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Iraq struggles to provide war orphans with identities

The living victims of the war in Iraq against the Islamic State include children whose parents were killed or can't be identified.
A stuffed toy is found inside an abandoned house previously used by the Islamic State militants in western Mosul, Iraq June 15, 2017. REUTERS/Erik De Castro - RC1561383C60
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When the Islamic State (IS) was finally driven from Iraq in July 2017, it left material ruin in its wake. It also left behind a legacy of abandoned children and orphans, many afflicted with psychological and social scars and many with no registration papers or trace of their parentage.

Under Iraqi law, for these children to become registered and granted Iraqi nationality there must be an official marriage certificate to prove they were born under a legal union. This has led the Iraqi Foreign Ministry to call on the international community to adopt children who are known to be non-Iraqi. But what about those offspring whose lineage remains unknown, including those who lost their parents in the war?

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