DAMASCUS - More than a million Iraqis in Syria cannot find work. For their
idleness, they have come to be called the "pillow drivers."
The United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) says there are at
least 1.5 million Iraqi refugees in Syria. If they seek work, they will lose
their status as refugees.
And so Iraqi refugees who were once doctors, engineers, athletes, artists,
and businessmen sit it out in Syria with nothing to do.
"They call us the pillow drivers here," said Dr. Jassim Alwan, who
fled Baghdad after he was arrested by U.S. forces in 2003. "I was humiliated
like an animal by those who call themselves soldiers of liberty, so I decided
to flee to Syria."
He has no work now, he said. "All I do is stay up late at night thinking
of myself and my family's dark future, and sleep all day like a drugged man.
Most Iraqis do the same."
Many Iraqi refugees gather at night at Damascus teahouses. They spend much
of the night talking over strong Iraqi tea, some smoking the water pipe.
"Not all of us can afford the water pipe," Salim Khattab, earlier
an engineer from Mosul, told IPS. "Most of us have run out of money after
the long years of spending while there has been no income. I accepted a job
of salesman for $100 a month for a while, but I quit when I was asked to clean
the shop and the doorsteps. A hundred dollars would not be enough for more than
a few days anyway. Now I spend the days in bed waiting for night so I can meet
my new friends."
Many Iraqis have turned to reciting poems about their condition, or trying
to joke about it. Audiences do not always laugh; more often they have tears
in their eyes. Some poets and writers frequent particular teahouses, and their
fans follow them there.
"Iraq has become the wasteland we've been reading about by [T.S.] Eliot,
and worse," said an Iraqi poet, who wanted his name withheld. "Those
thieves who took over the country with the help of the bigger thieves, the occupiers,
are the reason for our agony."
From the outside, such thoughts and observations are seen as idleness. Many
Iraqi refugees ponder these days over their new status as "pillow drivers."
"Better to be a pillow driver than worm feed, my friend," Mohammad
Adnan, who was a trader in Baghdad, told IPS. "I think Americans invaded
our country to turn us into good-for-nothing people. They want us to stay outside
Iraq so that it stays retarded until they bring more capitalist corporations
to loot what is left."
The International Organization for Migration (IOM) said in a report March 19
that there are 2.7 million Iraqis displaced within their own country, and another
2.4 million who have fled, mostly to Jordan and Syria. The IOM, an independent
body that cooperates with the UN and its agencies, said the situation for Iraqis
who are outside their country is deteriorating.
"There is very little light at the end of the tunnel in Iraq's humanitarian
crisis," IOM spokeswoman Jemini Pandya told reporters. "Conditions
for the displaced, and refugees, have been getting steadily worse."
Yet, bad as it is for the refugees outside, the situation for Iraqis within
Iraq continues to be far worse. "Many IDPs [internally displaced persons]
live in substandard or overcrowded shelters as they are largely without an income
to afford escalating rent prices," the IOM report said.
More than 75 percent of them have no access to government food rations, and
nearly 20 percent lack a clean water supply, the report said. Some 33 percent
cannot get the medicines they need. Only 20 percent have had any help from humanitarian
agencies.
(Inter Press Service)