Iraq: Palestinians Targeted With Death Threats
Iraqi Government Must Protect Besieged Community
(New York, October 6, 2006) Shi`a armed groups have threatened to kill Palestinian refugees living in Baghdad if they do not leave Iraq within 72 hours, Human Rights Watch said today.
Human Rights Watch urged the Iraqi government and the Multi-National Forces
to investigate these threats and provide greater security to Palestinians
in Iraq.
A new leaflet obtained by Human Rights Watch and bearing the name of the Al-Bayt
Revenge Brigade Rapid Response Units states that there is no place for Palestinians
in the Iraq of Ali, Hassan, and Hussain. The names refer to three revered
Shi`a imams; in contrast, virtually all Palestinians are Sunni Muslim. The
leaflet also warns that our swords can reach necks and urges Palestinians
to leave within 72 hours and fight occupation in your own country, referring
to Israel and the Occupied Palestinian Territories.
According to Baghdad residents, trucks with loudspeakers passed through the
al-Dura neighborhood on September 25 and September 30 issuing death threats
against Palestinians.
These death threats to Palestinians underscore the constant violence against
Palestinian refugees in Iraq in the aftermath of the overthrow of Saddam Hussein's
government, said Sarah Leah Whitson, Middle East director at Human Rights
Watch. The Iraqi government and international forces in Iraq must take urgent
steps to protect this community at risk.
Armed groups in Iraq have killed dozens of Palestinian refugees since 2003.
Last month, Human Rights Watch documented killings, threats of violence and
other security concerns of the estimated 34,000 Palestinian refugees in Iraq
in the report, Nowhere to
Flee: The Perilous Situation of Palestinians in Iraq.
Over the past two years, successive Iraqi governments have done little to
protect Palestinian refugees and have often displayed open hostility to them,
claiming they are involved in terrorism and supporting the insurgency. Officials
in Iraq?s ministry of interior have arbitrarily arrested, beaten, tortured
and, in a few cases, been implicated in the forcible disappearance of Palestinian
residents. Moreover, the interior ministry has imposed onerous registration
requirements on Palestinians, forcing them to constantly renew short-term
residency permits. The ministry also subjects Palestinians to harassment rather
than affording them the treatment they are entitled to because of their status
as refugees, which was formally recognized by the Iraqi government.
The Iraqi government and the U.S.-led forces must provide adequate security
to the Palestinian community in Baghdad, Whitson said. The Iraqi government
has a duty to investigate and prosecute those responsible for attacks and
continued threats against Palestinians.
Human Rights Watch urged neighboring countries, including Jordan and Syria,
to open their borders to Palestinian refugees fleeing Iraq. The international
community should provide financial assistance to the host countries and offer
third-country resettlement opportunities.
Jordan and Syria have provided refuge to hundreds of thousands of Iraqi citizens
fleeing Iraq, but they have closed their borders to Palestinian refugees from
Iraq, Whitson said. When neighboring countries reject Palestinians fleeing
serious threats in Iraq, they are forcibly returning them to persecution.
The Human Rights Watch report of October 2005, A
Face and a Name: Civilian Victims of Insurgent Groups in Iraq, documented
widespread unlawful attacks by insurgent groups against Iraqi and other civilians
from different ethnic and religious groups.