A Road Home

USAID spokesman Clayton McCleskey highlighted for the Register some recent progress the organization has made in helping Iraq’s Christian communities on the ground.

He pointed to Green’s announcement of a new “special representative for minority assistance,” Max Primorac, who is based in Erbil “with the specific charge to engage with local leaders and their communities and ensure our aid is truly reaching those who need it most.”

Just this week, USAID celebrated the reopening of the road to the Chaldean Christian town of Batnaya on the Nineveh Plain, which will help facilitate the return of the town’s Christians who have been in a displaced status in neighboring towns.

Archbishop Warda, who had particularly regretted the town’s inaccessibility in his June interview with the Register, praised USAID and the other organizations that worked with the parties involved.

“We pray that this has not come too late for us, as we remain very late in the day for our survival as a people in Iraq, but this event truly brings us real joy and hope which we so desperately need,” Archbishop Warda said in a statement earlier this week.

McCleskey also highlighted a recent “Memorandum of Understanding” (MOU) between the Knights of Columbus and USAID in which the two groups “will work together to identify populations in need and assist them, convene local actors, advance pluralism and collaborate on efforts to prevent future atrocities.”

Knights of Columbus representative Joseph Cullen told the Register that the group is providing more than $700,000 in funding for projects, co-designed with USAID, aimed at the needs of Iraq’s Christians and other religious minorities.

He said the funds “will enable the providing of psychosocial services to the primarily Yazidi IDP [internally displaced people] community in Dohuk, a property-rights center at the Catholic University of Erbil to help Christians and Yazidis with property-rights claims, and the restoration of Christian cemeteries destroyed and desecrated by ISIS in northern and southern Nineveh.”

 

Congressional Aid Efforts

While the Trump administration looks to expand its partnerships on the ground and direct aid where it’s most needed, some in Congress are advocating additional solutions to help Iraq’s Christian minority in the long term.

Rep. Jeff Fortenberry, R-Neb., introduced a resolution in the House earlier this month that calls for the U.S. to “develop a coordinated and implementable plan for a stabilization and security mission in the region” and train “regularized national military structures that include Christian and Yezidi local security forces.”

Fortenberry told the Register that the security resolution “will draw further attention to the urgent situation faced by oppressed religious minorities in Iraq still recovering from the ISIS genocide.”

Fortenberry traveled to Iraq in July to evaluate U.S. aid efforts and said that “changes have been made and a more direct aid response is underway, which is all for the good.”

However, he emphasized that, “for the economic aid to be sustainable, a new security settlement initiated by the international community but led by the Iraqis is absolutely necessary.”

Another key piece of legislation aimed at helping Iraq’s Christians and other victims of the ISIS genocide finally passed the Senate earlier this month and is expected to be signed into law by President Donald Trump.

The Iraq and Syria Genocide Relief and Accountability Act, sponsored by Rep. Chris Smith, R-N.J., would direct U.S. aid funding to prioritize victims of ISIS, mandate that the State Department gather evidence of the genocide perpetrated by ISIS on Iraq’s religious minorities, and assist in the efforts of other countries to prosecute those behind the genocide.

Smith told the Register that the passage of his bill is “is a significant step forward toward ensuring that U.S. policy helps all the victims of ISIS genocide and leaves no one out.”

“As the U.S. has recently worked to correct the policies which under President Obama excluded these communities from aid, my legislation would give clear direction from Congress to the administration to ensure that humanitarian and reconstruction aid — as well as robust accountability for those who committed atrocities — gets to these communities and enables them to survive into the future,” he said.

 

Optimism

Overall, Smith is optimistic that U.S. aid efforts in the region are on the right track.

“I continue to have conversations with the administration on ensuring that U.S. aid reaches the survivors of ISIS genocide who desperately need it,” he said, “and everything I have seen of late suggests that the U.S. is indeed on track to provide for the needs of Christians and other genocide survivors in Iraq. The overall needs of these communities are great, but we are on the way to fulfilling our promise of emergency aid.”

Register correspondent Lauretta Brown writes from Washington, D.C.