Returning Home Is No Easy Solution for Displaced Iraqis
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Apr 11, 2008
IOM Press Briefing Notes

Returning Home Is No Easy Solution for Displaced Iraqis -
Assessments by Iraq's Ministry for Displacement and Migration (MoDM) and IOM
of Iraqis having returned to their original homes from internal
displacement or asylum abroad reveal that return has not brought them relief
from the humanitarian crisis they suffered during their displacement.

Priority needs among the 5,200 people assessed by IOM monitors out of
nearly 78,200 returnees identified so far across the country are food,
fuel, non-food items and access to health care and medications.

In the first of IOM reports focusing exclusively on the monitoring and
needs assessment of returnees, nearly two-thirds of identified returns
were to Baghdad with March 2007 as the peak month for returning.

Almost half of these returnees said they only had an intermittent
access to government food rations which were largely insufficient to meet
their needs.

For those returning to Baghdad, lack of access to health care was the
worst of any region at 70 per cent with the national average still high
at 56 per cent. Shortage of health facilities and medications and a
lack of finances were the main reasons cited.

Although the vast majority of returnees had returned to their original
house (84 per cent), many properties had sustained significant damage
and lost or stolen belongings including furniture, highlighting a
significant need for property assistance.

In Baghdad, where most property disputes occur over occupied houses,
the resettlement of returnees is currently being handled on an ad hoc
basis by various authorities. Any future large scale returns would
necessitate setting up a comprehensive policy and mechanism in order to avoid
renewed tensions.

Although identified returns so far constitute less than one per cent of
the total displaced Iraqi population (an estimated five million
internally displaced people and refugees), monitors had observed an increase
in returns in March prior to the recent violence in Basra, Baghdad and
elsewhere that outstripped the capacity of the MoDM and local
authorities to identify all locations. Therefore, real figures for returns are
likely to be higher.

"The situation for those returning is grim and isn't necessarily an
improvement from when they were displaced. Many returnees are unemployed
while only a fraction have received any form of humanitarian assistance
other than some food rations," said Rafiq Tschannen, IOM's Chief of
Mission for Iraq.

"Although efforts are being made to help returnees really get back on
their feet, intensifying these efforts is major challenge for all the
humanitarian agencies as well as the Iraqi government. IOM is working
closely with the MoDM to ensure assistance reaches a much greater number
of returnees and our reports on the monitoring and assessment needs of
returnees will go a long way to making sure we all get the right kind of
help to those who need it."


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