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U.N. officials say the Iraqi government and aid agencies are only now recognizing the magnitude of the problem. Some refugees have returned to find their homes occupied. Others were forced to flee violence as tensions between Sunni and Shiite Muslims erupted.
Um Sara and her family have moved five times in four years. Each time, her situation gets worse. Her Shiite family originally lived in a Sunni neighborhood in Baghdad. But during the sectarian strife of 2007-07, slogans like, "This school is for Sunnis" began to appear on walls, and the bodies starting piling up.
It's a phenomenon that was not known to many people -- even the government.
Now, Um Sara, her ailing husband and four children live on the first floor of an abandoned office building. Raw sewage drains into the courtyard and her family and visitors have no choice but to walk through it to get into their makeshift home. Inside, it is totally dark because there is no electricity.
"Look," Um Sara says, waving her hands in disgust. "We have nothing."
More than half of Iraq's 500,000 squatters are in Baghdad, says Shoko Shimozawa with the U.N. High Commissioner for Refugees. She says the number of squatters is increasing because people like Um Sara are finding it harder to make ends meet and aid groups and officials are only now looking for — and finding — the displaced people.
"It's a phenomenon that was not known to many people — even the government," Shimozawa says. "When we tried to explain the issue, some government officials [then] know for the first time of the magnitude of the problem," Shimozawa adds.
Can't Go Home
Iraq's Minister of Displacement, Abdul Samad Rahman Sultan, says even though he feels sympathy for squatters, they can't go on living illegally.
Alaa al-Marjani/AP
The only way squatters can register for government assistance is if they want to return to their original homes. But most people are still afraid to do that. Those who begin the process of seeking government help often face corrupt local officials who ask for bribes or sell relief packets for profit.
Kelly Clements of the State Department's Bureau of Population, Refugees and Migration says that is why the U.S. government doesn't give refugee aid money directly to the Iraqi government. Instead, the aid is funneled through the U.N. and other international aid agencies.
The State Department is ramping up its support as the U.S. military's presence in Iraq winds down, Clements says.
"Last year we provided close to $400 million. We're going to provide similar levels this year," Clements says. "What we're concerned about is the vulnerable, female-headed households, those that don't have other means."
The aid money helps provide squatters with stoves, fans and mattresses. In the long-term, aid providers hope to work with the Iraqi government to help squatters build new homes.
A Measure Of Iraq's Recovery
Elizabeth Campbell of Refugees International based in Washington, D.C., recently visited squatter camps around Iraq. She says resettling the displaced is the only way the country will be able to recover from the U.S. invasion and the resulting civil war.
"In many ways, displacement is the lens through which you can measure progress and success. And as long as communities are disenfranchised, impoverished, ignored, forgotten, problems will continue to fester and it can certainly lead to a wide variety of social and political problems down the road," Campbell says.
In Diyala province east of Baghdad, the Minhel family has been squatting in a mud-brick room on government land since the war began in 2003. They fled their home during ethnic tension between Arabs and Kurds.
The mother rifles through her purse and finds a letter from an American lieutenant colonel. Whenever local officials try to evict the family, she shows them the letter, which reads: "In accordance with the directives from Lt. Col. Grant, displaced civilians are not to be relocated or moved without prior coordination from this office." The letter is dated Aug. 5, 2003.
The mother says she knows the letter might not work much longer.
"If the soldiers can't help us anymore," she says, "who can?"
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