Nineveh IDPs in Erbil stage protest against PMF dominance in hometowns

ERBIL, Kurdistan Region – Internally Displaced Persons (IDPs) from the disputed Nineveh province protested in front of the United Nation’s Erbil office on Wednesday against the presence of  Shiite militias in their hometowns and villages.

Nineveh province was seized by the Islamic State (ISIS) in the summer of 2014. The province is mostly home to minority groups such as Christians, Yezidis and Shabaks, who were especially targeted by the terror group. 

Iran-backed Popular Mobilization Forces (PMF, Hashd al-Shaabi in Arabic) assisted the Iraqi army in the 2016-2017 offensives to dislodge  ISIS, which ruled the Nineveh capital of Mosul and its surrounding areas for over two years.

PMF units have remained in Nineveh ever since, and protesters say this is preventing them from going home.

“We in Nineveh plains are living with Kurdistan Region in peace,  and have been living there for thousands of years, while now Hashd al-Shaabi prevent us from going back to our hometowns,” Bashar Aazam, an elderly Christian man from Tal Skof told Rudaw.

Haji Harki, a Kurd told Rudaw on Wednesday that  “people are not going back to Nineveh province because they are afraid  of Hashd al-Shaabi militias.”

“PMF asks for money or your family’s women and they don’t care about any other institution or police department in the province,” he added.

 



According to the International Organisation for Migration (IOM) there are at least 111,384 individuals from Nineveh currently displaced in Erbil province, while around 318,666 are living in Duhok. 

Protester Amin Ahmed accused PMF Brigade 30 in particular of preventing IDP returns to Nineveh. 

“There is a PMF unit called Brigade 30 that prevents Kurds, Shabaks, Kakais and Turkmens returning to their hometowns,” Ahmed said.

Brigade 30 is a unit primarily composed of ethnically Shabak residents of eastern Mosul.

The brigade has caused particular controversy, with leader Waad Qado, also known as Abu Jaafar al-Shabaki, sanctioned by the US Treasury  Department for alleged corruption and human rights abuses on July 2019.

Qado’s brigade was accused of extracting money from residents of the mixed Christian-Shabak town of Bartella through extortion, illegal  arrests and kidnappings.

“Members of the local population allege that the 30th Brigade has been responsible for egregious offenses including physical intimidation, extortion, robbery, kidnapping, and rape,” added a press release from the US Treasury.

 



Protesters then left the UN and headed to the Kurdistan Parliament to meet with the Kurdish and Disputed Areas committee to discuss the matter.

Jwan Younis, head of Kurdish and Disputed Areas in the parliament of  Kurdistan region told Rudaw on Wednesday that PMF is enacting  demographic change in the province.

“They [PMF] are working on demographic changes in the areas of Nineveh, and this is a very dangerous development,” Younis said.

 “We  will work with the Iraqi parliament regarding the request and demand  of the people of Nineveh, also with the consulates of the foreign  countries, as well as the United Nations,” he added.

Photos by Bilind T.Abdullah