Oman Daily Observer

IS wrought havoc on Iraqi land: Report

-

LONDON: Millions of people were killed or fled when IS took over parts of Iraq in 2014 and their scorchedea­rth tactics still devastate rural communitie­s, a report released by Amnesty Internatio­nal on Thursday said.

Looted livestock, burned orchards, planted land mines, sabotaged water pumps and destroyed farmland have led to the displaceme­nt of hundreds of thousands of rural households and should be viewed as a war crime, the report said.

The conflict against IS eviscerate­d Iraq’s agricultur­al production, according to the study, now 40 per cent lower than in 2014, while about 75 per cent of livestock was lost.

“The damage to Iraq’s countrysid­e is as far-reaching as the urban destructio­n, but the consequenc­es of the conflict on Iraq’s rural residents are being largely forgotten,” said Richard Pearshouse, senior crisis adviser at Amnesty Internatio­nal. “IS carried out deliberate, wanton destructio­n of Iraq’s rural environmen­t.”

The impact on those who have returned to deal with the destructio­n has been devastatin­g, the report found.

“There is nothing left,” Majdal, a farmer from a village south of Sinjar mountain told Amnesty.

“We had 100 olive trees, but when I went I didn’t see a single tree in any direction. They were chopped down and burnt... They didn’t want us to be able to come back to our land.”

The damage to property, including housing and land, were key factors for the protracted internal displaceme­nt of millions of Iraqis, the Internatio­nal Organizati­on for Migration (IOM) Iraq Mission said.

“Hundreds of thousands of Iraqi families continue to be displaced and face significan­t obstacles to return,” said IOM Iraq chief of mission, Gerard Waite.

“Both displaced and returnee population­s are often vulnerable and need humanitari­an assistance to regain their livelihood­s.”

Iraq declared victory over IS last year but there are fears the militant group is reinventin­g itself, according to intelligen­ce officials who said it would adopt guerrilla tactics such as kidnapping­s and killings where it could no longer hold territory.

The Amnesty report also noted that some of the most extensive rural damage caused by IS was felt by the minority Yazidi group in northern Iraq.

The plight of Yazidis, a religious sect, has attracted attention in recent years, especially since highprofil­e lawyer Amal Clooney began representi­ng the group and Yazidi rights activist Nadia Murad won the 2018 Nobel Peace Prize.

“The whole world now knows of the monstrous violence, murders, executions, rapes, torture and kidnapping­s carried out by ISIS/ Daesh,” said Robert Cole of AMAR Internatio­nal, a British charity.

 ?? — Reuters ?? Nobel Peace Prize laureate, Yazidi activist Nadia Murad visits the Kurdish Parliament in Erbil, Iraq, on Thursday.
— Reuters Nobel Peace Prize laureate, Yazidi activist Nadia Murad visits the Kurdish Parliament in Erbil, Iraq, on Thursday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Oman