Posts

Showing posts with the label Minorities

Iraq Before the UN Human Rights Council: Promises Without Accountability

Image
Iraq Before the UN Human Rights Council: Promises Without Accountability By Hussein Zainulabdeen | Independent Researcher — Iraqi Minority Rights | husseinmonitor.com In January 2025, Iraq appeared before the United Nations Human Rights Council for its fourth Universal Periodic Review — a moment that should have marked a turning point. It did not. The UPR process, designed to hold governments accountable to their international human rights obligations, produced 263 recommendations from 93 countries. Iraq accepted 181 of them. On paper, that looks like progress. In practice, it continues a pattern that anyone who has watched Iraq's human rights record knows well: accept the recommendations, ignore the implementation. What the UN Recommended The recommendations issued to Iraq in January 2025 were not new. Many had appeared in the previous cycle — in 2019 — and in the cycle before that. They included: Imposing a moratorium on executions and ending the use of th...

Iraq's Minorities and the Constitution: Rights on Paper, Reality on the Ground

Image
Iraq's Minorities and the Constitution: Rights on Paper, Reality on the Ground By Hussein Zainulabdeen | Independent Researcher — Iraqi Minority Rights | husseinmonitor.com "The laws guarantee rights, but they are not applied." These words came not from a foreign critic or an opposition activist, but from Jabbar Awaid al-Karbouli, head of the Erbil office of the Iraqi High Commission for Human Rights — the body officially responsible for monitoring rights protection in Iraq. When the state's own human rights institution describes implementation failure as the defining problem, the gap between constitutional promise and lived reality is not a matter of interpretation. It is a documented institutional verdict. Iraq's 2005 constitution contains significant protections for minorities. It guarantees freedom of religion. It protects administrative, political, cultural, and educational rights. It declares Iraq a country of multiple nationalities, religio...

Transitional Justice in Iraq: Illusion or Reality?

Image
Transitional Justice in Iraq: Illusion or Reality? By Hussein Zainulabdeen | Independent Researcher — Iraqi Minority Rights | husseinmonitor.com Iraq has had 23 amnesties between 1975 and 2016. It has had dozens of prosecutions, multiple truth commissions, a special tribunal for Saddam Hussein, a Yazidi Survivors Law, and years of UNITAD investigations. It has received hundreds of UN recommendations on accountability and human rights reform. It has accepted most of them. And yet, for the survivors of Iraq's worst atrocities — the Yazidi genocide, the Turkmen massacres, the Christian displacement, the Shabak and Mandaean persecution — justice remains largely theoretical. Not coming soon. Not delayed. Theoretical. The question worth asking in 2024 is not whether Iraq has transitional justice mechanisms. It does. The question is whether those mechanisms have produced anything that survivors would recognize as justice. The Gap Between Law and Reality The Internat...

Kirkuk After the Agreement: Has the Conflict Really Ended?

Image
Kirkuk After the Agreement: Has the Conflict Really Ended? By Hussein Zainulabdeen | Independent Researcher — Iraqi Minority Rights | husseinmonitor.com Kirkuk has been called "an ethnic powder keg waiting to explode." In August and September 2023, it came closer to that explosion than at any point since 2017 — and the fuse was lit not by armed groups or foreign interference, but by a political decision made in Baghdad. When Prime Minister al-Sudani ordered Iraqi security forces to hand over a building in Kirkuk city to the Kurdistan Democratic Party, Arab and Turkmen residents took to the streets. Four Kurdish protesters were killed in the clashes that followed. Iraq's Supreme Court halted the handover. The crisis subsided — temporarily. But the underlying conflict did not end. It rarely does in Kirkuk. Why Kirkuk Is Different Kirkuk is not simply a contested city. It is a condensed version of Iraq's unresolved political identity — home to approx...

