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A Miraculous Reunion
For eight years, Salaymatu Bah believed that her two young sons were dead, that they'd been killed in Sierra Leone during that country's civil war.
Bah, who was raised a Muslim, had been forced to split from her children and their father, a Christian, because her parents didn't approve of the match. As her country plunged deeper into war, she lost track of her family.
Believing that Mallam and Alpha were dead, Bah fled to neighboring Guinea in 1999. Five years later, she traveled to the United States as a refugee.
With the aid of the IRC, Bah settled in Boston. She was 24 years old and alone in a strange country.
"When I got here, I never knew that my boys were still alive," Bah says, "I was dying inside."
Bah was not alone in her anguish. The war in Sierra Leone lasted nine years and killed tens of thousands. More than two million people became refugees and thousands of families were separated in the chaos.
In 2007, Bah received the stunning news from a family friend that her husband had died of disease and that her sons were living as refugees in Guinea. She turned to Rita Kantarowski, IRC regional director, for help in finding the children and bringing them to Boston. Kantarowski contacted the American Red Cross, which in turn contacted the Guinean Red Cross. The Red Cross located the children in a squalid camp, struggling but indeed alive.
After filling out scores of forms, Bah was shocked when immigration authorities rejected her application to bring her sons to America. The reason? With the war in Sierra Leone now over, the children could no longer qualified as refugees through their mother.
"When we got the decision, she sat in my office and cried and cried," Kantarowski recalls. "I told her I couldn't guarantee anything, but that I would do everything in my power to bring her children to her."
The IRC mobilized quickly on behalf of Bah. The State Department was contacted as was U.S. Rep. Michael Capuano (D-Mass). With their help, and the help of IRC staff members in Sierra Leone, the two boys were granted a hearing to determine if they could qualify as refugees on their own. At one point, when doubt arose about the children's parentage, Kantarowski arranged for DNA tests that proved Bah and the children were related.
Finally, in September 2007, Mallam and Alpha were granted refugee status. Just before Thanksgiving, the two boys, dressed in pinstripe suits, beaming and crying, stepped off a jet at Boston's Logan Airport and into their mother's arms.
"I was full of joy," Bah says. "It was the whole beginning of my life. This is the time I'm going to start being a mother again to my kids."
Bah knows that her battle to survive in the United States is just beginning. She lives in a sparsely furnished apartment, works a minimum-wage job and doesn't always have money for food.
But the boys are beginning to feel secure in their new home. They are addressing Bah as "Mommy" - a development that brings tears to her eyes - learning English and playing basketball at school.
Recently, Kantarowski and a group of IRC volunteers and Boston-area refugees gathered in Bah's small apartment to celebrate Mallam's ninth birthday. They surprised the family with streamers, balloons and cake.
"Mallam was so excited, he'd never experienced anything like it before," Kantarowski says. "This is one of the happiest stories I've ever seen. Salaymatu has focused her whole existence on these children. She is a good mother." For eight years, Salaymatu Bah believed that her two young sons were dead, that they'd been killed in Sierra Leone during that co... more -
'Saddam's sons' seek refugee status in Israel?
Officials foil Iraqi family's bid to gain refugee status after discovering children named Uday, Qusay
A recent family of infiltrators seeking a safe haven in Israel caused several officials in the Foreign Ministry to stand up and takes notice. Officials were surprised to discover that two of the children are named Uday and Qusay, after the sons of former Iraqi Dictator Saddam Hussein.
The family, which consists of the two parents and their six children, recently infiltrated Israel through the Israeli-Egyptian border.
The family then arrived at the offices of the Interior Ministry and applied for refuge status, claiming they were from the war-torn region of the Sudan.
'First time Iraqis try to infiltrate Israel'
Suspicions were raised when it was discovered that two of the children, ages 12 and 13, were named after the sons of Saddam Hussein. After a short inquiry it was discovered that family members were not refugees from the Sudan, but rather, Iraqi citizens.
Rami Ovadia, one of the persons who investigated the case said that "This is the first instance where Iraqis infiltrate Israel, claiming to be persecuted Sudanese and apply for refugee status". The head of the immigration department at the Interior Ministry, Yakov Ganot, also commented that there has been an increase in the number of people applying for refuge status who are not entitled to it. Officials foil Iraqi family's bid to gain refugee status after discovering children named Uday, Qusay ... more -
Palestinian Refugees Still Nearly Forgotten in Iraq's No-Man's Land
The U.N. refugee agency says nearly 200 vulnerable Palestinian refugees stranded in the desert along the Iraq-Syria border for the last two years have been accepted for resettlement by Iceland and Sweden. The UNHCR reports the group, which had taken refuge in a kind of no-mans land, includes some of the most vulnerable women and children with urgent medical needs.
UNHCR Spokesman, Ron Redmond, says the stranded Palestinians have little chance of being resettled in a third country. He says they are unwilling to return to the homes they fled in Baghdad because they are afraid they will be killed.
"The Iraqi government has also been approached repeatedly by UNHCR to ensure that protection is provided to these Palestinian enclaves in Baghdad. But, this has been easier said than done in the past because they were specifically targeted, including by mortars and so on," said Redmond. "So, it is a very difficult thing to control."
