IRAQ
- Current Issues
- Country Background, Politics & Law
- Human Rights Issues
- Security, Humanitarian Issues and Protection Related Issues
- Northern Iraq
Security
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Security forces |
Non-state actors |
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Criminality |
Security situation |
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Corruption |
Humanitarian issues
Social security
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Internal displacement |
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Housing |
Health |
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Protection-related issues
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Internal flight alternative |
Third countries |
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Positions on return |
Entry/exit regulations |
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15.11.2004 - Source: Integrated Regional Information Network
Huge increases in salary for government jobs ("original document") [ID 10941]
"Even with banditry on the highways, Iraqis want to travel. Tired of the violence and power shortages in their country, those who are working and can afford it are traveling to places they haven't been to in more than 30 years. (...)
They go to northern Iraq, controlled by Kurdish leaders, to Syria, Iran, Jordan or Turkey. Those who have government jobs, estimated to be more than 10,000 in the capital alone, saw huge increases in salary when the interim government took back power from US-led administrators on 28 June."
Document(s):
original document
03.11.2004 - Source: Institute for War and Peace Reporting
Iraq: 43% poor families, 42% middle-class families, 2% well-off families ("original document") [ID 10940]
"(Tareek al-Shaab) - A report issued by the Central System of Statistics said poor families in Iraq number 43%, middle-class families 44%, and well-off families 2%. The report, covering 28,500 Iraqi families, said Qadisiya Province led the country in shortages of food. The report also said 22% of Iraqis are illiterate, 11% continued their studies after high school, 9% graduated from high school, and 15% did not complete elementary school. The average Iraqi family brings in around $127 per month, the report said.
(Tareek al-Shaab is issued by the Iraqi Communist Party.)"
Document(s):
original document
20.10.2004 - Source: Institute for War and Peace Reporting
Income increase ("original document") [ID 10942]
"(...) A lot of paradoxes have popped up in Iraq following the demise of the Saddam Hussein regime. One of them is the dangerous increase in criminal violence that's accompanied a much-improved standard of living for most people. Government employees have perhaps benefited most from the regime change. Their incomes have rocketed compared to the Saddam period - although during this time most civil servants supplemented their meagre earnings with part-time work in the private sector work.
The minimum pension paid to retired government workers has jumped from around one US dollar (3,000 Iraqi dinars) to 75 dollars a month. The average salary for a municipal employee used to be about one dollar a month for those who completed 20 years of service. Now that figure has leapt 100 times.
The same sort of increases have occurred in the private sector, where a
builder's salary has gone up three times to around nine dollars day. But the rise in incomes has unfortunately been accompanied by an increase in crime and violence in the Iraqi street - which is somewhat ironic as many people thought improved standards of living would lead to a reduction in criminality. (...)"
Document(s):
original document
04.10.2004 - Source: Integrated Regional Information Network
Iraq: Unemployment with an estimated 50 percent ("original document") [ID 10943]
Interview with Minister for Labour and Social Affairs about the economic and social problems, the lack of money to assist old men and women who can’t work because of their age; widows or divorced women who have children; orphans; families who have pensions; and the blind.
"At the Iraqi Ministry of Labour and Social Affairs, Minister Leyla Abdul Latif says one of the biggest problems her department faces today is unemployment, with an estimated 50 percent of the population out of work.
In addition, the ministry oversees a wide variety of social programmes, including running orphanages and elderly homes around the country, as well as dealing with controversial resettlement issues.
In an interview with IRIN, Latif said while there were a number of wide ranging issues to be dealt with at hand, she hoped there would be some progress on social issues soon in the troubled country.
QUESTION: What are the biggest social problems in Iraq today?
ANSWER: Iraq’s biggest issue now is its incapability to help jobless people find chances to work, especially those who have registered in our centres. We also have many social problems, especially with people who are coming back to Iraq after living and working in other countries. Finally, we have to convince people who took over government buildings for houses that they have to leave. We have a big increase in the number of beggars and the number of children who don’t go to school. A large number of people live under the poverty line. We are very worried about the psychological stability of people.
Q: Do you have solutions to these problems?
A: One of the most practical remedies is that the government should be able to help people more, especially to find jobs. Private companies should be contacted since the government doesn’t offer as many jobs since the fall of the regime. This would absorb some of the jobless problem. In addition, we need the security situation to improve. Iraq is a rich country and its population is not too large to take care of itself. We can manage by ourselves.
