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Iraq's war against IS terrorism | Updates and Discussions

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People in various Shia cities of Iraq are protesting repetitive water and electricity outages in their areas which is getting unbearable for them in this very hot summer.

The funny fact is, electricity and water in areas under Daesh control are mostly there, since government is afraid that outages in those areas may increase public anger in Sunni areas under Daesh, hence more recruitment for the terrorist group. The government is even paying for state employees living under ISIS, despite the fact that many of them either don't work anymore or don't produce any revenues for gov.

Such a 'sectarian' and 'evil' government it is.
 
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Yazidi Kurdish women chant slogans during a protest against the Islamic State group's invasion on Sinjar city one year ago, in Dohuk, northern Iraq.
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Jewish businessman spearheads rescue of Christians and Yazidis
07 August 2015 11:11 by Peter Kavanagh, Mark Brolly
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A Canadian Jewish businessman has told The Tablet he has overseen the rescue of more than 120 Christian and Yazidi girls kidnapped by so-called Islamic State (IS) in northern Iraq as Pope Francis condemned the "silence" of the international community in the face of ongoing persecution of Christians and other religious minorities.

Steve Maman, 42, an entrepreneur, founded the Liberation of Christian and Yazidi Children of Iraq (CYCI) after the jihadists overran the cities of Mosul and Sinjar a year ago, forcing more than 100,000 civilians, including virtually all the region’s Orthodox and Catholic population, to flee.

Francis in a letter to Iraqi refugees in Jordan issued on Thursday, a year after the jihadists' offensive, said: "Many times I have wanted to give voice to atrocious, inhuman and inexplicable persecution against people in many parts of the world - above all Christians - who are victims of fanaticism and intolerance. Often this persecution occurs where it can be seen and heard yet all are silent. These are the martyrs of today, people who are humiliated and suffer discrimination because of their fidelity to the Gospel."

In a matter last August, the jihadists took up to 7,000 Yazidi women and girls, some as young as 13, into slavery. An unknown number of Christian women and girls were also kidnapped. CYCI estimates that around 2,700 are still being held by IS.

Mr Maman, who cites as a personal hero Oskar Schindler, the German who saved as many as 1,200 Jews from the Nazi Holocaust, works closely with a team of negotiators based inside IS-held areas, who work to reunite the Yezidis with their families. “We liberate children from their captors through the use of on-the-ground brokers,” he said.

The charity receives money for rescue missions from Mr Maman’s mainly Jewish business associates, who, he said, have been “remarkably generous”. But the said his approaches to 60 church organisations in Canada, including parishes in Montreal and national bodies, have failed to attract support.

“This is a finite problem that can be solved with money,” said Mr Maman. “We need Christians to open up at the same rate as my Jewish friends have.”

CYCI collaborates with Anglican Canon Andrew White's Foundaition for Relief and Reconciliation in the Middle East, which is providing shelter to hundreds of people who have fled IS.

Meanwhile in Australia, church leaders are exploring ways to help a Catholic university that is due to open for Christians and Yazidis from the Mosul region in Erbil, the capital of Iraqi Kurdistan.

The Chaldean Catholic Archbishop of Erbil, Bashar Warda, was a guest at the twenty-fifth general assembly of the International Federation of Catholic Universities last month in Melbourne, where he sought assistance from delegates and the Australian Church.

He held talks with the president of the Australian bishops’ conference, Archbishop Denis Hart, and representatives of the Australian Catholic University (ACU), which hosted the assembly.

Archbishop Warda said establishing a university was “a way of fighting back against [IS] and saying we are not going to go away”. He thanked the Australian bishops for a A$500,000 (£240,000) donation last year and for sending a delegation of bishops to Erbil.

In a homily at the Assembly he said: “Our Catholic University of Erbil, planned to be opened in October, is a work of hope … It is our responsibility to help [our brothers and sisters] help themselves and to open the doors for a reliable future so they will be able to contribute to the well-being of the Iraqi nation.”

ACU's director of identity and mission, Fr Anthony Casamento, told The Tablet that his university was exploring the best ways to help. Options included including training non-academic staff; offering scholarships and internships; assisting with the library, accounts and marketing; and helping the university meet the demands of modern higher education institutions.

Above: The Canada-based charity CYCI issues Christian and Yazidi young women from their jihadist kidnappers, and keeps records of their ordeal to use against their abductors
 
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The U.S. picked the wrong ally in the fight against Islamic State

By Blaise Misztal
August 4, 2015

Tags:
islamic state | kurds | Recep Tayyip Erdogan | Selahattin Demirtas | syria | turkey
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Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan at the National People’s Congress in Algiers, June 4, 2013. REUTERS/Louafi Larbi

When Turkey finally agreed to join U.S.-led efforts to fight Islamic State, Ankara was supposed to make the battle against the extremist group more effective. Yet within days, Turkey’s president, Recep Tayyip Erdogan, bombed not just Islamic State forces but also, with even greater fervor, the one group showing some success in keeping them at bay: the Kurds.

