MOSSOUL, Iraq — Alia Abdel-Razak is one of a million Iraqis deprived of crucial civil status
documents, often caught in legal limbo in a country paralyzed by bureaucracy
and the ravages of war.
اضافة اعلان
The 37-year-old has to
overcome countless hurdles just to get her children into school, and she cannot
register her family to obtain the food subsidies she and her husband so
desperately need.
A mother of four,
Abdel-Razak relies on a pro-bono lawyer from aid group the International Rescue
Committee (IRC) to help her navigate the labyrinthine processes required to get
her papers in order.
Like many others, she
struggles with endless red tape — but also the fallout from the country's
grueling battle to defeat Daesh — to obtain documents like marriage and birth
certificates, over a decade after her wedding.
Alia Abdel-Razak, a woman deprived of crucial
civil status documents, speaks to a lawyer in her home in Iraq's northern city
of Mosul on December 11, 2022.
"I don't have the
means, lawyers want $300–500. Where can I get this money when I don't even have
enough to eat?" she told AFP.
Her dilapidated Mosul apartment
bears witness to her daily struggle, with its bare concrete floors and broken
windows patched up with cardboard.
She was married in
2012 and gave birth to her first daughter a year later.
But in 2014, Daesh
seized Mosul and declared it the capital of its "caliphate", driving
out local officials in favor of their own administration.
'Restricted
freedom'The absence of civil
status documents obstructs access to basic services such as "education,
healthcare, and social security benefits", according to the United Nations
refugee agency UNHCR.
It can also "lead
to restricted freedom of movement, increased risk of arrest and
detention", the agency says.
Abdel-Razak's lawyer
has launched a legal process to have her marriage and children officially
recognized, with a decision expected in January.
One of the children of Alia Abdel-Razak, a
woman deprived of crucial civil status documents, is pictured in her
dilapidated home in Iraq's northern city of Mosul on December 11, 2022.
In the meantime, they
have scored one small victory — at nearly 10 years old, her firstborn Nazek has
just joined school for the first time.
But to obtain some of
the documents requested by the judge, it took three visits just to get the
intelligence services' seal on some papers.
One major hurdle has
been the fact that her jailed brother is accused of having ties with Daesh.
"I don't have the means, lawyers want $300–500. Where can I get this money when I don't even have enough to eat?"
According to the UN,
one million Iraqis are living with at least one missing civil status document
in a country still struggling to recover five years on from Daesh’s defeat back
in 2017.
Marriage contracts
agreed under the group's rule have yet to be recognized, along with the
children born out of these unions.
On top of that, many
of the civil bureaus that kept such documentation on record were destroyed when
Daesh rose to power or in the years-long battle to drive the group out,
according to the spokesman for the Ministry of Migration and Displaced Persons.
In cooperation with
the interior ministry, his ministry coordinates mobile missions in camps to
allow displaced people to obtain their missing documents, Ali Jahangir said.
One of the children of
Alia Abdel-Razak, a woman deprived of crucial civil status documents.
IRC communications
coordinator, Jordan Lesser-Roy, pointed to the work of non-governmental organizations
in raising awareness among state bodies and reducing the waiting time for such
paperwork.
"You need mayoral
approval for these processes... and then of course you need policy
change," she said, calling for budget increases to the Civil Affairs
Directorate and for more "mobile missions".
'I can't go
anywhere'In a report published
in September, aid groups including the IRC pointed to the added complexities
faced by families "with perceived Daesh affiliation".
To obtain a birth
certificate, mothers must provide DNA samples from up to three male relatives,
and these documents can only be obtained in Baghdad.
They must also provide
"evidence of the whereabouts of the child's father in the form of a death
certificate or evidence of incarceration".
This is "an
impossibility for many households where the head of household died or
disappeared during the conflict", according to the report.
To obtain a birth certificate, mothers must provide DNA samples from up to three male relatives, and these documents can only be obtained in Baghdad.
Hussein Adnan, 23, lost
his ID card while fleeing the battle against Daesh in 2017. He was subsequently
arrested and spent five months in detention before he was declared innocent.
He was married and had
a son under the group's reign.
Abdel-Razak, a woman
deprived of crucial civil status documents, is pictured with three of her
children in her home in Iraq's northern city of Mosul on December 11,
2022.
With the help of an
IRC lawyer, Adnan was able to obtain a divorce after having his marriage and
his six-year-old recognized, though he has yet to obtain a birth certificate
for his son.
The process was
further complicated as his ex-wife remarried and became pregnant again in the
interim.
He was "beaten
and tortured" while in detention and, despite family pressure to work, he
remains frozen by fear of another arrest.
"I can't work or
go anywhere... I'm staying at home until my ID card is issued," he said.
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