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Syrian Refugees Are Stung by a Hostile Reception in Iraq

PostPosted: Fri Aug 10, 2012 5:07 pm
Author: talsor
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QAIM, Iraq — Muhammed Muafak decided he had had enough when Syrian Army mortar shells struck near his house while his family was having the iftar meal to end the daily Ramadan fast. He packed up his 10-member household in Bukamal, the Syrian border town where they lived, and fled here to this Iraqi border town.
He expected a warm welcome. After all, his country had taken in 1.2 million Iraqis during their recent war, far more than any of Iraq’s other neighbors, and had allowed them to work, send their children to public schools and receive state medical care.

Instead, Mr. Muafak found himself and his family locked up in a school under guard with several hundred other Syrians, forbidden to leave to visit relatives in Iraq or to do anything else.

“We wish to go back to Syria and die there instead of living here in this prison,” said Abdul Hay Majeed, another Syrian held in a school building, along with 11 family members. Mr. Majeed was refused permission for that either, he and other refugees said.

Alone among Syria’s Muslim neighbors, Iraq is resisting receiving refugees from the conflict, and is making those who do arrive anything but comfortable. Baghdad is worried about the fighters of a newly resurgent Al Qaeda flowing both ways across the border, and about the Sunni opponents of the two governments making common cause.

Re: Syrithe an Refugees Are Stung by a Hostile Reception in

PostPosted: Fri Aug 10, 2012 5:14 pm
Author: alan131210
the arab world will not forget iraq's hostility towards syrians and the support milky showed for assad, a time will come for the same way of liberating the sunni region of iraq if the iranian province of iraq refuses to let the sunnis a federal region like kurdistan, it is stll unclear what the sunnis want after kurdistan divorces iraq, but i read on awene news that allawi has now finally come to the idea of iraq becoming 3 separate states.