What's new

Iraqi Yazidi MP Breaks Down in Parliament: ISIL is Exterminating my People

. . . .
She has 2 faces, she's trash in reality when you'd see the other things she used to say.

I have no background on Iraqi politics, so i have no right to judge or make choosing.

My only concern to bring this up with fellow international posters here on PDF -- is to make it known what is happening to the Yazidi people, a small religious minority of only 300,000 to 500,000 strong in Iraq. They are, literally, being systematically exterminated by ISIS forces.
 
. .
My heart broke seeing this....Dear God!!



:(

I cannot reply to this with any substance on this particular site, given the stated positions of its administrators and the majority of its users, except to say that this is real genocide. Those who, due to their emotions and political and religious leanings, cynically claim that a certain other conflict occurring right now is a "genocide" should look down in shame, if they are capable of shame.
 
.
Turkey gives sanctuary to hundreds of Yazidis fleeing Iraq

Ankara (AFP) - Up to 800 people from Iraq's Yazidi community have fled across the border to Turkey after escaping a lightning offensive by jihadists from the Islamic State (IS) group, Turkish officials said on Thursday.

The Yazidis are the latest victims of violence in the Middle East to find sanctuary in Turkey, after Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan's open door policy resulted in the influx of over one million Syrian refugees into the country.

Turkish Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu also revealed that Iraqi military helicopters had dropped Turkish aid for the Yazidis in northern Iraq, but the Turkish military denied its jets had entered Iraqi airspace.

Some "600 to 800 Yazidis have made their own way to Turkey since Wednesday," a government official told AFP on condition of anonymity.

"They have been accommodated by the local authorities in a housing complex for earthquake victims in the town of Silopi near the Iraqi border."

An attack by the IS at the weekend sparked a mass exodus from the northern part of Iraq including the town of Sinjar, where most of the population is made up of the Yazidi minority.
Turkey's Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu speaks during a news conference in Ankara on July 3, 2 …
A Turkish foreign ministry official described the flight of the Yazidis as a "human tragedy".

"It is not possible for Turkey to remain indifferent to this. We will fulfil our responsibility," the official told AFP.

The Yazidi are a closed community that follows an ancient faith rooted in Zoroastrianism and are scorned by jihadists as "devil worshippers", a term the Yazidi angrily reject.

- 'Circle of fire' -

The advance of Islamist militants in northern Iraq has alarmed Turkey, which is still trying to secure the release of dozens of its citizens held by the IS in Iraq's second largest city, Mosul.

Some 80 tons of food aid donated by neighboring Turkey is off loaded after it arrived in the norther …
Davutoglu held a three-hour long crisis meeting Thursday with military and intelligence chiefs to discuss the potential fallout from Iraq.

"There is a circle of fire in the region surrounding Turkey," he said, adding that some neighbouring governments had lost control of their countries.

Davutoglu said Turkey had increased humanitarian operations in Iraq, including a large package containing food and water dropped by Iraqi helicopters on the Sinjar mountains where the Yazidi community was stranded.

He insisted that the Turkish government strategy was based on helping Iraqis within their own territory.

"We could not do this during the Syrian crisis because a safe zone... could not be established," said Davutoglu.

The general staff of the Turkish armed forces late Thursday denied reports that its planes had entered Iraqi air space for the aid drop.

"Claims Turkish air force planes flew in Iraqi air space on August 7 do not reflect reality," it said in a statement.

Turkey is hosting 1.2 million Syrian refugees who have fled more than three years of brutal civil war. Many live in camps along the volatile border with others scattered throughout the country, including in Istanbul.

Officials say Turkey set up an aid centre at the Habur border gate and dispatched trucks carrying food and medicine to cities across northern Iraq.

The government is also planning to establish a 20,000-capacity camp in the Iraqi Kurdish city of Dohuk for Iraqi Turkmens.

Davutoglu said Turkey was working "day and night" to bring back the dozens of Turkish citizens, including the chief consul, kidnapped in June by jihadists in Mosul.

He lashed out at speculation that the government was preparing a "hostage show" ahead of Sunday's presidential elections where Erdogan is the clear favourite.

Turkey's main opposition Republican People's Party (CHP) filed a censure motion against Davutoglu this week over the unresolved hostage crisis.

Turkey gives sanctuary to hundreds of Yazidis fleeing Iraq - Yahoo News
 
.
Turkey gives sanctuary to hundreds of Yazidis fleeing Iraq

Ankara (AFP) - Up to 800 people from Iraq's Yazidi community have fled across the border to Turkey after escaping a lightning offensive by jihadists from the Islamic State (IS) group, Turkish officials said on Thursday.

The Yazidis are the latest victims of violence in the Middle East to find sanctuary in Turkey, after Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan's open door policy resulted in the influx of over one million Syrian refugees into the country.

Turkish Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu also revealed that Iraqi military helicopters had dropped Turkish aid for the Yazidis in northern Iraq, but the Turkish military denied its jets had entered Iraqi airspace.

Some "600 to 800 Yazidis have made their own way to Turkey since Wednesday," a government official told AFP on condition of anonymity.

