Young Iraqis See Suicide As an Escape
In
a recent report, Amnesty International detailed dozens of tragic
stories of women and girls choosing suicide to escape the brutality of
the Islamic State group (IS, formerly ISIS), as they rampaged through
large swathes of Iraq, capturing women and children, especially from
religious minorities, and selling them on for forced marriage and
slavery.
The report, Escape from hell: Torture, sexual slavery in
Islamic State captivity in Iraq, was a deeply disturbing document of
human misery. It is also, sadly, just the tip of the iceberg in Iraq
where the number of suicides, previously a rare phenomenon, has spiked
since it was "liberated" by the US-led "coalition of the willing" in
2003.
Suicide rates are rising especially among Iraqi youths right
across the country, whether in IS-controlled territory or in the
relatively stable southern provinces or Baghdad. The phenomenon used to
be largely confined to Kurdish areas in the north, where self-immolation
has long been seen as Kurdish women trying to escape gender-based
violence and the practice of early arranged marriage.
According to
the Kurdish Regional Government's Ministry of Human Rights, there were
over 3,700 cases of cases of infant betrothal in 2010 across Iraqi
Kurdistan's five regions. This is a predominantly rural phenomenon, in
areas where traditional tribal practices continue to dominate. In
today's neo-liberal economies of Kurdistan's largest cities, a rapid
rate of change in the role and status of women in society has
ameliorated the consequences of some of these practices but also shocked
conservative Kurds. There, the numbers of early arranged marriages are
declining. Elsewhere, they have been seen as a leading cause of suicides
in young women and girls.
However, some of the 10,000 cases of
self-immolation documented in Iraq's Kurdish areas between 1991 and 2010
may not be suicides at all. So-called "honour" crimes are also
widespread, and the Kurdish authorities are increasingly trying to clamp
down on them. International human rights organisations believe a number
of cases of reported suicide by self-immolation are likely to be
"honour" murders disguised as self-immolation.
A growing phenomenon
But
Kurdistan is not the only area afflicted by high suicide rates. Across
the rest of Iraq suicides, especially among the youth, a third of the
population, are on the rise. Previously almost unknown in Iraq, the
aftermath of the country's "liberation" in 2003 saw a sudden and
significant upsurge in the phenomenon.
An early documented case
happened in Baghdad in September 2003, when Maqdad al-Duhaimi, a
19-year-old who got married a month earlier, picked up a rifle, aimed it
at his head and pulled the trigger. Duhaimi served in the Iraqi army
before the invasion. After Paul Bremer, head of The Coalition
Provisional Authority, disbanded the army Maqdad begun selling soft
drinks in the street to support his young wife, Hanah. It seems the
shame of hardly earning enough to support his wife pushed him to kill
himself.
This year, two well-reported cases included a policeman,
and a young mother. Upon receiving orders to fight in Ramadi in Anbar
province in June, police officer Saad Aziz made a phone call to his
family, then shot himself. And a 20-year-old mother from Najaf, south of
Baghdad, burned herself to death in March after being beaten by her
husband.
Since Duhaimi wielded that rifle on himself there has
been a dramatic increase in the number of suicides in Iraq. In 2013,
according to the Iraqi Human Rights Commission (IHRC), 439 cases of
suicide were documented in Iraq, a rise of 60 percent (excluding Iraqi
Kurdistan) on 2012.
Most of those who killed themselves --
employing methods ranging from self-immolation and hanging to poison --
were young. Dhi Qar province, in southern Iraq, recorded the highest
incidence of suicides with 119. These figures, moreover, are likely to
understate the problem. Because of social stigma and religious taboos,
it is safe to assume that many suicides and attempted suicides, for
which no data is available, go unreported.
Many of the causes can
be traced to the desperate socio-economic circumstances many Iraqis find
themselves in. With widespread poverty, high unemployment, and no
progress toward such lofty ideals as "freedom" and the now widely
despised concept of "democracy", Iraqi youths have little to look
forward to.
Violence and escape
Moreover, violence is
everywhere. In a July 2014 study, presented at the World Congress for
Middle East Studies in Ankara in August, Ameel al-Shawi, of Iraq's
College of Medicine, found that with their daily lives surrounded by
violence and terror, more than 40 percent of Iraqi university students
found themselves thinking of death as an escape. The paper, The effect
of violence on youth in Iraq, concluded that Iraqi youths, unlike North
African youths who risk death trying to cross the Mediterranean for
European shores, see death as an option in itself.
There are other
ways to escape, like joining Iraq's increasingly numerous and
increasingly murderous militias, which hide behind one religious banner
or another, whether it be the Sunni Islamic State group's call to global
Jihad or Shia Grand Ayatollah Ali Sistani's fatwa calling for a
"righteous jihad". These are, perhaps, simply another way for youth to
commit suicide.
My generation grew up believing that Iraqis
generally do not consider suicide to be an option. Even the most
bohemian of Iraqi poets, renowned for their morbid poems and seeking
oblivion through drink, would have surprised suicide-contemplating
western intellectuals with their raw attachment to life. The urge to
live is fundamental in our culture.
An exception was Hayat
Sharara, a brilliant writer and academic, who committed suicide together
with her daughter in 1996, because of a combination of domestic
political pressure on academics and the brutality of international
economic sanctions. Describing these sanctions, she said: "Hunger walks
through this land like a giant monster, destroying everything under its
feet. When it opens its mouth, it crushes people 's souls with its
jaws."
"Well, we just exist ", Hayat concluded.
This was
long before the rise of IS, and if the group has resorted to barbaric
practices to instil fear and terror in the populace, it is only a
reflection of what is already there, a consequence of three decades of
US-led sanctions, occupation, torture and terror against the Iraqi
people.
Judging by the sectarian, corrupt, lawless rule of
consecutive Iraqi regimes since, the complete absence of any national
economic strategy to provide education, employment and equal
citizenship, future generations of Iraqis will also see suicide as an
option.
Tuesday, January 6, 2015
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