a US$90 million 19.4 mile (12 km) sewage pipe from eastern Baghdad to southeastern Baghdad, a US$58 million sewage pipe in Sadr City and US$91 million sewage works in eastern Baghdad. (Reuters, June-15).

 

Last month, Turkish authorities told a top Iraqi lawmaker they had increased the flow of the Euphrates River through its dams upstream of Iraq to help farmers battling a severe drought, but according to Iraqi Water Resources Minister Abdul Latif Rasheed, nothing has been done. On Sunday (June-7), Iraq called on Turkey again to release more water down the river. Water distribution is a fragile diplomatic issue for Iraq as it tries to better ties with its neighbors and Turkey is one of its most important trading partners. Iraq has accused Turkey, and to a lesser extent Syria, of choking the Euphrates by placing hydroelectric dams on it that have restricted water flow to Iraq, which damages the farm sector already coping with decades of war and neglect. (Reuters, June-7)

 

Food:  In a statement made on Tuesday (June-16), the Iraqi government said they were attempting to rationalize the state-run food aid system by stopping the well-off from benefiting from it and helping the neediest people to ease pressure on the budget. According to the statement, the Cabinet wanted people, who made a monthly income of over US$1,300 (1.5 million Iraqi dinars) to stop receiving food subsidies. Then, the Ministry of Trade would devise a plan that would direct the food rationing system’s financial allocations in the federal budget to the neediest people. In 1995, Iraq’s food rationing system, the Public Distribution System (PDS), was developed as part of the UN’s oil-for-food program. Since the US-led invasion of Iraq in 2003, the program has suffered poor management, insecurity and recently, corruption. Former Iraqi trade minister, Abdul-Falah al-Sudani, was arrested and charged on June 30 with corruption and embezzlement in relation to food imports for the PDS. (IRIN, June-17)

 

Health/Medical: Seven members of the women’s national basketball team became Iraq’s first cases of the H1N1 flu virus while playing in a tournament in the US city of Chicago, Iraq’s Health Minister Saleh Al-Hasnawi confirmed on Wednesday (June-24). The squad returned to Iraq on Saturday (June-20). As six members were treated in a hospital in Iraq, one member, who was detected as having the virus when the team stopped in Jordan, was being kept there. Al-Hasnawi reported that all patients were in good condition. Additionally, a member of the US-led multinational military force in Iraq was confirmed of contracting the H1N1 virus on Wednesday, but no specific details were given. (Reuters, June-24)

 

During the first 23 weeks of 2009, only two cholera cases have been confirmed. However, since cholera is endemic in Iraq, sporadic cases are expected to surface from time to time.  Iraq suffered a cholera outbreak in 2008 with a majority of cases occurring between weeks 33 to 41, the UN Children’s Fund Humanitarian Action Update reported. A total of 11 deaths were recorded among a total of 925 cholera cases, of which 36 percent were children under the age of five. According to updated reports, the outbreak seemed to have subsided after the gradual decrease in new cases had abated to zero by mid-December. Despite cholera cases not being detected, diarrhea cases continue to affect Iraqi populations. During week 23 in 2009, the World Health Organization (WHO) reported 18,768 cases of diarrhea. Fifty-six percent of the samples - or 10,595 - were cultured for the cholera organism, but none were found positive. The agency also tested 3,105 water samples for bacteriological contamination and 11 percent - or 333 - of them were deemed contaminated. (WHO, June-7)

 

According to the WHO, during the first 22 weeks of 2009, 26,056 suspected measles cases were reported in Iraq. The measles outbreak is mainly affecting the central part of Iraq, reporting 78 percent – or 20,330 – of the cases. The outbreak is beginning to spread to the South and North. (WHO, May-31) 

                                           

In-Country Humanitarian Assistance Information by Region

North Region

Erbil, Dahuk, Sulaymaniyah

Coordination

US forces handed responsibility for security in Iraq’s three northern provinces of Erbil, Dahuk and Sulaymaniyah to the Kurdish regional government in May of 2007.

