During the past few months I have spent working with religious minorities in Iraq, I have realized that these communities and Iraq’s anti-government protesters seek the same outcome: a democratic, safe, and pluralistic country.

Iraqi Yazidi people wait to receive aid at a makeshift roadside camp near the border crossing in Feshkhabour, Dohuk Province, northern Iraq, Aug. 11, 2014.
Iraqi Yazidi people wait to receive aid at a makeshift roadside camp near the border crossing in Feshkhabour, Dohuk Province, northern Iraq, Aug. 11, 2014. (Adam Ferguson/The New York Times)

But now the coronavirus pandemic is threatening the achievement of this shared goal, and could push Iraq over the edge, and its minorities into extinction, particularly as they already struggle to shield themselves from chaos due to poor, ineffective representation in both the government sector and local security forces.

Iraq’s interlocking crises—collapsed oil revenues, increased tensions between the United States and Iran, and the failure of political elites in Baghdad to address protesters’ concerns—have left state institutions overstretched.

The COVID-19 pandemic could not have come at a worse time as these crises draw attention away both from handling the outbreak and rebuilding Iraq’s ill-prepared healthcare system.

As a Reuters report underscored, Iraq’s healthcare system has a shortage of drugs and doctors—who are fleeing by the thousands—leaving Iraq with only eight doctors per 10,000 people. In comparison, nearby Lebanon has 23 doctors per 10,000 people.

Religious Minorities Are Most Vulnerable

The consequences of Iraq’s dire situation will fall heaviest on its minorities. Since 2003, they have been shut out of government decision-making processes, both in Baghdad and on the provincial level.

Their exclusion contributed significantly to the government’s failure to protect predominantly minority areas, and ultimately paved the way for the ISIS invasion, which uprooted these communities from their ancient homelands.

Iraq’s religious minorities have endured mass murder, kidnapping, and sexual violence—all part of a concerted effort by ISIS to enact the wholesale destruction of their livelihoods, homes, and existence.

Christians in Iraq, once estimated at 1.4 million in 1987, have been forced to flee due to persecutions and attacks against them, driving the population down to less than 200,000.

Christians, Yazidis, and Kaka’is are still struggling to reclaim their way of life because of rapidly declining demography, institutionalized discrimination, and conflict over their ancestral homelands, especially the northwestern region of Nineveh.

Coronavirus in Iraq will only further complicate the sustainability of fragile minority groups.

Today an estimated 787,367 internally displaced persons (IDPs) are registered in Kurdistan and nearly 40 percent of them are Yazidi, Christian or another minority groups.

Minorities are particularly vulnerable to the coronavirus outbreak because IDP populations live in camps where social distancing is not an option, proper sanitation measures are not possible, and the Ninewa province where many minorities have returned is still in a state of ruins.

Another wave of death on these communities could drive them out for good. Additionally, instability could divert Iraq’s attention from the ongoing fight against ISIS, leading to a resurgence that threatens the region, or facilitate Iraq’s ongoing submission into Iran’s sphere of influence and implementation of its regional goals—both of which could wreak havoc on minorities.

The determining factors of saving these communities will be the efforts by the Iraqi government, and international community, to preserve Iraqi minorities.

What can the Iraqi government do to protect minorities? Read the rest of this article on Al Arabiya, where it was originally published.

Yousif Kalian is a program specialist at the U.S. Institute of Peace where he works on social cohesion and community reconciliation in Iraq.


Related Publications

Baghdad Is Ready for a New Chapter in U.S.-Iraq Relations

Baghdad Is Ready for a New Chapter in U.S.-Iraq Relations

Thursday, April 25, 2024

Iraqi Prime Minister Mohammed Shia al-Sudani met last week with U.S. President Joe Biden at the White House as part of a weeklong visit aimed at strengthening bilateral relations. The visit occurred amid several historic anniversaries and dangerous developments in the Middle East. April marks the 21st anniversary of the toppling of Saddam Hussein. Since 2003, the U.S.-Iraq relationship has witnessed many ups and downs. Even as tensions persist, particularly in relation to the U.S. troop presence in the country, al-Sudani’s visit — which featured the largest delegation Iraqis have brought to Washington — demonstrates Iraqi will to start a new chapter in the strategic partnership that goes beyond security.

Type: Analysis

Democracy & GovernanceGlobal Policy

USIP Explains: Community Dialogue in Northern Sinjar

USIP Explains: Community Dialogue in Northern Sinjar

Thursday, April 11, 2024

Ten years after ISIS’ genocide against them, the wounds of the Yazidi community in Iraq’s Sinjar district remain fresh as thousands remain displaced and even more await justice for the crimes perpetrated against them. Meanwhile, despite living in peaceful coexistence prior to ISIS’ campaign, the conflict planted seeds of division among Sinjar’s various tribes and communities — resulting in tensions that threatened to tear the district apart even after ISIS’ defeat.

Type: Blog

Mediation, Negotiation & DialoguePeace Processes

Iraq’s Provincial Council Elections: The Way Forward in Nineveh Province

Iraq’s Provincial Council Elections: The Way Forward in Nineveh Province

Wednesday, December 13, 2023

On December 18, Iraqis will elect members of the provincial councils, the highest oversight bodies of subnational government and key providers of public services. The elections are the first at the provincial level in over a decade and come in the wake of the 2019 anti-government protests that resulted in the dissolution of the provincial councils following demands from the protesters who accused them of corruption. Recent findings from the U.S. Institute of Peace’s Conflict and Stabilization Monitoring Framework in Nineveh Province reveal that candidates are facing a distrustful electorate that is lacking confidence in state institutions.

Type: Analysis

Democracy & Governance

View All Publications