"They have been accommodated by the local authorities in a housing complex for earthquake victims in the town of Silopi near the Iraqi border."

An attack by the IS at the weekend sparked a mass exodus from the northern part of Iraq including the town of Sinjar, where most of the population is made up of the Yazidi minority.
Turkey's Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu speaks during a news conference in Ankara on July 3, 2 …
A Turkish foreign ministry official described the flight of the Yazidis as a "human tragedy".

"It is not possible for Turkey to remain indifferent to this. We will fulfil our responsibility," the official told AFP.

The Yazidi are a closed community that follows an ancient faith rooted in Zoroastrianism and are scorned by jihadists as "devil worshippers", a term the Yazidi angrily reject.

- 'Circle of fire' -

The advance of Islamist militants in northern Iraq has alarmed Turkey, which is still trying to secure the release of dozens of its citizens held by the IS in Iraq's second largest city, Mosul.

Some 80 tons of food aid donated by neighboring Turkey is off loaded after it arrived in the norther …
Davutoglu held a three-hour long crisis meeting Thursday with military and intelligence chiefs to discuss the potential fallout from Iraq.

"There is a circle of fire in the region surrounding Turkey," he said, adding that some neighbouring governments had lost control of their countries.

Davutoglu said Turkey had increased humanitarian operations in Iraq, including a large package containing food and water dropped by Iraqi helicopters on the Sinjar mountains where the Yazidi community was stranded.

He insisted that the Turkish government strategy was based on helping Iraqis within their own territory.

"We could not do this during the Syrian crisis because a safe zone... could not be established," said Davutoglu.

The general staff of the Turkish armed forces late Thursday denied reports that its planes had entered Iraqi air space for the aid drop.

"Claims Turkish air force planes flew in Iraqi air space on August 7 do not reflect reality," it said in a statement.

Turkey is hosting 1.2 million Syrian refugees who have fled more than three years of brutal civil war. Many live in camps along the volatile border with others scattered throughout the country, including in Istanbul.

Officials say Turkey set up an aid centre at the Habur border gate and dispatched trucks carrying food and medicine to cities across northern Iraq.

The government is also planning to establish a 20,000-capacity camp in the Iraqi Kurdish city of Dohuk for Iraqi Turkmens.

Davutoglu said Turkey was working "day and night" to bring back the dozens of Turkish citizens, including the chief consul, kidnapped in June by jihadists in Mosul.

He lashed out at speculation that the government was preparing a "hostage show" ahead of Sunday's presidential elections where Erdogan is the clear favourite.

Turkey's main opposition Republican People's Party (CHP) filed a censure motion against Davutoglu this week over the unresolved hostage crisis.

Turkey gives sanctuary to hundreds of Yazidis fleeing Iraq - Yahoo News

Thank You, Turkey!
 
.
I cannot reply to this with any substance on this particular site, given the stated positions of its administrators and the majority of its users, except to say that this is real genocide. Those who, due to their emotions and political and religious leanings, cynically claim that a certain other conflict occurring right now is a "genocide" should look down in shame, if they are capable of shame.

@LeveragedBuyout and every knee-jerk anti-american shoud realise, as flawed as americans can be, you guys are there in situations like this.

I hope the ground is littered with the mangled bodies of these ISIS barbarians.

This is genocide, right in front of our eyes, a khmer rouge on a mini scale. Thank the lord America decided to do this.
 
.
@LeveragedBuyout and every knee-jerk anti-american shoud realise, as flawed as americans can be, you guys are there in situations like this.

I hope the ground is littered with the mangled bodies of these ISIS barbarians.

This is genocide, right in front of our eyes, a khmer rouge on a mini scale. Thank the lord America decided to do this.

Situations like this cause my blood to boil. We, Americans, are damned if we do, damned if we don't. Just watch. Kurds getting gassed by Saddamn? Why didn't you do something, America? Depose Saddam? Damn you for creating instability, America. Surge in Iraq to stabilize it? You are trying to colonize Iraq and steal its oil, America! Withdraw from Iraq? You let Iraq fall apart, America! Intervene to save the Yazidi from barbarians? You are crusaders who kill Muslims, America!

Just watch. The usual suspects will come out of the woodwork with these accusations shortly.
 
. .
@LeveragedBuyout and every knee-jerk anti-american shoud realise, as flawed as americans can be, you guys are there in situations like this.

I hope the ground is littered with the mangled bodies of these ISIS barbarians.

This is genocide, right in front of our eyes, a khmer rouge on a mini scale. Thank the lord America decided to do this.

It is the US that caused this by their meddling in the first place.

Saddam was way better than the mess you have now.
 
. .
Thank you! You're right on time.

I saw the comments on Al Jazeera, and a lot of the comments were saying how Yazidis were a bunch of devil worshippers and had it coming,

Now excuse my language, but to those who think this effort to rescue Yazidis are a new crusade, I don't give one f!ck about them. They will let these people die just so they can get a perverse pleasure from watching the west fail.

go tell them to suck a fat one.
 
.

Country Latest Posts

Back
Top Bottom