About 34,000 Palestinians lived in Baghdad while Saddam Hussein was in power. They enjoyed many privileges denied Iraqis. After Saddam's downfall, Iraqis hostile to the Palestinians harassed, threatened, and even killed some of them.
Redmond says only about 10,000 to 15,000 Palestinians remain in Baghdad.
He cites the case of a 30-year-old widow, with three children as typical of those who are unable to find a new home.
"Her husband was killed while trying to help the victims of a bombing. Another bomb went off and killed him. Their four-year-old son was with his father when this happened and saw his father killed before his eyes and so now has severe emotional problems. So, in that particular case, we are looking for a resettlement country that can help a female-headed household with children who suffered severe trauma," continued Redmond.
Redmond says the health situation of many of the refugees is increasingly dire and proper medical care is lacking. He says medical problems range from diabetes and birth defects to kidney problems, cancer and serious trauma. In the past 14 months, he says 12 Palestinian refugees have died in the camps. The U.N. refugee agency says nearly 200 vulnerable Palestinian refugees stranded in the desert along the Iraq-Syria border for the las... more -
AWOL in Canada
US soldiers like Corey Glass and Rodney Watson, who have gone AWOL from the Iraq War, are now facing deportation from Canada to the US. They are waiting for the government there to decide their fate. US soldiers like Corey Glass and Rodney Watson, who have gone AWOL from the Iraq War, are now facing deportation from Canada to the US... more
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Canada gives US deserter second chance
Canada’s refugee board was ordered by a judge to rehear an application by a US war resister to remain in Canada. Federal Court Justice Robert Barnes said that mistakes were made by Canada’a Immigration and Refugee Board when they turned down Joshua Key’s claim for asylum. In 2003, Key served eight months in Iraq as a combat engineer. On his return to the US on leave, he his wife and four young children moved to Canada to seek refuge. There are more than two hundred US war deserters in Canada avoiding service in Iraq. A recent poll shows that 64% of Canadians would let US war resisters stay in the country. On June 3rd the Canadian parliament passed a non binding resolution calling for deserters to be allowed to stay and to put a halt to deportations. So far Conservative Prime Minister Stephen Harper, a close ally of the Bush administration, has ignored the resolution.
U.S. deserter wins appeal in battle for refugee status
Janice Tibbetts, Canwest News Service
Published: Friday, July 04, 2008
OTTAWA - A Canadian court has sided for the first time with a military deserter who fled to Canada seeking refugee status, ruling Friday that the U.S. soldier witnessed enough human rights abuses during a stint in Iraq that he could qualify for asylum.
The decision also marked the first time that the Federal Court, which has heard a handful of cases involving deserters, concluded that military action against civilians in Iraq violates the 1949 Geneva Convention, an international prohibition against humiliating and degrading treatment.
Federal Court Justice Richard Barnes ordered the Immigration and Refugee Board to reconsider the failed refugee claim of Joshua Key, a soldier who entered Canada with his wife, Brandi, and their small children in March 2005.
Key, an army private, deserted during a two-week break from serving as a combat engineer in Iraq, where he spent eight months in 2003 and says he was involved in military-condoned home invasions against civilians.
"This is a real breakthrough," said Lee Zaslofsky of the Toronto-based War Resisters Support Campaign. "What excites us is this may also apply to other war resisters who took part in Iraq." Canada’s refugee board was ordered by a judge to rehear an application by a US war resister to remain in Canada. Federal Court Justice... more -
Inside Iraq: Dangerous Allies
New alliances with Sunni militias have reduced attacks on American troops in Anbar and elsewhere in Iraq, but will this new strategy lead to lasting stability, or is it feeding a sectarian civil war and exacerbating a growing refugee crisis? Reporters David Enders and Rick Rowley take us inside Iraq for this report.
Produced by the Pulitzer Center on Crisis Reporting in association with Azimuth Media.
To learn more about this issue, visit www.pulitzercenter.org. New alliances with Sunni militias have reduced attacks on American troops in Anbar and elsewhere in Iraq, but will this new strategy l... more -
Interactive performance piece is altering perspectives on war, one paintball at a ...
An Iraqui buddy of mine from my school days was recently picked by the Chicago Tribune as "Chicago Artist of The Year".
You can find out more about his work and this particular installation by visiting his personal site: http://www.crudeoils.us/wafaa/ An Iraqui buddy of mine from my school days was recently picked by the Chicago Tribune as "Chicago Artist of The Year". ... more -
You Need to Know Gladys
Knowing Gladys Alard has enriched my life.
Here are five reasons why you need to know her too:
1) She's 81 and she dances better than you can.
2) She went to school with Fidel Castro.
3) She's an amazing story teller.
4) She's charming.
5) She'll teach you what she's taught me about enjoying a full, abundant life. Knowing Gladys Alard has enriched my life. Here are five reasons why you need to know her too: ... more -
Iraqi refugees give Current props
These Iraqi Refugees had reached out to many, many other media outlets before VC2 producer Adam Fish found them in Cyprus. Be on the look out for a pod about their struggles as refugees from their country. These Iraqi Refugees had reached out to many, many other media outlets before VC2 producer Adam Fish found them in Cyprus. Be on the l... more
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North Korean Escape
A 25-year-old North Korean, now living in South Korea, recounts his long journey to freedom.
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