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While Erdogan & barzani planning new False-Flag operation for Mosul, Turkish jets bombing Kurdish positions

December 9, 2015 By administrator

Barzani tukish jetAnkara carried out airstrikes targeting Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK) forces in northern Iraq, the Turkish army said on Wednesday. The action comes in the wake of rising tensions between Ankara and Baghdad over the deployment of Turkish troops in Iraq.

Ten F-16 fighter jets launched an attack between 10pm and 10:50pm on Tuesday, targeting PKK positions in the Kandil, Hakurk, Zap and Avasin-Baysan regions in northern Iraq, the Turkish General Staff said in a statement. It added that the targets were “destroyed in an aerial campaign.”

Tensions have been rising between Ankara and Baghdad after Turkey deployed hundreds of troops equipped with tanks and artillery to Iraq’s northern Nineveh Governorate last Thursday, saying they will train forces battling Islamic State (IS, formerly ISIS/ISIL).

Baghdad said it had not asked for the help of Turkish forces, and demanded their withdrawal after it said Turkey had “illegally” sent the troops into Iraq. Describing the move as violation of sovereignty, the Iraqi government also asked NATO to intervene.

Meanwhile, Shiite paramilitary groups have threatened to use force against Turkey unless it pulls its forces out of Iraq. Likening the Turkish incursion to the occupation of Iraq by IS militants, Badr Brigade spokesman Karim al-Nuri said “all options” were available.

“We have the right to respond and we do not exclude any type of response until the Turks have learned their lesson,” Nuri said on Wednesday. “Do they have a dream of restoring Ottoman greatness? This is a great delusion and they will pay dearly because of Turkish arrogance.”

Also on Wednesday, the Iraqi parliament unanimously approved a motion condemning the Turkish intervention, supporting the government in taking whatever measures it viewed as appropriate.

Russia raised the issue at a meeting of the UN Security Council on Tuesday, expressing hope that Ankara will avoid escalating the situation in the region with any further reckless actions. Following the meeting, Russia’s UN envoy Vitaly Churkin said that Moscow expects Ankara to “settle the situation in Iraq in a way that would satisfy the Iraqi government.”

“Now the situation is within the focus of the attention of the Security Council, so we hope it will help resolve [it] to the satisfaction of the Iraqi government, whose sovereignty, territorial integrity and independence will be respected,” he said.

Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov slammed Ankara’s actions while speaking to Italian media on Wednesday.

Lavrov proposed a thorough examination of how Turkey performs goals set by the coalition in Syria. “We need to examine how a member of the US-led coalition – the Republic of Turkey – performs goals set by the coalition,” the minister said. “Why is it not bombing terrorists as such, but the Kurds instead?”

READ MORE:West’s reaction to Turkish invasion – an exercise in hypocrisy

On Wednesday, Ankara argued that Turkish soldiers were sent to northern Iraq after a threat from IS to Turkish military trainers in the area. Prime Minister Ahmet Davutoglu said that the deployment was an act of solidarity, not aggression.

“The [military] trainers in the Bashiqa camp were threatened by Daesh (Islamic State) because it is 15-20 kilometers from Mosul and they have only light arms,” he told media in Istanbul. “So when these threats increased… we sent some troops to protect the camp, not as an act of aggression but as an act of solidarity.”

 

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Barzani, bombing, jet, Kurd, Turkey

Why: KRG leader Barzani visits Turkish most notorious Military Intelligence MİT headquarters in Ankara??

December 9, 2015 By administrator

(Photo: Reuters)

(Photo: Reuters)

Is Barzani part of Turkish spy network?

Kurdistan Regional Government (KRG) President Massoud Barzani visited Turkey this week to hold talks with Turkish officials amid tensions between Turkey and Iraq over the deployment of Turkish troops in northern Iraq.

Barzani arrived in Ankara on Wednesday afternoon for a two-day official visit. Although it wasn’t stated on the official schedule, the KRG leader paid his first visit to the National Intelligence Organization’s (MİT) headquarters, Turkish media reported. He is expected to meet with MİT Undersecretary Hakan Fidan.

KRG president’s visit to Turkey came amid the escalating tension between Ankara and Baghdad over the deployment of Turkish troops in Iraqi city of Mosul.

Turkey deployed about 150 troops, along with 25 tanks, to a camp in the Bashiqa region of northern Iraq on Thursday, calling it a routine rotation to train Iraqis to retake Mosul from ISIL, which captured Iraq’s second-largest city in 2014.

Ankara says its troops are in Iraq to train Iraqi forces against ISIL. The foreign ministry said Turkey had stopped the deployment two days ago due to the “sensitivities” of the Iraqi authorities but added that it will not withdraw those already there. The Iraqi government says it never invited such a force.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Barzani, MIT, Turkey, visit

Kurdistan region ‘Iraq: Kurdish protesters attack KDP party offices in Iraqi Kurdistan

October 10, 2015 By administrator

450x360xAttack-on-KDP-party-branch-in-Said-Sadiq-oct-10-2015-photo-nrt.jpg.pagespeed.ic.h3-15BhcnMERBIL-Hewler, Kurdistan region ‘Iraq’,— Protesters attacked several offices of the main political party in Iraq’s Kurdish north on Saturday in a third day of violent unrest that threatens to destabilize the region at a time of war with Islamic State militants.
The demonstrations that began on Oct. 1 initially targeted the autonomous region’s government, which many Kurds blame for an economic crisis that has left them struggling to pay the bills.
But the anger took a partisan turn on Friday when protesters in the city of Qaladize torched an office of the Kurdistan Democratic Party (KDP) after at least one demonstrator was killed.

