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More than 3,000 families fled due to sectarian conflict, government says.

The Iraqi Ministry of Immigration and Displacement said on Tuesday that 3,705 families had been displaced in the country, as a result of the ongoing sectarian violence. It erupted following the 22 February bombing of a Shi'ite shrine, Al-Askariya, in Samarra, some 120 km north of Baghdad. The attack on the Al-Askariya shrine spawned days of reprisal attacks between the country’s two major Muslim sects, the Shi’ites and the Sunnis. At least 400 people were killed and dozens of mosques were damaged and destroyed, according to figures released last week by the Interior Ministry. Sattar Nawroz, the spokesman for the Ministry of Immigration and Displacement, said that most of the displaced families went to the southern city of Najaf. About 1,000 families had descended there from Baghdad’s restive western neighbourhoods, and from the northern oil-rich city of Kirkuk as well as from Diyala, north-east of Baghdad. The second largest number of the displaced families, 615, Nawroz added, have fled to the centre of Baghdad, from the capital’s western and northern suburbs. The government has allocated about US $350,000 to provide the affected people with essential supplies, but more funds will be needed as displacement in some places is still on going, he said. Some of the families have ended up in their relatives’ homes while others less fortunate found shelter in partially built structures, mosques and in abandoned government buildings. The head of the Iraqi Red Crescent Society (IRCS), Dr Saad Haqi, said his organisation was supplying the displaced families with food, tents, blankets and beds. “Our volunteers are working like bees trying to reach all places to help these families." Haqi said. Ridha Hussein, 45, left his home in Baghdad’s lawless neighbourhood of Dora with his four children and wife and found shelter in an abandoned sports hall in the Mansour neighbourhood. This was after militants killed his brother and left a note on his door reading: “Leave the area or have your head chopped off. You Shi'ites are traitors and America’s allies.” Donated sacks of sugar, rice and flour were piled up on one corner of a sports club in Baghdad where about 10 families have taken shelter.

This article was produced by IRIN News while it was part of the United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs. Please send queries on copyright or liability to the UN. For more information: https://shop.un.org/rights-permissions

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