Minorities in Iraq - Pushed to the brink of existence
Iraqi minorities (Turkmens, Yazidis, Christians and other smaller communities) have long been discriminated against in Iraq. Violence against them has increased dramatically in areas of Iraqi territory that have fallen under the control of the Islamist terrorist group that has declared itself 'the Islamic State' (known variously as IS, ISIS or ISIL, and by the Arabic acronym 'Daesh' or 'Da'esh'). After coming into power, this terrorist group called into question the very existence of several of these minorities, not least non-Muslim minorities, subjecting them to murder, rape, slavery and organ trafficking. Fearing for their life, people have been fleeing in unprecedented numbers: mass killings have led to the displacement of more than 2 million people, mainly to refugee camps in the Kurdistan region, these displacements are tangible evidence that the country is going through a process of reconfiguration and fragmentation. Past experience has shown that few displaced people ever return to their homes.
Briefing
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Cuvânt-cheie
- ajutor umanitar
- Asia şi Oceania
- construcţie europeană
- context social
- cultură şi religie
- discriminare religioasă
- DREPT
- drepturile individului
- fundamentalism religios
- GEOGRAFIE
- geografie economică
- geografie politică
- grup religios
- Irak
- islam
- libertate religioasă
- migraţie
- migrație forțată
- minorități naționale
- politici de cooperare
- POLITICĂ
- politică şi securitate publică
- PROBLEME SOCIALE
- RELAŢII INTERNAŢIONALE
- rolul internațional al UE
- terorism
- UNIUNEA EUROPEANĂ