Housing affordability and job security are not priority issues in Iraq's
new, improved 'Democracy'.
DAHUK, 22 Jun 2006 (IRIN) - A sharp increase in house rents is hurting
people in the northern Dahuk governorate – local officials say.
http://www.irinnews.org/print.asp?ReportID=54088
Following a large inflow of internally displaced people (IDPs) from
other volatile regions of the country, there has been a shortage of
housing. This has prompted landlords to cash in - leaving many with no
choice but to stay in cramped and poor unhygienic conditions.
“One of the consequences of this large number of IDPs to Dahuk, within a
short period of time, has been the dramatic increase in rent and house
prices," Gorgees Shlemon, the acting Governor of Dahuk told IRIN.
"This has negatively affected people’s economic conditions,” he added.
The regional Kurdish government has started to build 200 houses for some
of the IDPs near Zakho but says much more is needed.
Salar Khalil, an estate agent in the governorate confirmed that prices
have tripled since 2004 when IDPs first started arriving, as a result of
the conflict to oust Saddam Hussein in 2003.
The north was already home to more than half a million IDPs and the new
influx is putting a huge strain on resources, officials say.
There are 3,020 IDP families in Dahuk province, according to the local
branch of the Iraqi Red Crescent Society (IRCS).
Almost 80 percent of these IDPs are Christians who fled the cities of
Mosul and Baghdad due to insecurity.
Some 63 families are currently living in tents in the Zakho and Shiladze
camps, north of Dahuk. They are in poor conditions, without electricity
and clean drinking water, because they can't afford to pay rents said
Sardar Tamar, a senior official of the IRCS in Dahuk. The rest of the
displaced are either renting or staying with relatives in the governorate.
Julita Nissan Maku, 46, a Christian, fled Mosul with her family of four,
after her 23 year-old son, Morin, was beheaded by armed men. Morin was
employed by a Turkish company working with the US military in the city.
“After the death of my son, terrorists sent us a threatening letter
saying that if we don’t pay 30,000,000 Iraqi Dinars (US $200,000) we
would be killed. So we had no other option but to run away,” she said.
She together with another family have rented a house with two rooms in a
Dahuk suburb for $200 per month. In late 2004 a house like hers could be
rented for $70, according to local estate agents. Maku said her husband
was ill and could not work forcing them to live on a meagre monthly
income of $100.
Many of the fleeing families are unable to find work and cannot afford
to pay the rent alone.
[ENDS]