[Congressional Bills 111th Congress]
[From the U.S. Government Publishing Office]
[H. Res. 944 Engrossed in House (EH)]

H. Res. 944

                In the House of Representatives, U. S.,

                                                     February 24, 2010.
Whereas threats against members of even the smallest religious and ethnic 
        minority communities in Iraq could jeopardize the future of Iraq as a 
        diverse, pluralistic, and free society;
Whereas according to the Department of State's International Religious Freedom 
        Report, violent acts continue to pose a significant threat to members of 
        the country's vulnerable non-Muslim religious minority communities, 
        including documented attacks against Chaldeans, Syriacs, Assyrians, and 
        other Christians, Sabean Mandeans, and Yazidis, and ``very few of the 
        perpetrators of violence committed against Christians and other 
        religious minorities in the country have been punished'';
Whereas according to the United States Commission on International Religious 
        Freedom, there are grave threats to religious freedom in Iraq, 
        particularly for members of the smallest, most vulnerable religious 
        minority communities in Iraq, including Chaldeans, Syriacs, Assyrians, 
        and other Christians, Sabean Mandeans, and Yazidis;
Whereas the February 2009 Country Report on Human Rights Practices issued by the 
        Department of State identifies ongoing ``misappropriation of official 
        authority by sectarian, criminal, and extremist groups'' as among the 
        significant and continuing human rights problems in Iraq;
Whereas in recent years, there have been alarming numbers of religiously 
        motivated killings, abductions, beatings, rapes, threats, intimidation, 
        forced conversions, marriages, and displacement from homes and 
        businesses, and attacks on religious leaders, pilgrims, and holy sites, 
        in Iraq, with the smallest, non-Muslim religious minorities in Iraq 
        having been among the most vulnerable, although Iraqis from many 
        religious communities, Muslim and non-Muslim alike, have suffered in 
        this violence;
Whereas the Assyrian International News Agency reports that 59 churches were 
        bombed in Iraq between June 2004 and July 2009;
Whereas persecution and violence in Iraq have extended to church leaders as 
        well, such as the March 2008 kidnap for ransom and killing of 65-year-
        old Chaldean Catholic Archbishop Paulos Faraj Rahho;
Whereas many members of non-Muslim religious minority communities in Iraq 
        reportedly do not receive adequate official protection, and are legally, 
        politically, and economically marginalized;
Whereas control of several ethnically and religiously mixed areas, including the 
        Nineveh and Tamim (Kirkuk) governorates, is disputed between the 
        Kurdistan regional government and the Government of Iraq, and Chaldeans, 
        Syriacs, Assyrians, and other Christians, Sabean Mandeans, Yazidis, and 
        Muslim ethnic minorities Shabak and Turkomans are caught in the middle 
        of this struggle for control and have been targeted for abuses and 
        discrimination as a result;
Whereas many members of vulnerable non-Muslim religious minority communities in 
        Iraq have fled to other areas in Iraq or to other countries;
Whereas the flight of such refugees has substantially diminished their numbers 
        in Iraq;
Whereas approximately 1,400,000 Christians were estimated to have lived in Iraq 
        as of 2003, including Chaldean Catholics, Assyrian Orthodox, Assyrian 
        Church of the East, Syriac Catholics, Syriac Orthodox, Armenians 
        (Catholic and Orthodox), Protestants, Evangelicals, and others;
Whereas it is widely reported that only 500,000 to 700,000 indigenous Christians 
        remained in Iraq as of 2009;
Whereas since 2003, the Sabean Mandean community has found itself targeted by 
        both Sunni and Shia Islamic extremists, and by criminal gangs who use 
        religion to justify their attacks;
Whereas the Sabean Mandean community in Iraq reports that almost 90 percent of 
        the members of that community either fled Iraq or have been killed, 
        leaving only about 3,500 to 5,000 Mandeans in Iraq as of 2009;
Whereas in August 2007 a series of bombings targeted the Yazidi community of 
        Iraq resulting in an estimated 200 deaths and more than 200 injuries;
Whereas at least 20 people were killed and 30 wounded in a double suicide 
        bombing in August 2009 which targeted the Yazidi minority in northern 
        Iraq;
Whereas the Yazidi community in Iraq reportedly now numbers about 500,000, a 
        decrease from about 700,000 in 2005;
Whereas the Baha'i faith, estimated to have only 2,000 adherents in Iraq, 
        remains prohibited in Iraq under a 1970 law;