Population

Population of Erbil: 1,392,093

Population of Sulaymaniyah: 1,715,585

Population of Dahuk: 954,087

IDP Movement

Internally Displaced Persons (IDPs) by province/governorate

 

 

Province

Current

Historical

Individuals displaced

after Feb 2006

Families displaced

after Feb 2006

Families displaced 2003-2005

Families displaced pre-2003

Erbil

62,034

10,339

76

32,737

Dahuk

104,948

18,733

22

22,452

Sulaymaniyah

79,672

14,254

35

50,430

(IASC, Kurdistan Regional Government, June 2008)

 

Food

No New Information

Health

No New Information

Non-Food Items –Shelter

In Dahuk province, the Gulf Region Division, US Army Corps of Engineers in Iraq developed a new 12-room US$1.1 million Shindokha School, and 600 middle and high school students will benefit from this bigger and better school. A ribbon-cutting ceremony was performed to mark the opening of the new school that will significantly reduce an overcrowding problem. The school’s entire curriculum is taught in English, and prospective teachers will undergo four months of intensive language training. (AFPS, Mar-30)

Water & Sanitation

No New Information

Security

No New Information

Other/Comments

No New Information

 

 

 

At Tamim, Ninawa, Salah ad Din

Coordination

Five NGOs closed their offices in Mosul (in Ninawa) because of increased violence against aid workers: Mosul Human Rights Association, Supporting Children With Cancer, Ruweida Aid Agency, and two preferring to remain unnamed.  The past six months have especially affected relief agencies’ work, according to the Association for NGOs in Northern Iraq.  Armed groups pose the largest threat to aid agencies. But an Iraqi Voices of Freedom volunteer said another problem is aid workers being detained by police after returning from displacement areas with suspected insurgents. (IRIN, Sept-24)

Population

Population of Mosul: 2,811,091

Population of Kirkuk: 902,019

Population of Tikrit: 1,191,403

IDP Movement

Internally Displaced Persons (IDPs) by Province/Governorate

 

 

Province

Current

Historical

Individuals displaced

after Feb 2006

Families displaced

after Feb 2006

Families displaced 2003-2005

Families displaced pre-2003

Kirkuk

36,202

6,594

1,068

184

Ninawa

106,750

19,126

4,625

1,947

Salah ad Din

45,762

7,817

3,006

360

(IASC, Iraqi Ministry of Displacement and Migration, June 2008)

Of 10,337 displaced families surveyed in At Tamim, Salah ad Din and Diyala provinces, over 92 percent said they had not received any humanitarian aid. (Mercy Corps, Oct-31)

 

Returns are increasing and displacement is low three years after the bombing of a revered Shia shrine in Samarra that sparked nationwide sectarian violence, causing major displacement. Since February 2006, the International Organization for Migration (IOM) reported that more than 1.6 million Iraqis (about 270,000 families) have been displaced and out of those, at least 49,000 families (almost 300,000 individuals) have returned home. IDPs still face the hardships of a lack of jobs, food shortages, unemployment and a lack of basic services. However, Rafiq Tschannen, chief of mission in Iraq for the IOM, said “the fact that people are returning home, although in smaller than expected numbers, is a positive development which we hope will gather pace.” (IRIN, Feb-22)

Food

No New Information                                                                                 

Health

No New Information

Non-Food Items –Shelter

In Salah ad Din province, the As Sharqat Bridge was opened and is expected to greatly improve travel times in the area, in addition to increasing freedom of movement in the north. The Iraqi Army, police and the Sons of Iraq (SOI) will be coordinating security and traffic. (USDOS, Apr-29)

Water & Sanitation

In a combined multi-agency effort by the Provincial Reconstruction Team (PRT) Kirkuk, the Army Corps of Engineers, the Environmental Protection Agency, the Kirkuk provincial government and the US Agency for International Development, the first environmentally engineered and constructed landfill was built in Kirkuk recently. It is the first of its kind in the country and was made as a way to properly dispose of waste and refuse. The landfill meets US and European standards and will teach the Iraqis proper waste management techniques, providing additional jobs to local residents. (USDOS, Mar-11)

