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STOCK IMAGE. A 747 jet taking off under a cloudy sky. Leo_65/Pixabay

Hundreds of migrants arrive back in Iraq on flight from Belarus

Belarussian officials believe there’s still 7,000 migrants in the country.

HUNDREDS OF IRAQIS returned home today, on an Iraqi Airways flight from Belarus, where thousands of migrants have camped on the Polish border for weeks hoping to enter the EU.

It was the first repatriation flight of migrants since the Poland-Belarus border crisis began.

Many of them are fleeing war and poverty-wracked Middle Eastern countries.

A total of 431 people were aboard the Boeing 747, said a spokesman for the government of the autonomous region of Kurdistan where many of the repatriated Iraqis came from.

Iraq’s government has said the repatriation was voluntary.

The flight was to continue later in the evening to Baghdad but most of the passengers disembarked at Arbil.

Some hid their faces, so as not to be identified on local TV images as they stepped down from the plane.

The smile of one woman, however, was clear as she entered the terminal carrying an infant.

Many of the children and adults wore thick winter coats and hoods, images from a regional Kurdish TV station showed.

Some carried their belongings in backpacks or plastic bags.

Inside the terminal, blue-suited workers administered Covid-19 tests.

The situation on the border created a stand-off between the European Union and US on one side and Belarus and its ally Russia on the other.

That left the migrants stuck in the middle and living in freezing temperatures.

At least 11 have lost their lives at the border.

Western countries have accused Belarusian President Alexander Lukashenko’s government of engineering the crisis by encouraging migrants, many of them Iraqi Kurds, to come to Belarus and then taking them to the border.

The EU alleges this is revenge for sanctions imposed last year after a heavy crackdown on the opposition.

Lukashenko’s spokeswoman Natalya Eismont said today that there were about 7,000 migrants in the country, with about 2,000 in dire conditions on the border.

© AFP 2021

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    Mute jack hammer
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    Sep 18th 2014, 7:43 AM

    Was in an elephant reserve in botswana 12 mths ago. Ranger there told me there was at least 10 bodies of poachers on their reserve. No questions asked your caught poaching its a bullet in the head. Different world.

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    Mute Patrick
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    Sep 18th 2014, 10:28 AM

    Its ironic like those pro lifers headbangers here who threatened to kill the ministers.

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    Mute Stephen Carroll
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    Sep 18th 2014, 12:56 PM

    Great to see this, poverty is one of the biggest contributors to poaching in Africa. People flock to these reserves in hopes they have work going for them and then ultimately people with knowledge of the area can put those skills to use to kill these animals and sell their meat/tusks or whatever, valued at nearly €15 billion a year trade in illegal game. Overseas buyers can be a big contributor to these practises as their is demand for their “medicinal” effects, see asian market for Rhino horn erectile dysfunction hollistic cure.

    Nearly an estimated 100,000 Elephants were killed last year, that’s almost 3000 elephants a day, if rangers and parks (which ultimately need much more funding to preserve these species) can turn the local hunters into rangers themselves they can cut the legs off the illegal trade to stop their supply chain

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    Mute Tara Tevlin
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    Sep 18th 2014, 12:08 PM

    Such a beautiful animal love to see them one day.

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