Iraq's IDP Camps: Open Prisons for a Million People

Image
Iraq's IDP Camps: Open Prisons for a Million People By Hussein Zainulabdeen | Independent Researcher — Iraqi Minority Rights | husseinmonitor.com Nearly a decade after ISIS swept through northern Iraq, approximately 1.2 million Iraqis remain internally displaced. Ninety percent of them have not been able to return home for more than three years. Seventy percent have been displaced for more than five years. These are not refugees fleeing a war that is still happening. They are people trapped — unable to go back, unable to move forward — in a limbo that the Iraqi government has decided to resolve not by fixing the conditions that make return impossible, but by closing the camps and calling the problem solved. The Scale of Displacement As of early 2023, more than 173,000 internally displaced persons were living in 26 formal camp locations across Iraq. Another 983,000 were living in urban settings — informal displacement that is harder to count and easier to ignore....

The Shabak and Mandaeans: Iraq's Forgotten Minorities

Image
The Shabak and Mandaeans: Iraq's Forgotten Minorities By Hussein Zainulabdeen | Independent Researcher — Iraqi Minority Rights | husseinmonitor.com When the world talks about Iraq's minorities, it usually means Christians and Yazidis. Occasionally Turkmen. Rarely Shabak. Almost never Mandaeans. This is not because the Shabak and Mandaean communities have suffered less. It is because they have fewer advocates, less international visibility, and no powerful diaspora community lobbying on their behalf. In the hierarchy of attention that governs humanitarian response, they occupy the lowest rung — and they are paying the price for it. Who Are the Shabak? The Shabak are an ethnic and linguistic minority concentrated in the Nineveh Plains east of Mosul — a community whose name derives from the Arabic word for "intertwining," reflecting a heritage woven from multiple traditions. They speak a language that blends Arabic, Farsi, Kurdish, and Turkish. Appro...

Tal Afar After Liberation: A City Without a Future?

Image
Tal Afar After Liberation: A City Without a Future? By Hussein Zainulabdeen | Independent Researcher — Iraqi Minority Rights | husseinmonitor.com When Iraqi forces declared Tal Afar fully liberated from ISIS on September 1, 2017, the celebrations were real. A city that had suffered three years of occupation — massacres, displacement, destruction — was finally free. The Iraqi flag flew again over the ancient Turkmen city in western Nineveh. Five years later, the question is no longer whether Tal Afar was liberated. It is whether liberation meant anything at all for the people who lived there. What ISIS Did to Tal Afar Tal Afar fell to ISIS on June 16, 2014. The city's population — largely Shia and Sunni Turkmen, numbering around 200,000 to 225,000 — was shattered almost overnight. Most fled. Some Sunni Turkmen remained, and a number became implicated in ISIS's war crimes — a wound that still cuts through communal relations today. The Shia Turkmen community...

Yazidi Women Who Escaped ISIS: Between Trauma and Social Rejection

Image
Yazidi Women Who Escaped ISIS: Between Trauma and Social Rejection By Hussein Zainulabdeen | Independent Researcher — Iraqi Minority Rights | husseinmonitor.com They survived enslavement. They escaped. They came home. And then, for many Yazidi women who returned to their communities after years in ISIS captivity, the ordeal continued — not at the hands of their captors, but within their own families and communities. This is the part of the Yazidi story that receives far less attention than the abductions, the rescue operations, and the political declarations. The return. And what happens after it. The Scale of What Happened In August 2014, ISIS launched a coordinated attack on the Yazidi homeland in northwestern Iraq. Thousands of women and girls were abducted and traded into sexual slavery across ISIS-held territories in Iraq and Syria. By the most careful estimates, more than 6,000 Yazidi women and children were captured in the initial wave. Years of rescue o...

Iraq's Amnesty Law

Image
Iraq's Amnesty Law: Justice for the Wrongly Detained — or a Path to Freedom for ISIS Perpetrators? By Hussein Zainulabdeen | Independent Researcher — Iraqi Minority Rights | husseinmonitor.com Iraq's General Amnesty Law has been a recurring flashpoint in the country's fragile post-ISIS landscape. First passed in 2016, and significantly expanded in January 2025, the law was designed to address a real problem: tens of thousands of detainees held under sweeping counterterrorism laws, many of whom were arrested on the basis of torture-extracted confessions, anonymous informants, or third-party testimony. The problem is not that an amnesty law exists. The problem is what it threatens to undo. What the Law Does The General Amnesty Law allows for the reopening of investigations and trials where confessions were obtained under duress, and extends its applicability to crimes committed up to January 2025. It applies to both convicted individuals and those under i...