Security

In At-Tamim province, a roadside bomb wounded two civilians when it targeted a police patrol in central Kirkuk, 155 miles (250 km) north of Baghdad, on June 17. A policeman was stabbed to death by attackers in central Kirkuk on Friday (June-19). At least 72 people were killed and 200 others were wounded by a suicide truck bomb that exploded outside a mosque near Kirkuk on Saturday (June-20). The same day in northern Kirkuk, two civilians were wounded when a roadside bomb targeting a police convoy exploded. Eleven people were arrested by Iraqi security forces backed by US troops this week, who were wanted on terrorism charges in Kirkuk on Saturday. A member of a Sunni Arab anti al-Qaeda militia was killed by a roadside bomb and two others were injured when they chased the gunmen who opened fire on their checkpoint southwest of Kirkuk on Monday (June-22). On a roadside near Kirkuk, an insurgent was killed while trying to plant a bomb on Wednesday (June-24). The same day in central Kirkuk, a roadside bomb wounded three street cleaners as they emptied a garbage container.

 

In Ninawa province on Thursday (June-18): a civilian was shot and killed by gunmen in a speeding car in northern Mosul, 240 miles (390 km) north of Baghdad. In eastern Mosul, a soldier mistakenly killed another soldier when his rifle fired accidentally. Also in east Mosul, gunmen opened fire on an Iraqi army patrol and killed one soldier and one bystander. In west Mosul, gunmen killed another civilian. On Friday: Iraq’s national karate team coach, Izzat Abdulla, was killed by gunmen in eastern Mosul. An off-duty policeman was killed and his mother was wounded by gunmen when they opened fire on his car in western Mosul on Saturday. On Sunday (June-21): a roadside bomb targeting an Iraqi army patrol in Mosul killed a civilian and injured three others, including a policeman. In eastern Mosul, gunmen killed a policeman. On Monday: gunmen in east Mosul killed two Iraqi soldiers at a checkpoint. Gunmen in central Mosul opened fire on policemen and killed two. Nearby, police discovered a body bearing bullet wounds to the head and chest. On Wednesday: an armed man threw a hand grenade at a US military patrol in a market in central Mosul and wounded seven civilians. A soldier was wounded when a car bomb targeting an Iraqi army patrol exploded in central Mosul. Nearby, another roadside bomb killed a policeman and wounded one more. In southern Mosul, gunmen killed an off-duty policeman in a drive-by shooting. Police retrieved the body of a woman bearing a gunshot wound to her head from the Tigris River .

 

(Reuters, June 18-24)

Other/Comments

Ninawa province complied with a Ministry of Interior directive that requires all currently employed Iraqi Police to be formally trained by June 2009 after 1,000 Iraqi Police graduated from the Mosul Public Service Academy on May 11. All the officers were hired last year and will continue to serve at the police stations where they were previously posted. (USDOS, May-27)

 

Central/West Regions

Anbar, Diyala, Karbala, Babil, Wasit, Najaf, Qadissiya

Coordination

As a step to operating independently of Coalition Forces under the US-Iraqi Security Agreement, in February, the Multi-National Force-West (MNF-W) transferred responsibility of two observation posts and a patrol base in Anbar province to Iraqi security forces. The MNF-W also closed two other observation posts and a patrol base. (USDOS, Mar-4)

Population

Population of Anbar: 1,485,985

Population of Diyala: 1,560,621

Population of Karbala: 887,858

Population of Babil: 1,651,565

Population of Wasit: 1,064,950

Population of Najaf: 1,081,203

Population of Qadissiya: 990,483

IDP Movement

Internally Displaced Persons (IDPs) by Province/Governorate

 

Province

Individuals displaced

after Feb 2006

Families displaced

after Feb 2006

Families displaced 2003-2005

Families displaced pre-2003

Anbar

51,487

8,876

4,685

218

Diyala

103,426

17,198

6,691

2,409

Karbala

55,962

8,617

1,328

17,490

Babil

77,914

12,799

821

654

Wasit

75,326

12,259

1,960

70

Najaf

58,032

10,140

160

3,833

Qadissiya

26,320

4,111

932

222

(IASC, Iraqi Ministry of Displacement and Migration, IOM, June 2008)

Food

 

No New Information

Health

In Babil province, an anti-cholera initiative has been implemented to prevent future outbreaks of the disease that affected the area significantly in 2008. Already 13 out of 14 new water tanks have been installed. Also, several solar- powered water purification units were bought as well as water tanker trucks in order to transport clean water to remote villages. (USDOS, Apr-8)

