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- <text id=91TT0886>
- <title>
- Apr. 29, 1991: Refugees:Omar's Journey
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1991
- Apr. 29, 1991 Nuclear Power
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- WORLD, Page 34
- REFUGEES
- Omar's Journey
- </hdr><body>
- <p>Every Kurdish refugee has his own tale to tell and his own reason
- to weep. Here is the story of one man and his family.
- </p>
- <p>By Edward W. Desmond/Shushami
- </p>
- <p> Talia is standing by the small window inside a worn tent,
- a streak of morning light framing her pretty face in the smoky
- air. She smiles at the baby in her arms, and for a singular,
- brief moment she looks like a Madonna in the midst of hell. Her
- three elder children are sitting on a blanket set on the cold,
- damp ground. The eldest, a boy of seven, has a vacant look in
- his eyes, and he twitches every few seconds, like someone lost
- beyond the edge of pain. His younger brother and sister gaze at
- him, then look quickly away, a fog of panic filling their eyes
- as they contemplate their mad brother, the gloom of the tent,
- their possessions reduced to a teapot, a blanket and a few
- ragged clothes. Omar, their father, clears his throat and
- volunteers, "The boy, he has been like that since the bombing.
- He is disturbed, I think."
- </p>
- <p> Omar and his family come from Kirkuk, the northern Iraqi
- city that was captured by Kurdish guerrillas in late March and
- retaken by Iraqi forces about a week later. Omar decided to flee
- Kirkuk after he saw the Iraqi Mi-24 helicopters hanging like
- avenging demons on the horizon, unleashing their terrifying
- rocket fire and evoking the threat of what he feared most:
- chemical weapons that make every breath a draft of fire. Not
- only was Omar sure that the Iraqis would kill many Kurds in
- Kirkuk in reprisal, but he also knew that he would be in more
- trouble than most. He is an ex-Iraqi army lieutenant who refused
- the call to return to duty after Iraq's invasion of Kuwait. So
- he gathered his family and a few belongings and started the trip
- toward Iran, leaving his car behind because the road was already
- a chaotic snarl.
- </p>
- <p> They walked and hitched rides for six days to reach the
- border, enduring sub-zero cold, rain and snowstorms that left
- the children shivering uncontrollably. They marched high into
- the hills of Kurdistan along narrow mountain roads deep in
- slippery mud, thinking a thousand times that their world had
- come to an end. The worst moment came at a mobbed road crossing,
- where Omar and Talia, each with two children, were separated as
- they struggled aboard different trucks. Omar did not see his
- wife again for two days, and in his arms was their
- seven-month-old daughter, weakly sobbing for her mother's milk.
- Other nursing mothers saved the little girl's life by giving her
- a turn at their breasts.
- </p>
- <p> Yet wretched as they are, Omar's family is among the
- blessed ones. They live in one of the thousands of tents pitched
- on the steep slopes of the Sirwan River valley, a few miles
- inside the Iranian border. The Iranian army provides shelter,
- bread every day, and a crude dispensary gives basic medical
- help, especially against rampant dysentery caused by the lack
- of clean drinking water. But Omar's family must make do with
- only one blanket to stave off the frigid nights. The terrible
- cold and disease claim young lives every day, a tragedy
- underscored by the cemetery of small, fresh graves on a grassy
- knoll above the camp. A red wash of wild poppies is in bloom,
- a sad bouquet expressing heaven's remorse.
- </p>
- <p> Life is even more chaotic at the border checkpoint up the
- road, where a crush of vehicles and humanity begins and
- stretches back into Iraq for miles. With maddening slowness,
- Iranian troops let a sprinkling of refugees through the
- checkpoint, taking care not to let them pass before the
- campsites are ready. Perhaps they could be settled faster, but
- so far the Iranians have been left to do the job almost entirely
- by themselves. Commitments from Western countries to help the
- more than 1 million Kurds at the border have just started to
- pick up beyond the initial trickle according to angry
- international relief officials, who believe the slowness in part
- reflects Western distaste for Iran's Islamic government.
- </p>
- <p> One stretch of the road has a steep mountain wall on one
- side and a near vertical drop on the other, in places falling
- away for several hundred feet. Old men overtaken by exhaustion
- sprawl dangerously close to the brink. Other refugees step over
- them, too tired to lend a hand. Distressed mothers, wondering
- when dehydration and shock will claim their children, hold
- their diarrhea-plagued babies over the road's edge and let them
- relieve themselves.
- </p>
- <p> Where the roadside broadens into a high meadow, families
- camp out under whatever shelter they can find, usually by
- draping tattered plastic sheets over a frame of sticks. The
- surrounding mountains were a major battleground during the
- Iraq-Iran war, and minefields are everywhere. Relief officials
- say dozens of refugees have been killed or maimed after straying
- off the road.
- </p>
- <p> The fleeing Kurds are barefoot peasants as well as
- prosperous city dwellers and farmers who have tried to escape
- with their cars, trucks and tractors. A white Oldsmobile Cutlass
- Ciera joins the line, along with a brand-new Massey-Ferguson
- harvesting combine. Iranian soldiers drive up the road, throwing
- bread to the Kurds and starting a frantic scramble that sends
- more than one person rolling down a steep embankment. When the
- crowd parts, old men patiently pick the crumbs out of rocks and
- mud, their only margin of survival. Whenever the refugees
- discover a reporter in their midst, they crowd around and find
- someone to express their fury in English: "Why did George Bush
- do this to us? He has betrayed us. Why did he tell us to rise
- up? Why didn't he shoot down the helicopters?" The questions are
- the same, over and over again.
- </p>
- <p> At the border post, the Iranian troops carefully search
- each vehicle for weapons--Tehran insists that Kurdish
- fighters will find no haven in Iran--as well as articles
- offensive to strict Islamic sensibilities. Pop-music tapes, for
- example, are forbidden, as is immodest dress. One woman, about
- to drive her Volkswagen up to the checkpoint, frantically tied
- a scarf over her hair but still stood out in a short skirt and
- knitted leggings. She managed to get through the checkpoint, but
- not before giving away her collection of tapes.
- </p>
- <p> The flight is particularly hard on more prosperous Kurds,
- who are no more prepared to endure the rigors of refugee life
- than American suburbanites would be. Khaleda, 19, a
- well-dressed university student, escaped with her brother and
- two cousins. Their parents gave them the car and told them to
- go, fearing that the Iraqis would kidnap and kill the young
- people, as they had after past uprisings.
- </p>
- <p> But they have languished in the long queue of cars on the
- Iraqi side of the border for two weeks. Khaleda and her friends,
- seeing the hardships ahead in the refugee camp, are among a very
- small group who have decided to go back to their parents and
- take a chance that Saddam will honor his pledge of amnesty for
- the Kurds. "We can't stand it," she says. "At home we have a
- nice big house and lots of money. We don't trust Saddam. But we
- hope he will leave us alone." Nothing in her face shows that
- she believes her own words.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
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