The United States miscalculated by bringing in Erdogan. Turkey’s embattled and volatile leader looks far less interested in combating Islamic State than in reclaiming his power at home. Erdogan’s personal agenda, however, cannot be allowed to alienate U.S. partners and prolong the conflict.

Washington’s first priority here should be to preserve its constructive alliances with Kurdish groups in the fight against Islamic State. It must also prevent Turkey from further undermining the key strategic goal of defeating the jihadists.

So U.S. officials should be taking a far stronger stance against Erdogan’s attacks on the Kurds. One complicating factor is that both Ankara and Washington have labeled the target of Turkish operations — the Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK) — a terrorist organization. But there are related Kurdish organizations that U.S. leaders can and should approach, publicly reassure and privately work with to maintain their cooperation against Islamic State.

First, the Syrian Kurdish political movement, the Democratic Union Party, though ideologically related to the PKK, is considered a separate organization and not designated as a terrorist group under U.S. law. Its leader, Saleh Muslim, should be invited to Washington expeditiously for high-level consultations with government officials. These meetings could publicly demonstrate Washington’s continued commitment to the Syrian Kurds.

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Selahattin Demirtas, leader of Turkey’s pro-Kurdish Peoples’ Democratic Party, during an interview with Reuters in Ankara, July 30, 2015. REUTERS/Umit Bektas

Second, Turkey’s pro-Kurdish political party, the Peoples’ Democratic Party, is increasingly popular because it represents the aspirations of the vast majority of Turkey’s Kurds to reach a peaceful solution to the long civil conflict, as well as many Turks who want a more democratic, liberal Turkey. The party’s success in the June general elections was tremendous; it won seats in parliament for the first time. Yet the government has recently opened an investigation into the party’s leader, Selahattin Demirtas, that many critics say is politically motivated. The U.S. ambassador to Turkey should meet with Demirtas and express Washington’s continued support for concluding a peace process between Turkey and the Kurdistan Workers Party.

Third, the Kurdistan Regional Government in northern Iraq remains the most important of all the Kurdish factions. It might also be least likely to abandon the anti-Islamic State coalition over Turkish actions because of its close economic ties to Ankara and ideological opposition to the PKK. But if the regional government were to abandon the coalition, U.S. forces could lose access to critical operational, planning and intelligence facilities. So U.S. officials would do well to reassure Kurdish leaders of Washington’s commitment to their safety. They should also agree on a joint approach to pressure Erdogan to end his campaign against the PKK.

Another priority for U.S. officials should be to remove Erdogan’s motivation for attacking the Kurdistan Workers Party: political survival.

In June, Turkish voters handed Erdogan a significant defeat. His Justice and Development Party, after 12 years of single-party rule, failed to secure even a simple majority in parliament. Ever since, Erdogan had been searching for an excuse to call early elections and cajole the voters who deserted him to return to the fold. War offered the perfect opportunity.

Turkey, Erdogan told the nation, is under siege, its enemies legion. He has positioned himself as the only leader capable of protecting his people. He has also presented himself as an important and respected player on the world stage after striking a deal with the United States and getting North Atlantic Treaty Organization support for his war.

By denying Erdogan’s campaign any imprimatur of international legitimacy, the United States could begin to cut down on the political benefit he is seeking to accrue. This could mean U.S. officials openly questioning Turkey’s attack on the PKK and highlighting how it jeopardizes the mission against Islamic State — and therefore Turkish lives — rather than suggesting that the two are merely “coincidental.” The United States should be prepared to go a step further and speak frankly about the many concerns that have arisen in the U.S.-Turkish relationship during Erdogan’s administration.

Washington has continually overlooked Erdogan’s growing list of political and strategic sins –including jailing journalists at home and supporting extremists in Syria — in the hope that, when it really needed him, he would rise to the occasion. There has been no greater need for Turkey than in the fight against Islamic State. Yet after displaying reluctance to join the fight for 10 months, Erdogan has placed his own ambitions ahead of his country’s and his allies’ interests.

There is no good reason for U.S. officials to continue biting their tongues regarding Erdogan’s dictatorial tendencies and his rejection of Turkey’s traditional Western orientation.

It might have been a miscalculation to bring Erdogan into this conflict. But if the United States could stick by its Kurdish partners and chastise Erdogan’s recklessness, he might realize that he is the one who has finally overplayed his hand.
 
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See this little Iraqi girl. Suffering has made her speak like a mature woman. She is mainly talking about the lack of proper government services and corruption, as opposed to violence.


 
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See this little Iraqi girl. Suffering has made her speak like a mature woman. She is mainly talking about the lack of proper government services and corruption, as opposed to violence.



