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04/10/2007
Contacts: Kristele Younes
and Nir Rosen
ri@refugeesinternational.org or 202.828.0110
Iraq’s internally displaced are in desperate need of assistance as the
Public Distribution System (PDS) that they and other Iraqis depend on
for food and fuel is broken. Poor management is to blame for its
shortcomings, as well as terrible security and a general lack of
political will on the part of the Government of Iraq to acknowledge the
scope of the crisis. With the central government unable or at times
unwilling to protect and assist Iraqi civilians, donor governments must
step in to fill the gaps. Reform of the PDS should be a priority, and
agencies such as the US Department of Agriculture and the UN World Food
Program (WFP) must provide the technical assistance required to ensure
the system is once again fully functional and able to reach the most
vulnerable Iraqis.
Under the former regime of Saddam Hussein every Iraqi had the right to
receive rations through the PDS system established during the sanctions
period in the context of the Oil for Food program that began in 1995.
Run by the Iraqi Ministry of Trade, the PDS was one of the most
efficient institutions of the Iraqi state. Iraq, which had once been a
net exporter of food, depended on imports, importing up to four hundred
and eighty tons of food per month before the war. Eighty percent of
Iraqis benefited from the PDS and for sixty percent of Iraqis the food
basket was their only source of outside support. Ministry of Trade
distribution warehouses throughout the country fed local branches. Each
family had a card it redeemed in the neighborhood PDS branch. The
family was tied to that branch alone.
Following the American-led military coalition’s overthrow of the former
regime, the Oil for Food program was interrupted. The UN World Food
Program (WFP) stepped in to fill the void, supporting the existing
infrastructure. After the war, food rations became more important than
ever. There were fewer jobs and no salaries.
The new Iraqi government was able to resume running the PDS and its
efficiency meant that in 2004, as the Iraqi elections were being
organized for January 2005, the PDS rolls supplied the data used for
voter registration. The quality of the data was remarkably accurate.
Ninety percent of people found themselves on the list, though there was
a 20 percent error rate in details such as date of birth and place of
birth. Food was simply swapped for ballots. Thus the PDS cards acquired
a new political significance, and this significance still lasts today,
even though the cards are technically separated.
With around one million Iraqis internally displaced before the March
2003 war and the additional recent displacement of nearly one million
Iraqis due to factional violence, the PDS system is now more important
than ever to reach these vulnerable people, who often have no source of
livelihood. The effectiveness and efficiency of the PDS, however, have
declined significantly. Roads throughout Iraq have become increasingly
treacherous as the result of criminal gangs and militias. This has
meant that PDS supply trucks are often unable to reach their destined
governorates, leaving much of the country cut off. Administrative
corruption has weakened the efficiency of the distribution system.
Those supply convoys that do reach their destination often carry only
limited amounts of the PDS basket, with key items missing.
Like other UN agencies, the WFP views its role as supporting the Iraqi
government. Thus, its assistance programs are managed by the
government, and it does not act unilaterally or against the
government’s will. Taking over the management of the crumbling PDS
would be another indicator that the Iraqi state is failing, and WFP and
other agencies are reluctant to take any step that would suggest this
is the case.
The situation in the three northern governorates of Erbil, Dohuk and
Suleimaniya illustrates the vulnerability of internally displaced
people as the result of their inability to access the Public
Distribution System. These three governorates, often referred to as
Kurdistan by the Kurds who make up their majority, have been an
exception to the violence in the rest of Iraq. As a result many
internally displaced Iraqis, at least 150,000 in the estimate of
Refugees International, have sought shelter there. They all had to seek
permission from the Kurdish authorities prior to gaining access to the
north.
These internally displaced Iraqis represent all segments of Iraqi
society. They are Kurds from other parts of Iraq such as Mosul, Baghdad
or Diyala; they are also Christians, Turkmans, and Sunni and Shiite
Arabs. Some fled the general state of violence while others fled direct
threats. Many could not take their belongings with them. Most rent
houses or apartments at prices far higher than what they were
accustomed to. Most are also unable to find work. There are few support
networks or organizations providing help to these needy Iraqis. The PDS
would be more important than ever, but it does not reach those Iraqis
internally displaced in the three northern governorates.
In late February and early March, Refugees International visited
numerous internally displaced people in the cities and villages of the
three northern governorates, and interviewed government officials,
local authorities and representatives of the United Nations and
non-governmental organizations that provide aid. Based on these visits
and meetings, Refugees International believes that virtually none of
the post-2003 internally displaced people in the three northern
governorates have access to the PDS, putting them in a dire financial
situation. “Without the monthly food rations, I don’t know how to feed
my children,” a Sunni Arab woman from Baghdad told RI. Because
the PDS cards for each Iraqi family are tied to a specific location,
when a family relocates it must apply at its local PDS branch for the
transfer of its card, which must then be processed at the Ministry of
Trade before the new PDS branch is notified.
The insecurity and violence that have caused so many Iraqis to flee
prevent them from returning to the very neighborhoods they fled in
order to apply for the PDS transfer. As a result, most of the displaced
in the north manage to obtain some of their PDS rations only on rare
occasions when relatives send the rations to them or when they pay
others to collect the rations. Although some have tried to transfer
their PDS registration cards, none have succeeded.
This can be attributed in part to the difficulties the Iraqi government
faces operating in such a restrictive security environment. The
insurgency has cut off governorates and government offices from one
another. Security concerns dominate all other priorities.
But Refugees International is concerned that there are also political
reasons preventing the transfer of PDS cards to new locations. Iraqi
authorities are in denial about the extent of the violence and
displacement, maintaining that it is a small scale and temporary
problem. As such they are reluctant to initiate a process that
could enshrine the displacement, potentially encouraging the displaced
to view their new locations as permanent. Given Iraq’s sectarian and
ethnic strife, any demographic shifts are inherently laden with
political implications. Both the Iraqi government, dominated as it is
by a Shiite coalition, and the Kurdish government in the north are
reluctant to lose their constituencies due to the displacement.
Because the PDS cards are also the basis for voter registration, and
Iraqis vote according to the location where they are registered, any
transfer of the PDS card could conceivably allow Iraqis to vote in
their new locations. This is something the Kurdish authorities, facing
a wave of Arab migration from the south, are particularly sensitive
about. Refugees International has been told that Shiite IDPs who have
fled from other parts of Iraq to the south have on occasion been
successful in changing their PDS locations, perhaps because the
Shiite-dominated government is sympathetic to their plight and they
have moved into friendly Shiite-dominated governorates.
Therefore, Refugees International recommends that:
Iraq: U.S. Response to Displacement Remains Inadequate
Iraq: Time to Acknowledge and Address the Displacement Crisis
Refugees International Urges Concrete Action at International Conference on Iraqi Refugees
Reuters: Iraq takes step to meeting U.S. election benchmark
Iraq: The World's Fastest Growing Displacement Crisis
Iraq & Egypt: February mission to Assess Displacement of Iraqis
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