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・ Iraqi clubs in the AFC Cup
・ Iraqi Communist Party
・ Iraqi Communist Party (1960)
・ Iraqi Communist Party (Central Command) (Widhat al-Qa'idah)
・ Iraqi Communist Vanguard Organisation
・ Iraqi Constitutional Monarchy
・ Iraqi Constitutional Party
・ Iraqi constitutional referendum, 2005
・ Iraqi Council
・ Iraqi Council for Non-Governmental Humanitarian Organisations
・ Iraqi coup d'état
・ Iraqi cuisine
・ Iraqi Democratic Youth Federation
・ Iraqi Democrats Against Occupation
・ Iraqi detainees at Guantanamo Bay
Iraqi diaspora
・ Iraqi diaspora in Europe
・ Iraqi diaspora in Western Asia
・ Iraqi dinar
・ Iraqi Division I Basketball League
・ Iraqi Federation of Trade Unions
・ Iraqi Governing Council
・ Iraqi governorate elections, 2005
・ Iraqi governorate elections, 2009
・ Iraqi governorate elections, 2013
・ Iraqi Ground Forces Command
・ Iraqi Independence Party
・ Iraqi Institute for Economic Reform
・ Iraqi insurgency
・ Iraqi insurgency (2003–06)


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Iraqi diaspora : ウィキペディア英語版
Iraqi diaspora

The Iraqi diaspora refers to native Iraqis who have left for other countries as emigrants or refugees, and is now one of the largest in modern times, being described by the UN as a "humanitarian crisis" caused by the 2003 invasion of Iraq and by the ensuing war.
==History==
The Iraqi diaspora is not a sudden exodus but one that has grown exponentially through the 20th century as each generation faced some form of radical transition or political conflict. There were at least two large waves of expatriation. A great number of Iraqis left the country during the dictatorship of Saddam Hussein, and large numbers have left during the Iraq War and its aftermath.
Various ethnic and religious populations have also been displaced or relocated. The Assyrian people have dealt with a century long dispersion of its people. Another ethnic group are the Mandeans, who numbered around 70,000 before the current war. Now, the last practising Gnostic sect in the Middle East has almost entirely left Iraq.
During the first Gulf War, Iran provided refuge for 1.4 million Iraqis, though many did not settle there permanently. Facing international pressure, the United States agreed to allow Iraqis in the Rafha refugee camp in Saudi Arabia to resettle in America. Through 2002, over 32,000 Iraqi refugees had been resettled in the United States; they joined a population of non-refugee Iraqis in America, bringing the total to about 90,000 Iraqis in the US, most notably in Detroit, Chicago, San Diego and Phoenix.
The history of emigration and of the diaspora community then drastically changed with the invasion of Iraq in 2003. There are many sources claiming different amounts of displaced Iraqis. Some claim as low as 1.2 million people have left Iraq, while others claim this number to be around 4-5 million. It is difficult to gauge an accurate number of how many Iraqis seek refuge in other nations because of the constant outflow of Iraqis.
According to "UN statistics on displaced Iraqis around the world" of September 2007, Syria and Jordan are absorbing 44 per cent of displaced Iraqis globally. Other countries have also received Iraqis. Egypt, which has pledged to end Iraqi immigration, already has 150,000 ethnic Iraqi people. The United Kingdom, whose Iraqi population comes largely if not entirely from before the 2003 Iraq war, has a population numbering between 250,000 and half a million. Iran also has approximately 204,000 Iraqi expatriates. And, in Lebanon, notably due to West of Syria has 100,000 refugees. Sweden has allowed 18,000 refugees to enter, by far the most of any European country, but has indicated that it too plans on tightening restrictions.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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