Q: How does Iraq handle unemployment?
A: We currently have a project for vocational training. We will build 10 new centres for work in all of the governorates that don’t currently have such centres. In addition, we will build vocational training centres in places such as Hillah, Diwaniya, Samawah, Salahadin, Anbar, Diyala, Karbala and Sulaymaniah. The work centres are places where people can register to look for a job. The vocational centres are places where people can learn a new trade, such as wood working.
Q: As you deal with orphanages, what is the situation of these children?
A: It’s a complex issue to explain - not only are children starving in Iraq, but many people in the lower social classes are also going hungry because of the circumstances. Even though Iraq has many resources, such as oil, those resources have become a curse rather than a prosperous blessing. For example, many children have to work hard now, because their parents cannot provide for them. The children provide all of the money for the family, so they don’t have time to go to school.
Q: What is your budget for social programmes?
A: Our programme is to give a salary to poor families according to the Law of Social Treatment No. 126, which was approved by the government in 1980. This law covers the following: old men and women who can’t work because of their age; widows or divorced women who have children; orphans; families who have pensions; and the blind. However, we do not have a determined budget yet. The ministry is responsible for arranging and carrying out all of the fields mentioned and checking lists of these people every few months to make sure they are correct.
Q: How is the money distributed to the people on the lists?
A: Once we verify the names on the lists, they are submitted to the Ministry of Finance for approval. We have more than 100,000 families who receive about 30,000 Iraqi dinars, (about US $200) per month.
Q: Now that Iraq is moving in a new direction, do you have new goals?
A: We had wars for two decades in the 20th century. This means that a large number of Iraq people are widows; the number of divorces increased and the number of orphans increased. Wars also mean that there is an increased number of handicapped people who can’t do any work. There is a weakness in the social system because of the political instability. This leads to increased bad behaviour. In addition, more people get divorced. More [single] women got married because they had social or financial problems. We should also address the increasing number of street children - it seems more are begging now.
Q: With which aid agencies do you currently work with?
A: We get aid from the International Labour Organization (ILO) to train our employees who are responsible for vocational training through courses inside and outside the country. We receive aid from the International Organization for Migration (IOM) to train our employees on management. They have also supplied the ministry with furniture and computers. The United Nations Childrens' Fund (UNICEF) pays for some of our local NGO groups for training people to develop their organisational capabilities. Other international organisations did some rehabilitation and maintenance of the institution for the deaf and dumb in Baghdad, supplied some furniture and also gave them a car.
Q: What are your future plans?
A: We want to continue working to rehabilitate damaged houses so that we can return government buildings currently occupied by homeless families back to government offices. We want to change and amend our social laws to make them more flexible to handle changes happening in Iraq. We want to train our employees to do their best and learn modern management methods."
Document(s):
original document
08.2004 - Source: UN High Commissioner for Refugees
Report on the current security and legal situation, material safety, displacement situation, human rights and protection situation as well as an overall analysis ("Country of Origin Information (COI) paper on Iraq (as of August 2004)") [#24717], [ID 10945]
Employment situation and other forms of income generation
Document(s):
Open document
09.02.2004 - Source: Integrated Regional Information Network
Retired people: government pensions ("original document") [ID 10944]
Retired people in Iraq on government pensions have finally received money owed to them since April 2003
Document(s):
original document
20.01.2004 - Source: Integrated Regional Information Network
60 Percent of the population still depend on Oil-for-Food Programme completely ("original document") [ID 10946]
"(...) A key US $900 million piece of Iraq’s former Oil-for-Food Programme is being handed back to the UN World Food Programme (WFP) after weeks of negotiations, a US administrator recently announced.
UN officials handed over all Oil-for-Food Programme contracts to the US-led administration on 21 November along with more than US $2 billion from surplus funds. (...)
The monthly food ration includes rice, flour, sugar, chickpeas, tea and milk. It’s distributed through an estimated 40,000 stores around the country. About 60 percent of the population depends completely on the Oil-for-Food Programme for basic food necessities, according to Coalition Provisional Authority (CPA) estimates in May. Another 30 percent has food ration cards, but also has other sources of income, according to estimates."
Document(s):
original document
