Among the impoverished Iraqi refugees queuing for food aid at a Catholic
charity in Damascus stands 65-year-old Hirmiz Hanna, puzzled and upset at his
fate.
Now retired, he worked all his life at the state oil company in Kirkuk. His wife
and three children have university degrees. The Christian family was relatively
well off until death threats forced them to abandon their home and flee to Syria
a year ago.
"I've come here to get some assistance, some food. Anything will do, it will
help," Hanna said in fluent English. The centre run by the Caritas relief agency
had offered him food vouchers worth 1,500 Syrian pounds ($30) a month for six
months.
"But for how long do we stay here? We can't go back to Iraq. We'll be killed en
route," he said, waiting in jacket and tie at a church annex in the shabby
Jaramana area, swamped with Iraqis.
Syria says it now hosts 1.4 million Iraqi "guests" who have fled the relentless
violence unleashed by the U.S.-led invasion that toppled Iraqi leader Saddam
Hussein in 2003.
"We expected to live freely like the rest of the world after the liberation, or
invasion, but unfortunately it turned out the other way round. We wanted
freedom, but we didn't want it that way," said Hanna. "Now we need to leave
Syria, to emigrate."
But the West's doors are largely closed to Iraqi refugees, while Syria and
Jordan, the main host countries, are finding the strain on their own limited
resources increasingly irksome.
SURVIVAL SEX
Middle-class Iraqis like Hanna face the creeping humiliation of poverty as the
savings they brought with them are exhausted.
Many of their poorer compatriots are already desperate. Some have even resorted
to prostitution, despite the shame attached.
"We are defining it as survival sex," said Sybella Wilkes, spokeswoman for the
U.N. High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR). "If these families had any other
option, they wouldn't put their girls, their daughters, sisters, into commercial
sex."
She said a programme to identify and help such families was still in the
planning stages, although UNHCR was supporting a small shelter for women victims
run by nuns in Damascus.
Iraqis are still streaming over the Syrian border, sometimes at a rate of 1,000
a day, each bringing tales of the misery, sectarian bloodshed and insecurity
that have uprooted them.
At a UNHCR registration centre near Damascus, a man who gave his name as Adnan,
25, said he had fled Iraq two days earlier.
"I worked for the police in Mosul. The terrorists couldn't get me so they went
for my brother. They killed him with eight bullets," he said, his blue eyes
shifting nervously around him.
"He has a wife and two children, but they just shot him in the street," said
Adnan, who is of mixed Arab-Kurdish parentage.
Thin and pale, he described how a suicide bomber had struck on his first day at
the police station. "It broke everything. Eight of my friends were killed. Some
were cut in half."
Another brother still works for Iraqi television in Mosul, despite death
threats. "He can't leave his job," Adnan said.
His mother and sisters have left the northern city for the relative safety of
Dohuk, in Iraqi Kurdistan.
"It's okay for me in Syria, but I have no money and I can't help my family,"
Adnan said. "I'm worried about my brother, about my family. I'm worried about
all Iraqi people."
CALMING FEARS
Only about 88,000 Iraqi refugees in Syria have registered with UNHCR, including
more than 11,000 needing special protection because they have suffered violence
or torture.
"We aren't telling everyone they must get registered. It's not going to affect
their residence or get them a work permit -- we say all Iraqis should have the
right to stay and not to be forcibly returned to Iraq," Wilkes said.
"But it helps us to identify those that need our help and it makes many Iraqis
feel safer to be recognised and registered with UNHCR," she added.
One such is Rafi al-Ani, 56, who has lived in Syria since 2001, when he moved
here from the western Iraqi city of Ramadi to run a business exporting
laboratory equipment to Iraq.
Now he fears his residence permit might not be renewed and he has come for an
appointment with UNHCR.
"This is the first time I register as a refugee. I feel humiliated, it's like
begging somehow," Ani confided.
Without work for several years, Ani has survived by buying and selling houses in
Damascus. But his capital is dwindling.
"If it was safe, I would go back to Iraq tomorrow. We have a house directly on
the Euphrates with a nice view. Here we live in a small, dirty flat. We're not
used to living like this."
(Reuters)