Good morning, honourable members of Parliament.
My name is Alda Benjamen, and I'm a representative of the Assyrian, Chaldean, Syriac Student Union of Canada, or ACSSU of Canada. Our organization was founded in 1999, and it has since established branches in most Canadian universities, focusing on assisting immigrant students to integrate into the Canadian system and enhance their level of education. I am a byproduct of this union. With their support, I obtained a Bachelor of Science, become an intermediate public school teacher, and I have now returned to graduate school in near and middle eastern civilization studies at the University of Toronto.
I thank you for taking this opportunity to discuss the issue of Iraq refugees. I will attempt to share information and statistics from various human rights supports, ACSSU's communications through grassroots civil society organizations in Iraq, and my personal trip to Iraq in the summer of 2007, where I conducted research on civil society organizations. My focus will be on the Assyrians, who are also known as Chaldeans and Syriacs, and are herein referred to as ChaldoAssyrians.
ChaldoAssyrians are the indigenous people of Iraq and speak Neo-Aramaic, or Syriac, the language spoken by Jesus Christ. They embraced Christianity in the first century and have numerous monasteries in Iraq dating back to the fourth and seventh centuries. They played a critical role in building the Islamic civilization, especially during the Abbasid period, and they were heavily involved in the translation movement from Greek to Syriac to Arabic. They have endured numerous atrocities and genocides in the past, making them a minority in their indigenous lands and reducing their numbers.
In current times, and due to their ethnic and religious background, they have been severely targeted. Although they constitute 5% of Iraq's population, they make up 20% of the Iraqi refugees in neighbouring countries. One in three ChaldoAssyrians is a refugee, and the IDP figures in all of Iraq show a greater internal dislocation.
Why are they leaving?
The first reason is Islamic extremism. ChaldoAssyrians in the Dora district of Baghdad, for example, in March and April of 2007, were given these options: convert to Islam; pay Jiza, which is a non-Muslim tax; give a daughter or sister in marriage to a Muslim; leave; or die. In a matter of months the neighbourhood that was home to 20,000 ChaldoAssyrian families was completely ethnically cleansed. Other stories include the killing of clergy, bombing of churches, abductions, beheadings, literal crucifixions, and rapes of ChaldoAssyrian women.
The second reason is discriminatory policies in the Kurdish Democratic Party. The United States Department of State's Annual Report on International Religious Freedom for 2006 alleges that the Kurdish regional government continues to engage in discriminatory behaviour against religious minorities. Minorities living in the areas of north Mosul such as Yazidis and Christians asserted that the KRG encroached on their property, eventually building Kurdish settlements on the confiscated land, further arresting minorities without due process, denying service to some villages, and preventing the employment of non-KDP or PUK party members.
The Iraq Sustainable Democracy Project conducted a field mission with the Iraqi refugees in Syria, Jordan, and Lebanon in March 2007. Here are a few of their responses: “There are signs everywhere, and reminders brought to our doors--even delivered with bullets and/or blood--stating that Iraq is not for Christians any longer.” Another person said: “I tried to go to the north, to the Nineveh Plains or the Kurdistan Region in Iraq. I could not get a job, I had to join the Kurdish Democratic Party to work.” And yet a third person: “The north would be nice, but there is nothing there for us, nothing developed to survive there. If it was developed to allow us to live, I would stay.”
With respect to the situation of students who are part of the ChaldoAssyrian Student and Youth Union of Iraq, during interviews with various branches of the ChaldoAssyrian Student and Youth Union, they disclosed that their members faced difficulty in attending schools since they have no security measures in their towns and schools. Due to this, many decide to leave the country. For example, I interviewed a student from Baghdeda/Qaraqosh, a Christian town located in the Nineveh Plains, near Mosul. This young man described the day that he, along with seven other ChaldoAssyrian students, were abducted on their way to school. Their parents had to pay heavy ransoms. Until this day, no security official has recorded the incident or interviewed them--until this day.
On Canada's role in Iraq, Canada needs to make sure that Iraq continues to be an ethno-religiously diverse and multicultural country. The ChaldoAssyrian Christians, along with other minorities, are an integral part of Iraq and will enable it to be a pluralistic society rather than governed by national or religious fundamentalists.
Temporary assistance includes a careful examination of the situation of Iraqi refugees in which hasty and priority access is to be afforded to the most vulnerable refugees, who include, inter alia, widows and those who have been tortured, abducted, and raped.
Effective Canadian assistance, preventive measures. In 2003 the Government of Canada committed $3 million in the effort to assist Iraq in its reconstruction. This assistance emphasized three parts, which if used effectively and extended to the real minorities of the country, can prevent ethnic and religious cleansing and decrease the refugee problem.
The first objective Canada committed to was helping Iraq rebuild its social and economic base. We propose that the Canadian government extend this objective to the Nineveh Plains as well.
The Nineveh Plains is an area in the Nineveh governorate that is famous for Mosul city. The Nineveh Plains is the ancient homeland of ChaldoAssyrians and home to Iraq's real minorities, such as the Yezidis and the Shabaks. According to the Assyrian Society, a charitable organization in Iraq, approximately 15,000 internally displaced ChaldoAssyrian families are currently residing there. Using the five per family average, the total will be 75,000 people. Since this area has always been home to minorities, the previous Baath government did not care to invest much in it, a situation that is currently repeating itself.
Therefore, the Nineveh Plains already lack the needed infrastructure to sustain its existing population, let alone take thousands of IDP families. At the end of 2006 and the beginning of 2007, the Nineveh Center for Research and Development, a civil society organization in the Nineveh Plains, conducted a survey of the IDPs in this region.
Due to the lack of basic needs, 71% of the IDPs stated that their current situation encouraged them to become refugees outside of Iraq, while 75% stated that they know family and friends who would move to the Nineveh Plains if housing or work were available.
Canadian funding should be directed to an NGO or a grassroots organization such as the Assyrian Aid Society and Babylon Charitable Society, located conveniently in the Nineveh Plains, to provide food, create jobs, build basic infrastructure, the basic necessities of life.
Canada's second commitment to Iraq is to help Iraq develop effective governance and security structures, ensure respect for human rights and the rule of law, and promote gender equality. We also propose the implementation of this objective in the Nineveh Plains. This can be achieved by training security officials from among the inhabitants of the Nineveh Plains, who are willing and ready. This will ensure the physical security of these minorities indiscriminately. This will avoid the politically motivated security forces currently in the Nineveh Plains, which are responsible for various human rights violations and the overall instability and insecurity of the region.
Canada's third commitment—