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Missing Yazidi women and children hiding in plain sight

November 19, 2017 By administrator

While the “Islamic State” (IS) has lost most of its cities in Iraq and Syria, thousands of Yazidis it kidnapped are still missing. Activists say some are being hidden within IS families. Judit Neurink reports from Irbil.

Almost half of the over 6,000 Yazidis kidnapped three years ago by the IS group have still not been found. Yet many of them are hidden in plain sight, aid workers and Yazidi activists say, living with Arab families who have sought refuge in Internally Displaced Person (IDP) camps.

Forced to convert to Islam, they now fear for their lives if they are found, aid worker and Yazidi activist Mirza Dinaye says. He is calling for an active search and for the Yazidis to be returned to their families.

They are victims of the IS policy to eradicate the Yazidi faith, he says. “We know they are completely assimilated into the Muslim community. They think the Yazidi faith has been eradicated, and often suffer from Stockholm syndrome,” — a special, often intimate relationship between victims and kidnappers.

That was the case for Mediha Ibrahim, 13, a Yazidi girl kidnapped by IS in August 2014, who spent the next three years living with the families of Turkish IS fighters in their stronghold of Talafar. During that time, they turned her into a Muslim.

Sold to Turkish IS families

“I forgot my Kurdish,” she admits in Turkish as she devours a pizza in a restaurant outside the camp in the Kurdistan Region of Iraq where she has recently been reunited with her uncles along with two of her brothers who were helped to escape. Her parents and another brother are still missing, but the latter has been identified in pictures posted on the Facebook account of an IS fighter. Just like Mediha, her brother has been taken into the fighter’s family and hidden away.

Mediha’s first Turkish owner in Talafar, Abu Yousef, had three wives and several children. “He beat me and sold me to another family,” she says. She stayed a bit longer with Abu Ali and his wife Fatima, who came from Bursa in Turkey, before they sold her to Abu Ahmed and Zahida from Konya. She was given a new name, Hadjar. By that time, she had taught herself Turkish and been sent to school to learn Arabic. She prayed five times a day and enjoyed reading the Quran.

She was told she could never go back to her family and that it would be better to forget about them altogether. “I felt like a Muslim, not like a Yazidi. They said that my family would kill me if they found out I had left our faith.”

Source: http://www.dw.com/en/missing-yazidi-women-and-children-hiding-in-plain-sight/a-41425642

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: missing, women, Yazidi

Iraq: 16 schools damaged by powerful quake in Darbandikhan

November 18, 2017 By administrator

ERBIL, Kurdistan Region – More than a dozen schools have been damaged in Darbandikhan due to the 7.3 magnitude earthquake which shook the Kurdistn Region and neighboring countries last week.

The Education Department of Darbandikhan explained 16 schools were damaged as a result of the earthquake and its aftershocks and that these schools cannot be used for classes due to the high possibility of the buildings collapsing.

“I was sad to see these things here. I want the government to repair this place. I want to go back to school to study,” Helen Mohammed sighed while holding the hands of her 3rd grader brother and looking for their class in the school only to find it in ruin.

In Darbandikhan area, a loss of 10 billion Iraqi Dinars (IQD) has been incurred on the education sector, according to local officials.

Darbandikhan Education Department now brings students from four schools and puts them in one building in order for the education process to continue.

“Sixteen of our schools and 2 kindergartens have been damaged. Classes cannot resume in them for now,” Omar Mohammed, head of the Darbandikhan Education Department, told Rudaw. “We distributed the students of these schools on other schools in Darbandikhan.”

He explained that “some schools will have three, sometimes four rounds of classes a day.”

After the Education Minister of the Kurdistan Regional Government (KRG) met with the head of Education Department and headmasters of affected schools, he said they were trying to dedicate a budget to renovate the schools.

“Although the government is in deep financial crisis, we should dedicate some of the budget to attend to things that require urgent attention,” KRG Minister of Education, Pishtiwan Sadiq, told Rudaw.

Some 1,968 teachers teach 16,343 students at 70 schools and kindergartens throughout Darbandikhan.

Students in Darbandikhan were wishing to go back to school after the earthquake. But the committee formed by the Darbandikhan Education Department says that some schools in the town should be demolished because of the direct impact of the earthquake.

