ISIS takes advantage of water scarcity to lure Iraqi farmers
It would be easier for ISIS to recruit militants in the wake of water scarcity in Iraq as droughts hits farmland.
According to a study conducted by Al-Ahram Center for Political and
Strategic Studies, the freed Iraqi territories are facing tough challenges due
to dilapidated infrastructure as ISIS is seeking to reorganize itself to
recapture Iraqi cities.
Peter Schwartzstein, an environment correspondent and non-resident
fellow at the Centre for Climate & Security, said “While Isis was not
formed from environmental issues alone, there is a very clear link".
According to Schwartzstein, the issue first manifested in 2010
after nearly 15 years of terrible droughts. That was also the year that Abu
Bakr al-Baghdadi was appointed leader of what was then known as Islamic State
in Iraq. Baghdadi replenished the group’s leadership by targeting former Iraqi
military and intelligence officers who served under Saddam Hussein.
The Independent newspaper reported last week that drought might
force the Iraqi people to join ISIS.
After years of punishing droughts, which had blasted their lands
and livelihoods, they did not really care. Their real interest was in the
salaries of more than $400 a month.
This was early 2014. But for years, residents of this area and
others in Iraq’s northern Saladin governorate had noticed strange men in
religious garb visiting the rural areas during difficult farming seasons. It
seemed that whenever the droughts struck the visitors would appear, sometimes
dishing out food, sometimes money, sometimes agricultural supplies.
In the early days these men, part of what would later morph into
the Islamic State, tried to stoke local anger by accusing Iraq’s Shia-dominated
authorities of deliberately ignoring the embattled Sunni areas. They even
claimed there was a government plot to halt river flow to worsen the water, and
so farming, crisis.
According to The Independent, people began to listen in the spring
of 2014 the Jihadists homed in on the most vulnerable farmers of fighting age,
around 18 and 19. They promised
them they would become emirs. They lured them in with the salaries.
The Independent's report said in Kirkuk a few years later, Jihadists
were appearing at cattle markets, eyeing up farmers who were forced to sell
their livestock because they had no means of keeping their cows alive with no
water.
The newspaper quoted an Iraqi farmer as saying that they takfiris moved
to “underground trenches where they had drinks and food and got training on
different weapons.
The farmers who signed up had power and status. Those who refused were
forced to hand over 10% of their crops by the Jihadists who terrorized the
community and enforced punishing taxes. If people did not obey they had their
electricity and water supplies cut or in some cases were sent to trial.
Naseer Tareq, a rights activist from Tikrit who works on water
shortage issues for Save The Tigris campaign, said in total 5,000 farmers from
the Saladin and Kirkuk areas signed up.
According to The Independent's report most of the farmers are not
educated, they do not learn about religion, they know little about national
politics. At the time they didn’t know the difference between government forces
or any other armed group, they just needed the money.
An Iraqi farmer named Nawaf told The Independent that the village
where he lives lost over 100 feddans [acres] of farmland due to saline water. I
personally used to own 50 feddans.
"Of course, we have to give animals fresh water. But due to
scarcity; we cannot give them enough," Nawaf said.
Abdullah, another Iraqi farmer, says that other infrastructure
issues such as lack of electricity were adding to the problems. Farmers rely on
electrical pumps to access underground water reserves for irrigation.
Wim Zwijnenburg, researcher at the Dutch non-profit organization PAX,
said the Ministry of Water Resources estimates that ISIS had caused $600m
(£457m) worth of damage to hydraulic infrastructure which, according to PAX, is
still in need of urgent rehabilitation and maintenance.
However, Zwijnenburg has said the Ministry of Water Resources lacks
the funds to fix this: its budget has plunged from $1.7bn to just $50m, due to
plummeting oil revenues and the war efforts. Most of those funds are used to
pay staff salaries.