BAGHDAD: Tens of thousands of Iraqis have fled their homes or the country since the bombing of shrines of Imam Ali Naqi and Imam Hassan Askari in Samarra on February 23. At least 30,000 Iraqis have been displaced from their homes since then, the International Organisation for Migration (IOM) says.

The IOM, a leading international organisation that works on migration issues closely with United Nations agencies, says the number of fleeing refugees is increasing as more people begin to feel unsettled by the violence. The IOM estimate is in line with that of Iraq’s Ministry of Displacement and Migration. But this is only an official estimate. Many believe the number is far larger.

Iraqis have been fleeing their country for long. More than a million had left under the regime of military dictator Saddam Hussein. Under Saddam Iraqis fled the country for economic as well as political reasons. Under the occupation now, the primary cause of migration is a complete breakdown of security. Iraqis have much to be worried about, from lack of social services such as electricity and clean water, to rampant crime plaguing Baghdad and Iraq as a whole.

So far, wealthy families had been leaving homes and the country more than others. But since the Samarra bombing, many lower income Iraqis have begun to change neighbourhoods. Sunnis and Shias are moving to areas dominated by their own sects. Iraqis fleeing the country have left mostly for Amman in Jordan. By official estimates, Amman now has more than half a million Iraqi refugees. Unofficial estimates put the number at one to two million.

“During the war we left Baghdad for Amman because there was such heavy bombardment of Baghdad,” 35-year-old Sundus al-Mashdani told IPS. “When the war ended we returned to our house in Baghdad, but we found US troops there, and they refused to leave.” Last year Sundus returned to Amman with her three children. Baghdad resident Osama Bahnam plans to leave. “I have been thinking about this for the last two years, but now I’m serious because of the killing between Sunni and Shias,” he said. “We can’t sleep at night, we all worry, there’s killing every day, just because of being Sunni or Shia.”

“I have lived in Adhamiya in peace,” Uday Dakhil, a Shia who lives in the Sunni Adhamiya neighbourhood with his Sunni wife told IPS. “I have many friends, and we never asked each other before if we are Sunni or Shia. One week ago my Sunni friends asked me to leave Adhamiya for some days, because they feared I might be killed.” Dakhil spoke of mysterious dangers. “There are many strange groups killing Shia people who live in Adhamiya, and they also do the same in Shia areas, killing Sunnis who live there.” Ammar Hussein, whose Sunni uncle was shot dead while out shopping in Shula, a predominantly Shia area of Baghdad, says the city is in the hands of militias.

Amid such tension and violence, many Iraqis still hope that calm will return, and that many who fled the country will come back. Sundus says Jordan is safe, but her heart is in Iraq. “I hope my country will be safe soon, and all of the Iraqis will come back to Iraq.”—Dawn/IPS News Service

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