Darbandikhan dam built in 1961 was also damaged by the powerful quake.

The death toll of last week’s earthquake, according to the latest figure, rose to 12 in the Kurdistan Region. More than 500 people were injured mainly in the areas of Darbandikhan, Halabja, Kalar and Khanaqin ,the International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies (IFRC) announced in a press report on Tuesday.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: earthquake, Iraq, Kurdistan

Lebanon’s Hariri says he will return to Beirut

November 18, 2017 By administrator

Lebanon’s Prime Minister Saad Hariri has announced on a Paris visit that he will soon travel back to his country. Hariri’s recent resignation is seen as the latest fallout of the proxy war between Iran and Saudi Arabia.

Lebanese Prime Minister Saad Hariri announced on Saturday that he intended to return to Beirut for the country’s Independence Day celebrations on Wednesday.

Hariri sent shockwaves through regional politics two weeks ago when he announced his surprise resignation while abroad in Saudi Arabia.

“As you know I have resigned, and we will discuss that in Lebanon with President Michel Aoun,” Hariri said in Paris, having been invited by French President Emmanuel Macron in the wake of the crisis.

Lebanon has traditionally had very strong ties with its former colonial power, France. Paris has routinely provided Beirut with military and financial assistance, particularly in helping the nation rebuild after its civil war.

Hariri thanked Macron for his “generous hospitality,” while France has indicated its willingness to host an international meeting on the crisis should the need arise.

Political chaos ensnares Germany’s top diplomat

Prime Minister Hariri shocked the world when he declared that he was stepping down during a trip to the Saudi capital, Riyadh, on November 4, and then declined to return to Lebanon. His prolonged stay in Saudi Arabia prompted many, including German Foreign Minister Sigmar Gabriel, to assert that Hariri was being held against his will.

“To say that I am being held up in Saudia Arabia and not allowed to leave the country is a lie. I am on the way to the airport Mr. Sigmar Gabriel,” the prime minister wrote in a rare personal tweet on Friday night.

Riyadh has recalled its ambassador to Berlin over Gabriel’s comments.

 

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: hariri, Paris

Armenia to upgrade 30 tanks to T-72B4 version under $15 mln contract

November 18, 2017 By administrator

The Armenian armed forces are modernizing their tank park, Razm.info says citing a report from the Centre for Analysis of World Arms Trade.

30 of Armenia’s tanks, in particular, are reportedly planned to be upgraded to the T-72B4 version.

The modernization contract is estimated at $15 million, with the upgrade process set to conclude by 2019.

The remodeling of the T-72B3 version into a T-72B4 will add to the tanks’ technical equipment, making the engine more powerful and improving the fire management system.

An annual report by Russian machine building company UralVagonZavod also mentioned the modernization of “military products” previously delivered to Armenia.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Armenia, tanks

Armenian defense minister’s delegation completes Canada visit

November 18, 2017 By administrator

On the last day of its working visit in Canada, the Armenian delegation led by Defense Minister Vigen Sargsyan was hosted at the AGBU Alex Manoogian School in Montreal.

According to the ministry’s press service, the defense minister was welcomed by the School students, who presented their letter addressed to Armenian soldiers. The kids also performed a small concert at the hall of the School.

Minister Sargsyan noted during his visits to other states he always attached importance to the meetings at Armenian schools, since they play a key role in preserving the Armenian identity.

“Our country is a country with a limited territory and not a very large population. However, our people are bearers of an incomparably greater heritage. Our struggle, the meaning of our existence cannot be limited to our country’s territory, borders or population. We are the bearers of the heritage the creators of which were dreaming about statehood. Today, when we have a state, we should do our best so that Armenia, Artsakh and the Diaspora can together fulfil our centuries-old dreams,” the Armenian official said.

Afterwards, the Armenia delegation visited the Sourp Hagop Armenian School of Montreal and toured the school. Vigen Sargsyan left a note in the school’s honorary guest book.

At the end of the visit in Canada, the Armenian delegation paid tribute to the memory of the Armenia Genocide victims in Montreal.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Armenian defense minister, Canada

How Chris Cornell Found Inspiration for His Song From Armenian Genocide Film ‘The Promise’

November 18, 2017 By administrator

Even though the Armenian genocide depicted in Open Road’s The Promise took place more than 100 years ago, when Chris Cornell wrote the searing end-title theme, he wanted to bring awareness to similar atrocities going on today.