Non-Food Items –Shelter

Iraqi agricultural specialists from Anbar province recently returned from a trip to California where they visited California State University at Fresno to learn new irrigation techniques, high saline soil farming and integration with the dairy industry. While there, a memorandum of understanding was established with Fresno and Anbar University to build a working relationship between the two educational centers. (USDOS, Apr-29)

Water & Sanitation

On March 4, local residents, contractors, Iraqi police and US soldiers from the 4th Infantry Division’s 8th Infantry Regiment and the 110th Military Police Company gathered in the city of Diwaniya for the opening ceremony of the new police headquarters in Qada district. Iraqi contractors and workers built the facility with coordination through the US Army Corps of Engineers and the Iraqi government. Army 1st Lt. David Faulkner says the central location provides the station with better command, control and coordination of the collective police force in the district. (American Forces Press Service, Mar-11)

Security

In Anbar province, a man was killed and eight others were wounded, including two police officers, when mortar rounds landed on a house and a police station in southern Ramadi, 62 miles (100 km) west of Baghdad, on Saturday (June-20). A physician and three others were wounded by a roadside bomb in Falluja, 32 miles (50 km) west of Baghdad, on Monday (June-22). 

In Diyala province, three soldiers near the town of Khanaqin, 100 miles (140 km) northeast of Baghdad, were killed by a roadside bomb on Monday.

 (Reuters, June 18-24)  

Other/Comments

 

No New Information

                                                                                                              

 

Baghdad

Baghdad

Coordination

Control of Baghdad’s Green Zone, considered the safest place in Baghdad, has been transferred over to Iraqi security. Iraqi troops now man all checkpoints entering the Green Zone of Iraqi government buildings and foreign embassies. US soldiers are withdrawing from towns and cities this month and are slowly transferring control back to Iraqi security forces. (Reuters, June-16)

Population

Population: 7,145,470

IDP Movement

Internally Displaced Persons (IDPs) by Province/Governorate

 

Current

Historical

 

Province

 Individuals displaced

after Feb 2006

Families displaced

after Feb 2006

Families displaced 2003-2005

Families displaced pre-2003

Baghdad

563,771

92,936

1,586

2,281

(IASC, Iraqi Ministry of Displacement and Migration (MoDM), June 2008)

 

At the end of 2007, Iraq’s MoDM reported that 9,657 IDP families (some 60,000 people) had returned to Baghdad.  The Iraqi Red Crescent stated 46,000 refugees had returned from Syria to Baghdad by the end of December. (IOM, Feb-1)

Food

No New Information

Health

No New Information

Non-Food Items –Shelter

No New Information

Security

On Thursday (June-18), the bodies of four men with gunshot wounds were found by Iraqi security forces in a house under construction in Baghdad’s eastern Sadr City district.

 

On Sunday (June-21), a bomb exploded inside a café in a Shi’ite district of southern Baghdad, killing two people and wounding 13 others.

 

On Monday (June-22), five people were killed and 25 others were wounded when a bomb exploded in a vegetable market in Husseinya located on the northern outskirts of Baghdad. In central Baghdad’s Karrada district, a parked car bomb killed five people and wounded 20. Seven people were killed and 13 others were wounded when a suicide bomber blew himself up outside the Abu Ghraib municipal council building in west Baghdad. In Baghdad’s eastern district of Sadr City, three civilians were killed and 12 others were wounded when a roadside bomb exploded near a police patrol near al-Hamza Square. All the victims were students in a passing minibus. Three people were wounded after a roadside bomb blew up in Baghdad’s eastern district Habibiya district. Another roadside bomb in north Baghdad’s Shaab district killed three and wounded 30. A policeman and a bystander were wounded by a roadside bomb in the Yarmouk district of west-central Baghdad.

 

On Wednesday (June-24), a bomb attached to a motorcycle in eastern Baghdad’s largely Shi’ite Sadr City slum killed 52 people and wounded at least 104 at a popular market.

