Iraq internal refugee totals growing steadily: IOM
By Robert Evans
GENEVA (Reuters) - Some 480,000 Iraqis have registered as internal refugees or IDPs since the start of 2007, bringing the total in the country to more than 2.25 million, the IOM relief body said on Wednesday.
The IOM, or International Organisation for Migration, said most of those leaving their homes were fleeing sectarian violence -- with 88 percent saying they had moved after being targeted for their religious identity.
"The situation is becoming a displacement catastrophe," Dana Graber Ladek, a Jordan-based official for the IOM, told a news conference. "It is certainly the worst crisis of its type the whole (Middle East) region has seen since 1948."
In that year, hundreds of thousands of Palestinians fled their homes in Arab-Israeli fighting that followed the establishment of the state of Israel.
Graber Ladek said that while there had been little movement between the U.S.-led invasion in March 2003 and early 2006, nearly 1.06 million had moved to other parts of the country since the bombing of a major Shia shrine in February last year.
SURGE IN FLIGHT
That incident, in the city of Samarra, was followed by months of widespread bombings and killings in which Sunni militias and insurgents targeted Shia communities and Shia fighters and militias attacked Sunnis.
Small religious groups, including Christians, have also been attacked, causing many of their members to join both Shias and Sunnis in fleeing abroad -- mainly to Jordan and Syria where there are up to 2.2 million Iraqi refugees. Continued...