The current Iraqi regime is corrupt to the bone but it's admirable that the Iraqis have taken to the streets in a peaceful manner protesting against the corruption, leading parties and politicians (Maliki included). Ironically most of the protests have occurred in the Shia Arab heartland in the South, excluding Baghdad.

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:lol:

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We saw such protests before things went back to "normal". Same story in many other Arab countries. I am big fan though.

Down with all the corrupt tyrants!
 
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The current Iraqi regime is corrupt to the bone but it's admirable that the Iraqis have taken to the streets in a peaceful manner protesting against the corruption, leading parties and politicians (Maliki included). Ironically most of the protests have occurred in the Shia Arab heartland in the South, excluding Baghdad.

Yeah, compare that to 'Sunni revolutionaries' in Fallujah and Ramadi 1 year ago, most of which happened to be ISIS sleeper cells or sympathizers.
 
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Why are Shiites so thankless ? :

#Baghdad: People's Protest Against Corruption

- August 14th, 2015
I can hear the following :
- "Get out Iran, get out, Baghdad will stay free" | "ايران .. برّا .. برّا ، بغداد بتبقى حرّة"
- "Thieves have robbed us in the name of religion" | "باسم الدّين 'باقونا' الحراميّة"

PS: سرقونا = باقونا in the Iraqi dialect.
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#Baghdad: People's Protest Against Corruption
- August 21th, 2015

Had Al-Maliki been there, he would have given them the 'corrections' they were asking for :unsure:.

It's the payback time though :police:. For every 'nice' and 'kind' word that Shiites used to call us in the last 4 years :
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Some Shiite Mundasseen :angel:, Ara'eer :), Nawasib :rolleyes1:, Wahhabis :p:, Takfiris:yay:caught on camera while tearing off Khamenei's poster. Blessed are your hands.

More Zionist activities, by the Shiites of Ahlulbayt (as) :
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A Shiite Zio-Takfiri wrote the following :
"No salvation..no salvation, unless we expel Iran and its opportunistic clerics."

Such peaceful protesters. Bas lissa bakkeer, lol.
Allah y7meekun, I hope Iraq becomes Da'ish-free soon .
 
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if maliky is still with powers you will never see this thank god he is out
So when we going to see your corrupted regime out like almaliki Iraqis proved they are against corruption when you going to prove that.

Why are Shiites so thankless ? :

#Baghdad: People's Protest Against Corruption

- August 14th, 2015
I can hear the following :
- "Get out Iran, get out, Baghdad will stay free" | "ايران .. برّا .. برّا ، بغداد بتبقى حرّة"
- "Thieves have robbed us in the name of religion" | "باسم الدّين 'باقونا' الحراميّة"

PS: سرقونا = باقونا in the Iraqi dialect.
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#Baghdad: People's Protest Against Corruption
- August 21th, 2015

Had Al-Maliki been there, he would have given them the 'corrections' they were asking for :unsure:.

It's the payback time though :police:. For every 'nice' and 'kind' word that Shiites used to call us in the last 4 years :
CMjXuBoWwAU3La8.jpg

Some Shiite Mundasseen :angel:, Ara'eer :), Nawasib :rolleyes1:, Wahhabis :p:, Takfiris:yay:caught on camera while tearing off Khamenei's poster. Blessed are your hands.

More Zionist activities, by the Shiites of Ahlulbayt (as) :
CMcKxcoUAAAvzgg.jpg

A Shiite Zio-Takfiri wrote the following :
"No salvation..no salvation, unless we expel Iran and its opportunistic clerics."

Such peaceful protesters. Bas lissa bakkeer, lol.
Allah y7meekun, I hope Iraq becomes Da'ish-free soon .
Baathist and sectarian are there too.
 
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So when we going to see your corrupted out like almaliki Iraqis proved they are against corruption when you going to prove that.


Baathist and sectarian are there too.
our regime is from the people to the people unlike your lover who stole billions and yet no electricity or water creating isis and sectarian militia you cant hold a candle to us in terms of corruption and civil sorrow and poverty we are living the Saudi dream and yet it saddened us to see a once was great country turn to a carnival or joy ride to a bitter self loathing country who name changed it own identity to ease it shameful past and deny it and yet you jiggle their sacks
have some self respect
 
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our regime is from the people to the people unlike your lover who stole billions and yet no electricity or water creating isis and sectarian militia you cant hold a candle to us in terms of corruption and civil sorrow and poverty we are living the Saudi dream and yet it saddened us to see a once was great country turn to a carnival or joy ride to a bitter self loathing country who name changed it own identity to ease it shameful past and deny it and yet you jiggle their sacks
have some self respect


Your post was very confusing but when you say " country who name changed it own identity", do you mean "Saudi Arabia"? The only country in the world named after a family? Like a father-son general trading company?
 
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