AMMAN, Sept. 30 (Xinhua) -- Two busloads of Iraqis
have bidden farewell to their guesting country of Jordan after reports of
improved security conditions in Iraq, daily newspaper The Jordan Times reported
on Tuesday.
"This is the first official return to Iraq conducted
by the embassy in cooperation with the ministry of immigration," Iraqi
Ambassador in Amman Saad Hayani was quoted as saying.
He expressed his hope that this will be the first
trickle in a flood of Iraqis seeking to return home.
Some Iraqis boarding the buses said they were
encouraged by reports of improved security conditions in Iraq, while others said
they were forced to return due to difficult economic conditions in Jordan.
"It is an indescribable feeling of a man returning to
his homeland, his family and loved ones. It is a good feeling for any man who
returns home," said Abdul Nabi Hassan, who boarded one of the two buses before
the 1,000-kilometer overland trip to the Iraqi capital of Baghdad.
Iraqi diplomats said more trips will be organized in
the near future, with plans to charter private planes to send the elderly and
those suffering from health problems.
Almost four million Iraqis are currently displaced
with an estimated 500,000 in Jordan, and around a million in Syria, according to
the UN High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR).
But UN officials are reluctant to encourage Iraqis to
return to an unknown future given ongoing attacks in various parts of the
country.
"The UNHCR does not consider that, at present,
conditions are such inside Iraq as to encourage repatriation," said deputy UNHCR
representative Arafat Jamal.
"However, if an Iraqi takes a decision to return
voluntarily and based on sound information, we will support such return on an
individual case basis," added the UN official.