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The Kurdish Detour
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Page 27

Map of refugee camp layout, Zakho, Iraq, May'91 Life in the camp must have been a vast improvement for the Kurds after what they had been experiencing in the mountains. From an American point of view, it was worse than primitive. Thousands of tents, three to a side, formed a small neighborhood with its own latrine positioned at one corner. Though the arrangement was too tight by American standards, the closeness of the tents and the latrines promoted ownership of the neighborhood, thereby assuring more cleanliness and less theft.

Four "neighborhoods," also called zozans, were then arranged into larger squares termed blocks; four blocks represented a village; four villages in turn comprised one of the five major groupings, known as sub-communities, into which the entire camp was divided. The same pattern was used for the second camp run by the 432nd.

The reason for the four-layered arrangement of the camp was to facilitate the assignment of tents and the distribution of food and supplies. Nothing however could be done to facilitate the jobs of the interpreters, who were the front line of the 432nd's war on confusion which plagued the Kurds in their never-ending search for necessities. The system was even further complicated when some of the Kurds tried "double-dipping" in the system. Double issues of food and supplies could be obtained by registering for tents in the camp and then obtaining food in the distribution center in Zakho by claiming a residence there. At times it seemed like twenty percent of the camp was vacant because people who were assigned tents were actually living in town. Eventually a security system had to be set up when people living elsewhere tried leaving with their tents. CPT Watson, the Cattleman from Kuwait, was now employed as Sheriff. His Kurdish deputies successfully reduced much of the "tent rustling" that had been going on.


McMurry's Notes


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