 

(Reuters, June 18-24)

Water & Sanitation

After three and a half years, US and Iraqi officials opened a water treatment plant in Baghdad’s Sadr City slum on Wednesday (January-21). The US$65 million plant provides water for 200,000 people, which is only a tenth of the population of the vast slum on Baghdad’s eastern outskirts.

(Reuters, Jan-21)

Other/Comments

No New Information

 

South Region

Basrah

Coordination

British forces officially began withdrawing troops from Iraq’s southern province of Basrah on Tuesday (Mar-31), a move that will be a months-long process ending a role that commenced with the US-led invasion of Iraq in 2003. Last year, Baghdad and London signed a deal agreeing that the last 4,100 British soldiers would leave the country by July 31. About 400 British troops will remain in the country as a residual force to train Iraqi security forces. (BBC, Reuters, Mar-31)

Population

Population of Basrah: 1,912,533

IDP Movement

Internally Displaced Persons (IDPs) by Province/Governorate

 

Current

Historical

 

Province

 Individuals displaced

after Feb 2006

Families displaced

after Feb 2006

Families displaced 2003-2005

Families displaced pre-2003

Basrah

35,718

6,031

284

15,494

(IASC, Iraqi Ministry of Displacement and Migration, June 2008)

 

Food

No New Information

Health

No New Information

Non-Food Items –Shelter

An unnamed Iranian firm has been contracted by the Basrah Investment Commission to redevelop parts of Basrah. The US$1.5 billion contract includes the construction of 5,000 new housing units in addition to schools, hospitals, parks, a supermarket and commercial units for up to 2,000 shops. This contract is the largest construction contract given to an Iranian firm since 2003. (USDOS, Feb-25)

Water & Sanitation

The Sadr Teaching Hospital in Basrah had been discharging its raw sewage straight into the Shatt al-Arab River for more than 15 years, but with the assistance of Iraqi officials and coalition forces, a new wastewater treatment plant has officially opened. On April 2, the director of the hospital unveiled the new US$1.9 million wastewater treatment plant that holds 487 beds where about 500 patients are treated daily. According to Taha Mohammed al-Qurashi, chief of Basrah Environmental Directorate, the new treatment facility uses modern technology and is an important step toward a cleaner, healthier community. The US Army Corps of Engineers has finished more than 4,500 projects valued at nearly US$7 billion since 2004. (Govt USA, Apr-9)

 

A US$750,000 rehabilitation project of southern Basrah’s city’s rainwater, drainage and sewage networks has been completed after only six months. Ali Hanon, an official from Basrah’s reconstruction unit, announced the news, highlighting its funding as part of the 2008 provincial development projects program.  (USDOS, Apr-8)

Security

In Basrah province, 260 miles (420 km) southeast of Baghdad, Iraqi security forces backed by coalition forces killed a suspected militant on Saturday (June-20). (Reuters, June-20)

Other/Comments

On December-9, Iraq’s independent electoral commission announced that it plans to collect signatures in support of a referendum to transform the province of Basrah into an autonomous region much like Kurdistan in the north of the country. (Reuters, Dec-9)

 

 


Muthanna, Dhi Qar, Maysan

Coordination

No New Information

Population

Population of Muthanna: 614,997

Population of Dhi Qar: 1,616,226

Population of Maysan (Missan): 824,147

IDP Movement

Internally Displaced Persons (IDPs) by Province/Governorate

 

 

Province

Current

Historical

Individuals displaced

after Feb 2006

Families displaced

after Feb 2006

Families displaced 2003-2005

Families displaced pre-2003

Muthanna

18,351

2,641

437

424

Dhi Qar

47,825

7,138

3,569

657

Maysan

46,948

6,858

406

18,465

(IASC, Iraqi Ministry of Displacement and Migration, June 2008)

 

Food

No New Information

Health

No New Information

Non-Food Items –Shelter

No New Information

Water & Sanitation

No New Information

Security

 

Other/Comments

On April 1, around 500 Iraqis from Dhi Qar and Maysan attended the Jazz Masters concert at the Ziggurat of Ur. The show became a family event with women, who seldom join their spouses on such occasions in this part of Iraq. (USDOS, Apr-15)

 

Neighboring Countries’ Humanitarian Activities/Preparations

 

Jordan

 

