By Barry Moolman
Laurette and I were just back from our Summer holiday at Little
Brak River when the phone rang on 1 January 1999. It was Hans von Sponeck who
told me that me that he had been appointed as Humanitarian Coordinator for Iraq
and whether I would be interested to join him in Iraq coordinating the UN
activities in the Kurdish enclave in Northern Iraq. I had known Hans from my
time in India, where he was the UN Resident Representative.
The next morning, at the office, I discussed Hans’ call with
Chief Director Malcolm Ferguson and prepared a submission to Jackie Selebi, the
DG. Tutu Mazibuko, who was the DDG for Asia and the Middle East added her positive
recommendation and two days later the DG called me to the Union Buildings.
After I explained the background he added his comment on the submission –
“approved for full secondment”
This United Nations operation, UNOCHI, commonly known as the
Oil for Food Programme was designed to exchange Iraqi oil for essential goods
and services in Iraq. In the heartland of Iraq the UN monitored the
distribution and in the Kurdish north the UN implemented everything “on behalf
of the Government of Iraq.”
Shortly afterwards I travelled to New York for interviews
and briefings and returned to Pretoria two days later armed with a blue UN
Passport.
Early in April I flew to Amman in Jordan and from there
travelled by road to Baghdad where I spent the first two weeks at the UNOCHI
Headquarters in the Canal Hotel to meet all the Heads of the UN Agencies and
other senior UN Officials.
Then we drove to another world – to Iraqi Kurdistan. After
passing Kirkuk we went through the Iraqi control post, traversed a no man’s
land stretch and then the Kurdish control post. The currency changed from New
Iraqi Dinars to “Swiss Dinars”, the original Iraqi denomination. Satellite
dishes could be seen on rooftops.
The people were different and spoke Kurdish and despised the Arabs. Late that afternoon I was introduced to the PUK Prime Minister, Kosrat Ali. A lavish reception in a lush garden was laid on for Hans and myself. The Prime Minister, who spoke only Kurdish sat at the head of a long table laden with food and drinks. I sat to his left and he ordered a bottle of Johnnie Walker Black, poured each of us a water glass full and started to talk.
The people were different and spoke Kurdish and despised the Arabs. Late that afternoon I was introduced to the PUK Prime Minister, Kosrat Ali. A lavish reception in a lush garden was laid on for Hans and myself. The Prime Minister, who spoke only Kurdish sat at the head of a long table laden with food and drinks. I sat to his left and he ordered a bottle of Johnnie Walker Black, poured each of us a water glass full and started to talk.
Ebrahim, my excellent translator skipped between Kurdish and
English and some hours later (and an empty bottle) the PM and I really got to
know each other. Kosrat Ali was an imposing figure, big, burly and with only
one working eye. The other one, lost during the Kurdish civil war was replaced
by a glass object staring straight ahead while the working one skimmed from
left to right.
In Suleimania, the next day, I also met the President of the
PUK, Jalal Talabani. Mam Jalal, as he was commonly known took me to his study
where he showed me two books. President Mandela’s Long Walk to Freedom and the
FW De Klerk biography. He had studied both and expressed a high regard for what
we have achieved in South Africa.
By the end of that week I finally arrived in Erbil, the
capital of the KDP controlled part of Kurdistan. My predecessor, Maxwell
Gailard, on Thursday, took me along to a field demonstration by UNOPS where a
week’s loot of unearthed land mines were to be destroyed. That is where I met,
for the first and last time a young New Zealander, Nick Speigh.
Weekends are Fridays and Saturdays and after the
demonstration Max and I went to a small town, Diana, high up in the mountains
where we were to spend the weekend. We had scarcely arrived when a radio
message came through that we were to return to Erbil immediately. Nick had been
assassinated!
The Erbil Airport is a few kilometres out of town. Being in
the no-fly zone, it was unused but a lovely spot to watch the setting sun from
one of a number of pyramid shaped mounds. That is where Nick and Irene Plugge,
a Dutch girl working in the UNOCHI Office went for an impromptu picnic. A
dilapidated yellow and black taxi came to a standstill on the runway, the
bonnet was opened and the driver came up to Nick and Irene to ask for some
water for his overheated car engine.
