The Anfal files: 'Nobody had any hope of survival'

16-04-2020
Rudaw
Translation by Zhelwan Z. Wali
Translation by Zhelwan Z. Wali
Tags: Anfal files
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ERBIL, Kurdistan Region - "They took us to a place where we weren’t given food or water for seven days. There was no light. On grounds that we were females, they never let us go outside. For five months, we did not see daylight," said Bayan Mahmood Mansour, a survivor of the genocide which claimed the lives of more than 182,000 people.

Bayan's story of the Anfal campaign, a brutal Iraqi military operation launched by Saddam Hussein against the Kurdish people in the eighties, is just one of many that continues to haunt the Kurdistan Region.

Rudaw has collected the testimonies of several survivors to be released in a seven-part series, entitled “The Anfal Files”.

'Anfal' - the eighth chapter, or Surah, in the Quran -  was the codename used by Baathists for the slaughter. Ceremonies are usually held each year on April 14 to mark its anniversary. Tuesday marked 32 years since the conclusion of the genocide, which killed more than 182,000 people.

Commemoration ceremonies did not take place, with the Kurdistan Region in a state of lockdown to prevent the spread of the novel coronavirus.

KRG President Nechirvan Barzani released a statement in remembrance of all those affected by the campaign. 

“As we remember the victims and all fallen heroes of Kurdistan, it is crucial that we make all efforts to prevent the repetition of such genocidal crimes in Kurdistan or any other place in the world. It is also the Iraqi government’s moral and legal obligation to provide reparations to the families of the victims,” reads the statement.

The Anfal campaign took place over eight phases — beginning in 1986, reaching its peak in 1988 with the Halabja chemical attack that instantly killed 5,000 people and injured 10,000. The massacre intensified in the closing weeks of the Iran-Iraq war (1980-88).

The KRG has provided assistance to Anfal survivors and their relatives, including housing and tuition fees for studies.

The Iraqi Supreme Court has officially recognized the Anfal Campaign as constituting genocide, crimes against humanity and war crimes, however, the international community is largely yet to do so.

Erbil has also made efforts to secure global recognition of the Anfal as an act of genocide, and return the remains of victims from mass graves in Iraq’s southern and central deserts for reburial in the Kurdistan Region.

 

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