“Rather than people thinking, ‘Wow, what a horrendous thing that happened a century ago,’ I’d love for them to realize that it is happening now and the fact that the warning signs are always the same leading up to a genocide,” said the late Soundgarden singer in an interview a few weeks before his May 2017 death and shortly before the film, starring Christian Bale and Oscar Isaac, opened.

However, when Cornell wrote “The Promise,” musically he stayed rooted in the past. “That was a conundrum I hadn’t dealt with before. I couldn’t have any popular music references that are natural to me” like Led Zeppelin or The Beatles, he said. He also didn’t want to write a strictly period piece tied to the early 1900s, using only instruments that existed in Armenia, “because the song needed to do a bigger job, it shouldn’t be confined by geography or time.” He settled on acoustic guitar, piano, tympanis and strings, with orchestration by the late Grammy-winning arranger Paul Buckmaster.

Lyrically, Cornell, who earned a Golden Globe nomination in 2012 for “The Keeper” from Machine Gun Preacher, drew from The Promise writer-director Terry George’s script and rough edits of the film, as well as research – reading and watching documentaries – about the genocide. He told the story from the perspective of a young man singing to a photo of his father or grandfather about the inspiration they had provided by persevering through horrendous acts. Though not Armenian, Cornell also drew upon his wife’s Greek heritage since her ancestors were affected by the same World War I genocide that led to the death of 1.5 million Armenians.

Cornell, who donated proceeds from the song to the International Rescue Committee, an organization that provides assistance to those fleeing conflict, wanted to leave viewers with a sense of hope. “The hope was built into the story,” he said. “To me, the challenge was being able to distill it in a couple of verses and a chorus.

Filed Under: Articles, Genocide Tagged With: armenian genocide, Chris Cornell, Film, The Promise

Iraqi forces liberate last Daesh-held town near Syria border

November 17, 2017 By administrator

Iraqi armed forces have liberated Rawa, the last remaining town under the grip of the Daesh terror group, hours after they launched the offensive.

Lieutenant General Abdul Ameer Rasheed Yarallah said in a statement from the Joint Operations Command on Friday that Iraqi forces “liberated Rawa entirely, and raised the Iraqi flag over its buildings.”

The force striking Rawa near the border with Syria comprised government troops and paramilitary units.

“With the liberation of Rawa, we can say all the areas in which Daesh is present have been liberated,” Reuters quoted a military spokesman as saying.

The announcement came hours after the Iraqi Defense Ministry said in a statement that military units and local tribal fighters entered the western neighborhoods of Rawa on the Euphrates River in the western province of Anbar.

The recapture marks the end of Daesh’s territorial rule in Iraq.

The terror group stormed Iraq in 2014, seizing around a third of it in exceptionally-brutal attacks. The conquests included the country’s second-largest city of Mosul, which it boldly named as its so-called headquarters there.

Iraq then enlisted the help of Shia-dominated paramilitary volunteer fighters, making strides against the group, and liberating Mosul back in July.

The Syrian army also declared victory over Daesh earlier this month after retaking the border town of Bukamal on the border with Iraq.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: deash, Iraqi Forces, last

Kuwait Airways can bar Israeli passengers, German court rules

November 17, 2017 By administrator

Kuwait Airways canceled an Israeli passenger’s ticket because of their citizenship. Nothing wrong with that, said a court in Frankfurt — and provoked an outcry.

A court in the German city of Frankfurt ruled on Thursday that Kuwait Airways was within its rights to refuse to transport an Israeli because of their citizenship.

In its judgement, the court said it was “not reasonable” for the airline to transport a person if doing so risked severe legal consequences for its employees in Kuwait.

Kuwaiti law prohibits companies from doing business with Israelis.

The passenger had sued the airline for discrimination after it refused to fly him from Frankfurt to Bangkok via Kuwait City in 2016.

The details of the ruling

The court adjuged that:

  • Their evaluation did not consider “whether the law of a foreign country … makes sense” from a German legal view
  • The Israeli could not be compensated for the airline’s action because it was not discriminatory under German law
  • “Germany’s anti-discrimination law prohibits, among other things, discrimination because of race, ethnicity or confession. Discrimination because of citizenship is, by contrast, not covered by the law.”