This was gladly given and some time later the driver came back with the empty bottle, which he handed to Nick. As Nick took the bottle the man opened fire with a handgun and shot him in the chest several times, killing him on the spot. Irene, some 20 meters away screamed and some shots were fired in her direction. She fell over and feigned death till she heard the taxi speeding off. As we always carried two-way radios she raised the alarm and that led to our sudden recall from Diana.
This was gladly given and some time later the driver came back with the empty bottle, which he handed to Nick. As Nick took the bottle the man opened fire with a handgun and shot him in the chest several times, killing him on the spot. Irene, some 20 meters away screamed and some shots were fired in her direction. She fell over and feigned death till she heard the taxi speeding off. As we always carried two-way radios she raised the alarm and that led to our sudden recall from Diana.
An incident such as this inevitably led to a number of consequences.
Security was stepped up, a curfew imposed and a ban on any night travelling
imposed
After this rather dramatic start of my tenure I quickly met
the KDP Leadership who all came to pay their condolences.
The UN operation in the North consisted of field offices in
Dohuk, Erbil and Sulaimania. There were about 10 different UN Agencies dealing
with the full spectrum of administration
of, amongst others Health, Education, Agriculture, Demining, Housing and last but not least Food
Distribution. We were about 100 foreign UN Staff members and some 700 locally
recruited staff members.
My daily routine included co-chairing weekly meetings between the agency heads and the local ministers. As the interface between the UN and the Local Authorities I was very often called upon to mediate between both. Once, UNOPS announced that it had successfully demined a village and that the population could return. The traumatised villagers were sceptical that every single land mine had been cleared. In the end I suggested that I would lead a UNOPS Team who would take on the villagers for a soccer match on the former mine field. That convinced the meeting, no match was played and the village could be re-inhabited.
The world learnt of the horrors of chemical exterminations when
the city of Halabja was attacked by Sadam’s air force. This was merely the tip
of the iceberg. Many villages, such as one I visited on the banks of the Little
Zab River went through this horror when small aircraft appeared and drums of
chemicals were dropped up-wind. With the gas drifting over the villages few
were spared and ended up as corpses on the bank of the river. Wells were then
poisoned and mines planted, making the villages uninhabitable.
On another occasion I had to hand over “graduation certificates”
to newly trained dog handlers who controlled the sniffer dogs searching for
unexploded landmines. We previously ran into difficulties with the government
in Baghdad who could not comprehend why the dog food for the South African dogs
we used was more expensive than the rations given to the human population. The
explanation that dogs should not be seen as such but rather as highly
sophisticated biological mine detecting devices only partly convinced the
government. It was then decided to start the NIPS Programme. NIPS stands for
National Indigenous Puppy Sniffers.
Local mongrel dogs, used to the extreme
heat were trained along with their Kurdish handlers. Waiting under an awning we
saw the dogs with their baggy pant wearing Peshmerga handlers approaching. Then
I heard Afrikaans orders, “Sit, Staan Loop, Ruik.” And so forth. The newly trained handlers used to their
South African experts doubted whether dogs could be ordered to detect mines
when given commands in Kurdish. Hence the sticking to Afrikaans.
The UN Mandate for Iraq, ran on six monthly cycles. Our
contracts as well. At the end of each period an estimate was made of how much
income was expected from strictly controlled Iraqi oil sales. The Kurdish area
was run on the 13% account. That translated into millions of Dollars that had
to be allocated to the various sectors in a six monthly budget. The final
budget had to be approved by the UN Security Council.
Towards the end of the Millennium tension between the Iraqi
Government and the Security Council was at a height resulting in the
programme’s extension for mere weeks instead of the normal six months. Everyone
wanted to be with their families all over the world to see in the 2000’s.
I ended up in Baghdad as Acting Humanitarian Coordinator
when a final breakthrough came and the Budget had to be submitted and approved
in the week between Christmas and New Year. Sitting in the office, which was
later blown up with a massive truck bomb, I watched on television the new
millennium in New Zealand breaking and slowly moving round the world until 24
hours later when the budget was finally ready for transmission to New York.
My term was extended five times until 2001 when I finally
returned home to my family.Meeting up with Tutu Mazibuko after this time, she asked me
why I did not stay on in the UN. My answer was that I owed it to the Department
that approved my secondment to return home and continue to loyally serve my
country.
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