SULAIMANI (ESTA) — “Our life is awful,” says Kurdish taxi driver Himen Gabriel, who no longer believes he has a future in his war-battered country and says he is about to try to reach Europe.
He won’t say whether he will try to enter the EU across the Belarus-Poland border like thousands of others, but is determined to leave his home in Erbil.
Sporting a long, black beard and a fashionable haircut, Himen, 28, says he has no professional prospects, blaming local systems of patronage and nepotism.
He pointed to his four brothers, saying “all have degrees and none has found a job in the public sector because they do not belong to any political party”.
He prefers not to say whether his itinerary will run via Belarus where up to 4,000 migrants, many of them Kurds, now huddle in an improvised camp in freezing weather.
As troops mass on both sides of the border, Poland has accused Russia of orchestrating a wave of migrants trying to illegally enter via Belarus in a bid to destabilize the European Union.
One Iraqi man now in Belarus, who asked not to be named, told AFP by telephone that he and his family had made it all the way to the razor wire fence at the Polish border.
When they arrived, he said their group was confronted by “Polish soldiers” on the other side.
“We tried to cross,” he said, “but the soldiers fired tear gas to force us back.”
Now back in the capital Minsk, he said he remained in contact with relatives living inside the European Union, eager to find another way to enter and cross to Germany.
Belarus Tourist Visas
Gabriel, the taxi driver, remains convinced that even an arduous and dangerous journey is worth it, given the prospect of “leading a quiet life” in Europe.
Kurdistan Region presents itself as a haven of relative stability, but is regularly criticized for restricting freedom of expression.
The region has been ruled for decades by two parties, the Patriotic Union of Kurdistan (PUK) and the Kurdistan Democratic Party (KDP).
Last May, the U.N. denounced “arbitrary arrests”, unfair trials and “intimidation of journalists, activists and protesters” in Kurdistan.
About 3,000 Kurds have left the region in the past three months, of whom 1,600 have gone to Belarus on tourist visas, according to the Kurdistan Refugee Association.
The Belarusian honorary consul in Erbil, Fouad Mamend, told AFP that they were using travel agencies to obtain tourist visas and plane tickets.
He added that the Belarus missions in Erbil and in Baghdad had now been “closed for a week at the request of the Iraqi government”.
The head of the foreign relations committee in the Kurdistan parliament, Rebouar Babki, said that “initiatives are underway to bring these migrants back” to the Kurdistan Region.
“But some of them are not in favor of returning,” he said.
‘A Better Future’
Belarus is also the immediate destination for Hiwa Fariq Mohammed, a printer in Sulaimani city.
After four unsuccessful attempts to try to reach Europe, he said he will keep trying.
“I want to leave because of the lack of security and the difficult economic situation,” the 44-year-old told AFP.
“I want to ensure a better future for my son and daughter.”
Diler Ismael Mahmoud, 55, was grieving his son’s death.
He said Kilan, 25, died less than two weeks ago in Belarus, while planning to enter Poland with a trafficker.
“He had diabetes and a spinal cord disease,” the father said.
The tough journey in harsh weather killed Kilan, who had set off with two brothers, his sister, her husband and their five-year-old child in the hope of reaching Germany.
“We thought this route was easy,” compared to risky Mediterranean crossings, said the bereaved father.
“Many have done it and they say it is a safe route, with a four-hour walk.”
Today, he said, his daughter is being treated in Poland after breaking her leg during the journey, while the rest of the family is stuck in Belarus, awaiting an uncertain future.
(Esta Media Network/AFP)