According to Xinhua news agency, a UN official revealed in 2008, nearly 20,000 displaced Iraqis in Jordan have resettled to third countries. A majority of them, around 6,990, were sent to the US, Imran Riza, representative of the UN High Commissioner for Refugees representative in Jordan said, adding that 2009 should expect a greater number of relocations. (Xinhua new agency, December-24)

 

Iran

 

Iraqi Foreign Minister Hoshyar Zebari led an Iraqi delegation to Tehran on May 19 to meet with his Iranian counterpart, Manoucheher Mottaki, to discuss border issues, the water crisis and common security threats. He also met with Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad who said ties were improving and urged quick implementation of bilateral agreements between the countries. Ahmadinejad added that the age of “bullying and arrogant powers” had come to an end. (USDOS, May-20)

 

On April 23,  Iran’s official news agency, the Islamic Republic News Agency reported that  Iran and Iraq have agreed to build a pipeline that will feed Iraqi crude oil to an Iranian refinery, in addition to establishing five new oil refineries together. The 32-inch pipeline will carry 50 percent of the crude from Iraq’s southern oil hub in Basrah to be processed at Iran’s Abadan refinery, which has a capacity of 430,000 barrels per day. No timeframe has been set for this project. (AP, April-23)

 

Turkey

 

Kurdish rebels and the Turkish military extended a unilateral ceasefire by six weeks to try to pursue a peaceful resolution to the conflict that has taken 40,000 lives since 1984. The Kurdistan Worker’s Party (PKK) has been battling the Turkish government for independence for 25 years. The original ceasefire was declared on April 14 and was due to expire on Monday (June-1), however, the PKK may extend the truce even longer to September 1 if it believes the government is making progress on solving the political problem. (Reuters, June-1)

 

On Thursday (April 30), Turkey’s military said it had launched air strikes against suspected Kurdistan Worker’s Party (PKK) bases in northern Iraq. The operation was prompted after nine Turkish soldiers were killed by a bomb in southeastern Turkey on April 29. The PKK claimed responsibility for the attack. (Reuters, April-30)

 

Kuwait

 

Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki issued a statement on June 3 for Iraq and Kuwait to resolve their issues through dialogue to try and calm strained ties between the countries. After Kuwaiti Ambassador Ali al-Mumen met with al-Maliki, Maliki said he wanted to “resolve any outstanding issues between the neighbors through a dialogue which guarantees the interests of both parties.” Kuwait is also willing to solve issues with Iraq through diplomatic and official channels, UN Special Representative for Iraq, Staffan de Mistura reported after talking with Kuwaiti Parliament Speaker Jassem al-Khorafi. De Mistura urged both countries to show restraint to prevent straining bilateral ties. (USDOS, June-10)

 

Syria

 

Despite strained political ties between neighbors Syria and Iraq, Syria started a freight train service to Iraq, Reuters reported official media as saying on Sunday (May-31). According to Syria’s al-Thawra newspaper, the line, which is 894 miles (1,430 km) long between the Syrian port of Tartous on the Mediterranean and Baghdad, was inaugurated on Saturday (May-30) and will begin services this month. The estimated journey time will be at least 72 hours, but will be half the cost of road transport. The neighboring country currently hosts hundreds of thousands of Iraqi refugees and had hoped to become a main transit hub to Iraq. Syria got to play that role for a short time following the 2003 US invasion of Iraq. (Reuters, May-31)

 

Saudi Arabia

 

On Thursday (May-28), Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki said Iraq has no intention of making new goodwill gestures towards Saudi Arabia as Maliki’s efforts have been called a sign of weakness by Riyadh, Saudi Arabia’s capital. Bilateral ties between the two countries have been strained since the US-led invasion in 2003 and continue to decline. Al-Maliki’s Shi’ite-led government accuses Riyadh of not taking enough action to prevent its citizens from crossing the border to join the mainly Sunni insurgency. The Agence France-Presse quoted al-Maliki as saying, “There will be no other initiatives on our part as long as there is no sign from Saudi Arabia that it wants to have good ties with Baghdad.” During an April 25 visit to Baghdad, US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton expressed her concerns at the tension between the neighboring countries. (AFP, May-28)