Good.
I have four points I thought perhaps the committee might not be aware of.
The first one is that the present campaign to liberate Mosul from Daesh so far appears to be much better at avoiding civilian casualties than past offensives in such towns as Ramadi, Fallujah, Sinjar, and so forth. For an operation of this nature, it is remarkable that they have managed to avoid so many civilian casualties. I think part of it has to do with not allowing the Shiite militias into certain areas. We'll see whether that changes as we move forward.
The second point is with regard to the Syrian Kurdish cantons run by the PYD in what the Kurds refer to as Rojava. I think we need a subtle understanding of how they are operating. They have been excellent with various ethnicities, religious groups, and women. They have been by far the most tolerant and liberal and accepting of all these groups and have been protecting them, actually, including secular Sunni Arabs fleeing other parts of Syria.
The matters in which they are less tolerant and have been more repressive are those involving competing political parties and groups; they have very little tolerance for other political groups operating within areas they control.
We have human rights reports from their areas from last year or a year and a half ago from Human Rights Watch, for instance, that allege systematic destruction of Sunni Arab homes in villages and towns liberated from ISIS. They have replied to these reports and have denied the allegations vehemently. I'm not sure whether the truth lies somewhere in the middle, but I will point out that we have those reports because they invite the human rights monitors to enter the areas they control, which in a relative sense makes them much better than the other parts of Syria, where the human rights monitors can't even operate.
The third point is in regard to the Yazidis. There has been a change within the Yazidi community since Daesh attacked their towns and villages and forced so many of them into IDP and also refugee status. The community used to ostracize female members who had been raped. They were pushed out of their Yazidi community. This has changed. So many fell victim to ISIS that the Yazidi Pirs—the elders—along with other members of the community changed their approach to this issue, and they no longer ostracize them.
The fourth and final point regards the financial crisis in the Kurdistan region of Iraq. The combination of plummeting oil prices, the cut-off in budget from Baghdad, the war against Daesh, and the IDP and refugee influx have really made it very difficult.
I live in a community of normal houses that is mostly of refugees from Mosul and Baghdad, a bit outside of Erbil. This isn't a camp; it's all IDPs. On my way into Erbil almost every day, I pass IDP camps such as the Baharka camp. They are full to capacity. Roughly 40% of the population in the Kurdistan region of Iraq are IDPs or refugees, which gives it the highest per capita anywhere in the world of refugees and IDPs, and it doesn't have the money to adequately address their needs.
I'll leave it there.
Feel free to ask me your questions in French. If I can, I'll answer in French.
I would ask you to specify the time period you're referring to, the place, whether it's the Kurdistan region of Iraq or the part of Iraq ruled by Baghdad, or which territory in Syria—that ruled by ISIS or the Free Syrian army, or the Rojava Kurdish region—and which group you're referring to in the question, to make sure I don't misunderstand anything.