Whereas the ancient and once-large Jewish community in Iraq now numbers fewer 
        than 10, and they essentially live in hiding;
Whereas in 2008, the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) 
        reported that approximately 221,000 Iraqis returned to their areas of 
        origin in Iraq, the vast majority of whom settled into neighborhoods or 
        governorates controlled by members of their own religious community;
Whereas many of these returnees reported returning because of difficult economic 
        conditions in their countries of asylum, principally Syria, Jordan, 
        Egypt, and Lebanon; and
Whereas many members of vulnerable religious and ethnic minority communities are 
        not believed to be represented in more than negligible numbers among 
        these returnees: Now, therefore, be it
    Resolved, That it is the sense of the House of Representatives that--
            (1) the United States remains deeply concerned about the plight of 
        members of the vulnerable religious and ethnic minority communities of 
        Iraq;
            (2) the Secretary of State should develop and report to Congress on 
        a comprehensive strategy to encourage the protection of the rights of 
        members of vulnerable religious and ethnic minority communities in Iraq;
            (3) the United States Government should urge the Government of Iraq 
        to enhance security at places of worship in Iraq, particularly where 
        members of vulnerable religious minority communities are known to be at 
        risk;
            (4) the United States Government should continue to work with the 
        Government of Iraq to integrate religious and ethnic minorities into the 
        government in general, and the Iraqi Security Forces, in particular, 
        with the goal of ensuring that members of such communities--
                    (A) suffer no discrimination in recruitment, employment, or 
                advancement in government positions, in general, and the Iraqi 
                police and security forces, in particular; and
                    (B) while employed in the Iraqi police and security forces, 
                be initially assigned, in reasonable numbers, to their locations 
                of origin, rather than being transferred to other areas;
            (5) the Government of Iraq should, with the assistance of the United 
        States Government--
                    (A) ensure that the upcoming national elections in Iraq are 
                safe, fair, and free of intimidation and violence so that all 
                Iraqis, including members of vulnerable religious and ethnic 
                minority communities, can participate in the elections; and
                    (B) permit and facilitate election monitoring by experts 
                from local and international nongovernmental organizations, the 
                international community, and the United Nations, particularly in 
                ethnic and religious minority areas;
            (6) the United States Government should encourage the Government of 
        Iraq to work with members of vulnerable religious and ethnic minority 
        communities to develop and implement tangible, effective measures to 
        protect their rights and measures to reverse the legal, political, and 
        economic marginalization of religious minorities in Iraq;
            (7) in providing assistance to Iraq, the United States Government 
        should continue to take into account the needs of vulnerable members of 
        religious and ethnic minority communities and expand upon efforts to 
        work with local organizations that serve those communities;
            (8) the United States Government should continue to fund capacity-
        building programs for the Iraqi Ministry of Human Rights, the 
        independent national Human Rights Commission, and the newly-created 
        independent minorities committee whose membership is selected by members 
        of vulnerable religious and ethnic minority communities of Iraq;
            (9) the United States Government should strongly encourage the 
        Government of Iraq to direct the Iraqi Ministry of Human Rights to 
        investigate and issue a public report on abuses against and the 
        marginalization of members of vulnerable religious and ethnic minority 
        communities in Iraq and make recommendations to address such abuses; and
            (10) the Government of Iraq should, with the assistance of the 
        United States Government and international organizations, help ensure 
        that displaced Iraqis considering return to Iraq have the proper 
        information needed to make informed decisions regarding such return.
            Attest:

                                                                          Clerk.