What were the reactions?

The case in Frankfurt follows similar discrimination cases against Kuwait Airways in Switzerland and the US. Courts in those instances ruled against the company.

The Israeli’s lawyer, Nathan Gelbart, condemned the judgement. “This is a shameful verdict for democracy and for Germany in general,” he said. “This verdict cannot stand.”

Frankfurt Mayor Uwe Becker echoed the sentiment, saying: “To my mind, an airline that practices discrimination and anti-Semitism by refusing to fly Israeli passengers should not be allowed to take off or land in Frankfurt, or at any other airport in Germany.”

Source: http://www.dw.com/en/kuwait-airways-can-bar-israeli-passengers-german-court-rules/a-41414435

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Israeli, Kuwait Airways, passenger

Children of Armenia Fund’s event supported by Hollywood stars

November 17, 2017 By administrator

Photo from www.coafkids.org

The Children of Armenia Fund (COAF) is announcing its annual gala dinner which is supported by Leonardo DiCaprio, Tom Hanks, Ariana Grande, Chloe Kardashian, Conan O’Brien, Tina Fey and may others.

The supporters of COAF’s efforts gather in New York City each year to participate in the much-anticipated and star-studded event which will be held for the 14th time this year on December 16.

Emmy- and Tony-award winning actress Andrea Martin will host the fundraising, while Swiss art auctioneer and collector Simon de Pury will curate the auction of unique artworks.

Prominent artists and designers will attend the evening, enjoy cocktails and dinner and jazz performances.

Spanning education, health, wellness, science, technology, innovation, culture, art, communication and languages, COAF’s programming was created to empower a new generation of healthy, educated Armenians to significantly improve the future of their homeland on both a local and global scale.

Last year, DiCaprio made a $65,000 donation to the Fund by acquiring a work by painter Joe Bradley.

Filed Under: Articles, Events Tagged With: Armenia, children, Fund's

Israeli journalist Yossi Melman: I would take Azerbaijani website to court unless they apologize

November 17, 2017 By administrator

YEREVAN. – Israeli-Azerbaijani relations will not be affected by the recent scandal over Israeli drone producer who was told to attack the Armenian military on behalf of Azerbaijan, Israeli journalist Yossi Melman told Armenian News-NEWS.am.

Earlier this year journalist and writer Yossi Melman published an article in Maariv newspaper saying that  Israeli defense ministry was investigating the complaint saying Israel-based Aeronautics Defense Systems refused to demonstrate the capabilities of new drones on Armenian targets as requested by Azerbaijan.

“I do not think geopolitical situation in your area has changed. Israeli-Azeri relations are not affected by this particular case. This does not affect the overall relations and would not affect in the long run, it is an isolated case of a company. I would put it differently, Azerbaijan is very important for Israel, but this case is so outrageous, that even the defense ministry realized that they cannot turn a blind eye,” Mr. Melman said.

He mentioned that Azerbaijani side tried to say that the case “is poisoning the relations”, but Israeli side explained that “we are a democratic society and we cannot interfere with the investigation.”

On Monday it was revealed that Israeli police have opened a criminal investigation  against an Israeli drone manufacturer. News of the investigation came out as an Israeli court approved a gag order for the case, constraining the information that can be spread about it.

The journalist said that the probe started in late July when the defense ministry started to investigate the case. He believes the Israeli authorities realized that it is a complex investigation, and it is not only about breaching the terms of the license, but may be something bigger.

“As to the gag order by court, I think it is a theater of absurd. The gag order will operate until March and will forbid Israeli media to report about the case. I think the gag order would be challenged by Israeli media outlets,” he emphasized.

Mr. Melman said he had become a public enemy in Azerbaijan, and was even called “an agent of Armenia” on one of Azerbaijani websites.

“I am demanding an apology. They said I am corrupt journalist and received bribes from Armenian lobby. I would take them to court for defamation and I would demand compensation,” he said.

The journalist added that unless he receives an apology from Azerbaijani website, he would take the case to the British court.

Source: news.am

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Azerbaijan, dron, Yossi Melman

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