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Assyria: New Iraqi Census Officially Recognizes ChaldoAssyrians

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  • Assyria: New Iraqi Census Officially Recognizes ChaldoAssyrians

    UNPO, Netherlands
    July 12 2004

    Assyria: New Iraqi Census Officially Recognizes ChaldoAssyrians

    With the handover of sovereignty by the Coalition Provisional
    Authority (CPA) now complete, the new interim government in Iraq has
    begun to prepare the groundwork for nationwide elections now set for
    2005. Reports have surfaced that in preparation for a nationwide
    census, a new draft census form including the various Iraqi
    constituent groups has been prepared. The draft survey form
    reportedly includes Arabs, Turkoman, Armenians, Kurds, and Assyrians.
    The inclusion of Assyrians (also known as Chaldeans and Syriacs)
    marks a historic milestone in that under the former regime Assyrians
    were deliberately classified as Arabs, despite their protestations.
    As a direct result, past Iraqi censuses have resulted in Assyrian
    under representation.
    The initial draft version of the census form caused some concern and
    confusion within the Assyrian community. Reportedly, the new draft
    form originally included the term "Ashori" -- the Arabic version of
    Assyrian. For Iraqi Assyrians, the preferred term for official
    governmental business is "ChaldoAssyrian." This term was
    overwhelmingly adopted by Iraqi Assyrians during the Chaldean Syriac
    Assyrian General Conference in Baghdad in October of 2003. The
    Baghdad conference, sponsored by the Assyrian Democratic Movement
    (ADM) and the Assyrian Democratic Organization (ADO), was
    unimaginable just a few months earlier under the past Baathist
    regime. During a very critical period, the ChaldoAssyrian community
    of Iraq convened the meeting to formally adopt the official name to
    be included in any future Iraqi constitution as well as to press for
    recognition of an Assyrian self-administered area in the Nineveh
    Plain. The adoption of ChaldoAssyrian is broadly seen as the best way
    to avoid external threats to exacerbate internal tensions over the
    name issue that might otherwise result in fragmentation of the third
    largest demographic group in Iraq.

    Formal complaints by various groups within the community to the
    census bureau have, according to insiders, led to the census bureau
    acknowledging that ChaldoAssyrian will indeed be the term utilized in
    the census form. Prior to the anticipated reversal, Assyrian leaders
    had feared that the draft version represented an affront to the
    Assyrian community's political expression as well as potential
    fragmentation of the community in the upcoming census. As one leader
    noted, "there was concern that the resulting tension and confusion
    might lead to another undercounting of our people in Iraq." Another
    analyst added, "It remains critical at this time to not deviate from
    the agreed upon formula of the Baghdad conference in order to not
    hand our adversaries the victory of under representation of our
    people there once again."

    The inclusion of "Ashori" in any form has itself been seen as highly
    significant on another count as well. During the previous regime,
    there was a deliberate distinction made in Arabic between "Ashoris"
    and "Athoris." As part of the Arabization campaign of the Baath
    regime, Ashori referred to ancient Assyrians while Athori referred to
    today's Assyrians as a Christian Arab religious minority. By making
    such a distinction, the government deemed today's Assyrians unrelated
    to the ancient Assyrians in order to deny Assyrians their legitimate
    ethnic, historical, cultural and indigenous status within Iraq. In
    the Assyrian language (Syriac), there is no distinction between the
    two terms and both are used interchangeably. Appropriately, the new
    proposed census form uses the term Ashori (or ChaldoAshori)
    acknowledging the historical continuity of the Assyrians of Iraq.

    One of the greatest challenges facing Assyrians in Iraq today remains
    a proper accounting of numbers. Community estimates outside Iraq have
    put the numbers at between 6-10%, while in Iraq Assyrians are given
    only 4% representation. No real hard facts are known since Assyrians
    have never been included in official Iraqi censuses, they were
    fragmented as separate religious minorities along Church
    denominations. One Assyrian observer bitterly noted "We constituted
    just over 10% of the casualties of the Iran-Iraq War. How is it,
    then, that we are 'allowed' to die for our country proportionately,
    but not allowed to be represented politically fairly to the same
    extent?"

    Some of the responsibility of seeing that all Assyrians are counted
    in the upcoming census will fall on the shoulders of the new
    ChaldoAssyrian Minister of Immigration and Refugees, Ms. Pascale
    Warda Eshoo. Although Assyrians continue to protest only one
    ministerial position, the new ministerial level appointment of Ms.
    Eshoo is seen as highly significant because through that position she
    may be able to contend with the two most vexing issues for Assyrians
    in Iraq. First, she will be able to assist with displaced Assyrians
    within Iraq. Secondly, from the perspective of representation, she
    will be able to assist with properly registering Assyrians in the
    diaspora. One analyst noted, "In the US alone, 80-90% of
    Iraqi-Americans are Assyrian. Even if , pending a fair census, we are
    only 1.5 million in Iraq, there are at least hundreds of thousands
    outside Iraq that need to be counted." Another observer explained the
    discrepancy of 6-10% of a nation's population contributing 80-90% of
    its diaspora by simply summarizing "disproportionate persecution has
    led to disproportionate emigration."

    Despite the climate of fear and intimidation that the horrendous
    security situation has engendered, there have been some recent
    hopeful signs for Assyrians. The new Iraqi interim President recently
    acknowledged the importance of the Assyrian diaspora community.
    Speaking in Washington to an audience of Iraqi expatriates, Sheikh
    Ghazi al-Yawer stated that the Assyrians are the indigenous people of
    Iraq and are an important and integral part of government. Their fair
    representation will be ensured in the new political makeup inside and
    outside of Iraq, where they represent a majority of the Iraqi
    Diaspora communities.

    http://www.unpo.org/news_detail.php?arg=08&par=909
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