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Asharq Al-Awsat
Asharq Al-Awsat
World
Asharq Al-Awsat

Rights Group: ISIS Children in Iraq Shunned by Society

Displaced Iraqi children, who fled ISIS in Mosul, carry their belongings at Khazer camp, Iraq December 10, 2016. (Reuters)

Tens of thousands of children born under ISIS rule in Iraq are being shunned by society, said a rights group on Tuesday.

An estimated 45,000 children in Iraq who were born under ISIS and they are being excluded from society because the government denies them documentation and ID papers, said the Norwegian Refugee Council.

Norwegian Refugee Council Secretary General Jan Egeland warned that these children - most of whom are in camps for the displaced today - are a "possible human time-bomb."

"Undocumented children risk remaining left on the margins of society if this issue is not addressed immediately. This seriously undermines future prospects of reconciliation efforts," said Egeland, according to The Associated Press.

"We urge the government to ensure that undocumented children have the right to exist like any other Iraqi citizen," he added, citing the organization's 38-page report "Barriers from Birth."

The children were born during ISIS's 2013-2017 rule, when the group controlled nearly a third of Iraq. The Iraqi government today considers their birth certificates invalid because they were issued by ISIS.

After US-backed forces defeated the ISIS and the terrorists lost their self-styled "caliphate," many ISIS families and those of civilians who lived under the group's rule were put in camps for the displaced.

The Norway-based group said its legal teams receive on average 170 requests for help each month in cases of unregistered children, children whose fathers are undocumented, are on one of the government's security databases or are perceived to be affiliated with ISIS.

Egeland said the chance of obtaining ID documents for children from families accused of ISIS affiliation is nearly impossible, resulting in collective punishment of thousands of innocent children.

"Children are not responsible for crimes committed by their relatives, yet many are denied their basic rights as Iraqi citizens," he said.

Without ID papers, these children have no access to education or health care, they are not allowed to enroll in schools and their mothers cannot get badly needed aid - they are denied "simply the right to exist," Egeland said.

Providing these children with such basic rights to education and health care is "key to ensuring a sustainable future for them and for the country," he said.

"A society cannot be at peace if it allows a generation of stateless children in its midst."

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