
	
	updated May/09/2006
	
	from
	AAAS 
	Website
	
	 
	
	 
	
		
			
				
				"Assassins are targeting Iraqi university 
		professors in a coordinated, liquidation process to force well-known 
		scholars to leave the country and thus hinder the country's 
		reconstruction." 
				
				- Issam al-Rawi, 
				
				geologist at Baghdad University and head 
		of the Association of University Lecturers.
				"I received a threatening letter 
		saying, 'Do not nominate yourself to the dean's post, or it will cost 
		you your life.'" 
				
				- Iyad al-Ani, 
				
				assistant dean of Al-Nahrain University 
		in Baghdad
"We feel there's a campaign to kill every scientist in Iraq." 
				
				
				- Nahi Yousif Yaseen, 
				
				
				director general of the Iraqi Center for 
		Cancer and Medical Genetics Research in Baghdad
			
		
	
	
	
	 
	
	
	
	The Situation at a 
	Glance
	
	Since the March 2003 invasion of Iraq by U.S. forces and the subsequent 
	violence waged by insurgent groups, it is estimated that at least 100,000 
	Iraqi civilians have been killed (as of October 2004, according to a study 
	in British medical journal The Lancet), mostly by aerial bombardment. 
	
	 
	
	Scientists, medical professionals, and other 
	academics have been killed alongside the general civilian population, 
	however they have also been sought out specifically, due to their status or 
	position as scientists, for intimidation and assassination. As indicated in 
	the quotes above, the situation is extremely dire for scientists and 
	academics remaining in Iraq.
	
	Since the fall of Saddam Hussein's regime in Iraq, academics working at 
	universities and hospitals have been specifically singled out for attack. 
	Dr. Issam al-Rawi, geography professor, member of the Association 
	of Muslim Scholars and chair of the Iraqi Association of University 
	Lecturers, has reported that over 250 academics and professors have been 
	assassinated, and many others have disappeared. 
	
	 
	
	The list of those killed includes Arabs, Kurds, 
	Sunni Muslims, Shiite Muslims, and Christians: scientists and academics from 
	all backgrounds. 
	
	 
	
	In response to these killings and general 
	unrest, it is estimated that an additional 1,000 scientists have fled the 
	country.
	
	Estimates for these numbers are coming from individual reports by colleagues 
	of the dead/disappeared. A partial list of assassinated academics has been 
	collected and posted at the website of the Brussels Tribunal (a 
	Belgium-based anti-war group) by a Baghdad University professor, who wishes 
	to remain anonymous for security reasons. To date, there has been no 
	scientific study of patterns of threats or attempt to collect data on the 
	deaths in a methodical way.
	
	It is unclear who is doing the killing. Some scientists believe that the 
	majority of the killing is being carried out by the Badr Brigade, the 
	military wing of an Iraqi Shia rebel group that has been in exile in Iran.
	
	
	 
	
	It is affiliated with a group known as the 
	Supreme Council for the Islamic Revolution in Iraq which worked first to 
	overthrow Saddam Hussein, and is now focused on pushing for the full 
	withdrawal of U.S. forces from Iraq.
 
	
	 
	
	 
	
	
	Level of violence
	
	Some professors have received letters claiming to be from students, 
	threatening death should the student not receive a certain grade. Others 
	might claim the professor favors a particular ethnic group - Sunni or Shia. 
	Still other academics have received anonymous messages accusing them of 
	working with U.S. government forces and demanding they leave the country.
	
	
	 
	
	Mohammed Abdulazis, an English literature 
	student and son of Saadoun Abdulazis, an assistant dean of Al-Nahrain's 
	science faculty, was kidnapped while Saadoun was at a conference in England.
	
	
	 
	
	He was released after his parents paid a ransom, 
	but was given a message to relay to his father: 
	
		
		"You must leave Iraq. You don't belong here. 
		This country belongs to us."
	
	
	In general, morale is low in the Iraqi 
	scientific community. Although there has been some rebuilding, many labs 
	have not yet recovered from the looting that went on after the fall of 
	Saddam. Many scientists are fleeing not just because of the danger, but 
	because they have no equipment or resources, and thus nothing to do. They 
	see more opportunities in other countries. For example, Syria recently 
	opened a new science and technology university last year and the teaching 
	staff is now made up of almost 70% Iraqi exiles.
	
	The dismal state of laboratory science compounded with the danger faced by 
	scientists and academics in the country have additionally worried funders.
	
	
	 
	
	At a September 2005 meeting on science in Iraq, 
	held in Jordan, conference co-chair Arian Pregenzer, a senior 
	scientist at Sandia National Laboratories in Albuquerque, New Mexico 
	said,
	
		
		"I sometimes question the ethics of what 
		we're doing." 
	
	
	Any grants for work in Iraq 
	
		
		"are keeping scientists in a war zone," she 
		says. "It's a terrible dilemma."
	
	
	In a recent UN Educational, Scientific and 
	Cultural Organization press release, UNESCO's director-general, 
	Koïchiro Matsuura said, 
	
		
		"By targeting those who hold the keys of 
		Iraq's reconstruction and development, the perpetrators of this violence 
		are jeopardizing the future of Iraq and of democracy." 
	
	
	This crisis clearly has grave implications for 
	the stability in Iraq, as well as that of surrounding regions. It is vitally 
	important that the international scientific community takes up the cause of 
	their colleagues in Iraq.
 
	
	 
	
	 
	
	
	Actions to Take
	
		
		Resources
		
		
		
Scientists Under Attack
		
		
		
Rebuilding Scientific Infrastructure