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Angry crowds expel KRG minister from Anfal massacre commemoration

Angry crowds expel KRG minister from Anfal massacre commemoration
During the 34th anniversary commemorating the Anfal massacre, survivors and family members of victims directed their fury toward Kurdish officials.
3 min read
14 April, 2022
A graveyard for the victims of the Anfal massacre in the town of Chamchamal. [Dana Taib Menmy/TNA]

Survivors and relatives of victims of the Anfal massacre on Thursday boycotted an event to commemorate its 34th anniversary, as well as expelledÌýKurdish officials from the ceremony, in protest of ongoing failures by Kurdish authoritiesÌýin providingÌýbasic servicesÌýor support attempts to pursue recourse over the massacre.ÌýÌý

In 1987, as the Iraq-Iran war was winding down, Saddam Hussein's regimeÌýlaunched a large-scale military campaign in Anfal against Kurdish villagers who were supportive of the variousÌýKurdish peshmerga rebels.ÌýConsequently, between 50,000 to nearly 200,000Ìýpeople were killed, including women,Ìýchildren and the elderly, many of whom wereÌýburied inÌýmass graves across the southern deserts of Iraq.

Early on Thursday, the KRG Minister of Martyrs and Anfal Affairs, Abdulla Haji Mahmoud from the Kurdistan Socialist Democratic Party, attended the Anfal Monument in Chamchamal town and was about to address the families of Anfal.

"The minister's speech was very long, and relatives of the victims of the Anfal massacre did not let him finish it, because people are angry with the KRG and do not want to listen to over-repeated words without action,"Ìýa son of one of the victims of Anfal atrocities, who was present in the scene and requested anonymity, told The News ArabÌýduring a brief phone interview.

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"People are asking for basic services of water, electricity and job opportunities," he added.Ìý

According toÌýmedia outlet, relatives of the victims of the Anfal massacre appeared angry and startedÌýthrowing stones at the visitingÌýKurdish minister, forcing him to exit the stage surrounded byÌýheavilyÌýarmoured security forces.

Ìý"I have participated in today's commemoration of the Anfal massacre, but after 34 years we are still demanding justiceÌýfrom the KRG, who only remembers the familiesÌýonce a year,"ÌýAdil Majid, the only survivor of his family fromÌýthe massacre,Ìýtold °®Âþµº.

"Relatives of the victims of the Anfal genocide are angry since we are provided with drinking water once a month, and the government failed to platform the massacre as a caseÌýof genocide to the international community and failed to return the bodies of our beloved lost people who were buriedÌýin southern Iraqi deserts," Majid added.Ìý

Adil Majid
Adil Majid, the only survivor amongst his family during the Anfal massacre, holds a picture of his father.Ìý
[Dana Taib Menmy/TNA]

The town of Chamchamal, where most remaining survivors and families of Anfal victims live, includes the largest gas oil fields in Iraq, but locals blame the Kurdish authorities for the lack of basic services.

Four mass graves, including hundreds of bodies believed to be Kurds killed by Saddam Hussein's regime, were found in July 2019, in the Samawa desert of al-Muthanna province of southern Iraq.

"We have carried out all measures to bring back bodies of 171 victims of Anfal to be buried again in the Kurdistan region,"ÌýAdil Mullah Salih, head of media at the KRG Ministry of Martyrs and Anfal Affairs told °®Âþµº.

"All legal, scientific and health measures were carried out in exhuming the bodies, which are now at a forensics lab in Baghdad. They will soon be returned to the region to be buried in their own birthplace," Salih added.Ìý

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, told °®Âþµº that the relatives of Anfal victims rejected the KRG's efforts to bring back the bodies becauseÌýthe authoritiesÌýare not preparedÌýto take blood samples from victims'Ìýliving family membersÌýand do DNA tests.Ìý

He also blamed the Kurdish authorities for harbouring hundreds of wanted Kurdish mercenaries who collaborated with the former Ba'ath regime led by Saddam Hussein, and who were involvedÌýin the massacre in Anfal.

Abdulla also added that the Kurdish representatives in Baghdad, including Iraqi President Barham Salih failed, to make the Iraqi federal government acknowledge and apologise to the Kurdish people over theÌýAnfal massacreÌýand provide compensation toÌýthe survivors and family membersÌýof the victims.

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