Gareth Browne
Barzani and the KDP abandoned us, the only Yazidis that support them now are the ones they are paying. We don’t want to be with them, we don’t want their referendum, a Yazidi student says.
The world is slowly becoming aware of the plight of Iraq’s minorities, and yesterday US Secretary of State Rex Tillerson toldreporters that “ISIS is clearly responsible for genocide against Yazidis, Christians and Shia Muslims”.
one in the discourse of US officials, reserved only for the most serious of cases. But even with the international community awaking to the plight of Iraq’s minorities – especially the Yazidis and Christians, the path of their recovery is far from clear.
Now with a referendum on Kurdish independence looming, minority groups’ qualms with both the Baghdad and Erbil governments are becoming all the more prominent, and the minorities are refusing to see their concerns go ignored.
Iraq’s Christian community has dwindled in recent years. Once home to some 1.5 million Christians, the country now boasts a population of barely 250,000, according to a recent report by the World Council of Churches.
Dozens more are leaving every week for new lives in North America and Europe, but the ones who have remained do not appear convinced by the Kurdish case for independence.
In July, Kurdistan Regional Government (KRG) authorities forcefully removed elected Assyrian mayor Ayez Abed Jawahreh, only to replace her with a Kurdish figure more friendly to the ruling Kurdish Democratic Party’s (KDP) agenda. Although there were murmurs of corruption on Jawahreh’s part, no evidence was presented and many believe it was just an exercise in restricting opposition to the KDP’s agenda.
Diana Sarkisian, an Assyrian human rights activist, suggested “this removal and meddling in the political leadership in Alqosh has shown how little minorities are respected by the KRG”.
Assyrians quickly gathered in Al-Qosh to protest, and the Kurdish flag was notably absent from their demonstrations, with the Iraqi one instead proudly held up by many of those present. Assyrians further voiced their disagreement with referendum at an event involving the KRG’s representative to the United States in Washington earlier this month. Protesters rushed the stage holding aloft placards such as “KRG is not a democracy” and “Assyrians say no to referendum”.
Sarkisian added that most of the Assyrians in Iraq wanted to remain so, in an “independent province” similar to “that of the KRG”, but that obviously it was for the people to decide for themselves.
One minority that has received far greater attention from the Iraqi and Kurdish governments is the Yazidis. The victims of the world’s latest genocide have been widely courted by Barzani’s KDP party, which traditionally attempts to portray itself as something of a protector of minorities.
Indeed Haydar Shasho, the head of the YBS, or Sinjar Resistance Units, a Yazidi militia charged with defending Yazidi homelands in Northern Iraq, went as far as saying that the genocide carried out against the Yazidi people by the Islamic State group “would not have happened” if there had been an independent Kurdistan.
The Iraqi parliament’s sole Yazidi MP, Vian Dakhil, has also aligned with the KDP-led push for Kurdish independence, suggesting that an independent Kurdistan would be a “beacon of hope and stability”.
However this is a far cry from the perspective of most Yazidis, who feel that Barzani’s Kurdish Peshmerga – who fled their defensive positions in Sinjar in August 2014 as IS approached – abandoned the Yazidis in their hour of need.
Several weeks after IS’ capture of Mosul, the jihadists marched on Sinjar, and the thousands of Peshmerga charged with maintaining security withdrew without a fight. What subsequently took place has been labelled genocide by the United Nations – as many as 5,000 were executed and 7,000 women and children were kidnapped and exploited as sex slaves by IS fighters and officials.
As Hishah Bashir, a Yazidi student now living in Erbil, said: “Barzani and the KDP abandoned us, the only Yazidis that support them now are the ones they are paying. We don’t want to be with them, we don’t want their referendum.” He added: “If we stay with Baghdad, at least we can push for a federal or independent Yazidi province in Sinjar and Nineveh. The Kurds will never give us that; they want full control over everything.”
Source: eKurd.com