The region’s president, Massoud Barzani, called for calm but young men blocked a main road in the town of Said Sadiq on Saturday and pelted a KDP building with stones, said Farouq Abd al-Karim, a local party member who was present.

Live footage from Said Sadiq broadcast on Kurdish channel NRT showed riot police holding back protesters, some of whom wielded slingshots. Shops were shuttered and a tire burned in the street.

There were also protests in the city of Sulaimani and the town of Kalar, where demonstrators threw stones at a KDP office.

The pattern of unrest reflects long-running political divisions in the autonomous region of three provinces that have been exacerbated by a power struggle over the presidency of Barzani, who is also head of the KDP.

Sulaimani province, where the protests are taking place is dominated by the Patriotic Union of Kurdistan (PUK) party and former opposition movement Gorran, which are seeking to weaken the KDP’s grip on power.

In Erbil and Duhok provinces, where the KDP is strong, security was tightened around offices of the PUK and Gorran to avert any retaliatory attacks.

The KDP, Gorran, PUK and two of the region’s other parties have been wrangling over the terms of an extension of Barzani’s tenure since it expired on Aug. 20.

The stalemate has polarized Kurdish politics and compounded an economic crisis that began in early 2014 when Baghdad slashed funds to the region. A drop in oil prices has pushed the region further towards bankruptcy.

Massoud Barzani has led Kurdistan region as president from 2005 for two executive terms and his last term was extended in 2013 by ruling KDP and Patriotic Union of Kurdistan (PUK) for two more years on the condition that he can no longer run as president.

Iraqi Kurdistan parliament speaker, Yousif Mohammed Sadiq said in August “Extending Barzani term is against the laws in Kurdistan. Law No. 19 passed in 2013 … clearly says the president’s term ends on Aug. 19 and cannot be extended,” Sadiq added.

Political risk analyst Kirk Sowell said in August that “If it were a stable democratic system in Kurdistan, they would just vote him (Barzani) out of office. But it’s not,”

In April 2014, Massoud Barzani has sets condition to leave power, he told Sky News Arabic that he was ready to leave power only if the Kurdish enclave parties reach an agreement over the way to govern Iraq’s autonomous region of Kurdistan.

Source: eKurd

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Barzani, Iraq, kdp, Kurd, Protest

No One more worry about Massoud Barzani loosing power in Kurdistan than Turkey,

August 22, 2015 By administrator

Barzani-Turkish AirforceBarzani turn Iraqi Kurdistan to Turkish province, and diverted all oil pipeline through Turkey now Kurdistan become hostage to turkey.

Ankara is concerned about preserving the current state of Turkish-Iraqi Kurdistan ties, as political uncertainty hangs over Iraq’s Kurdistan region after President Massoud Barzani’s mandate expired without rival factions reaching an agreement to extend his term.
Weeks of rounds of debates between the rival parties failed to produce a consensus before Barzani’s term officially ended at midnight on Wednesday, despite a last-ditch intervention by the US and British diplomats, and Ankara is watching the ongoing stalemate over the presidency warily.
The replacement for Barzani, who has held the post for more than a decade, could have implications on ties with Ankara, which has invested heavily in Iraqi Kurdistan, both in diplomatic and economic terms.
Only a decade ago, relations wavered on the edge of mutual hostility, if not an outright showdown, but they improved rapidly since 2007, due to cordial relations between the Turkish government and the Kurdistan Regional Government (KRG) led by Barzani.
While Ankara has been cautious and has refrained from any public statement regarding the presidential debates among Kurdish parties in northern Iraq, diplomatic sources say the Turkish government may want to see the extension of Barzani’s mandate.

 

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Barzani, Kurdistan, power, Turkey

Iraqi Kurdistan’s Barzani faces an uncertain political future

August 4, 2015 By administrator

Iraqi Kurdistan President Massoud Barzani. Photo: Reuters

Iraqi Kurdistan President Massoud Barzani. Photo: Reuters

ERBIL-Hewler, Kurdistan region ‘Iraq’,— Turkey’s air strikes in Iraqi Kurdistan have increased the pressure on regional president Massud Barzani, who is a key player in the US-led anti-jihadist war but faces an uncertain political future.

Barzani, the 68-year-old leader of the Kurdistan Democratic Party (KDP), has been at the helm of Iraq’s autonomous Kurdish region for 10 years.

His term was extended for two years in 2013 and expires on August 19

Barzani argues his leadership is crucial to the fight against the Islamic State (IS) group but the other parties in Kurdistan seem to agree they will not give him another free ride.

“The KDP has asked us to extend the president’s term again but we have rejected this and it is now necessary to find a solution,” said Imad Ahmed, a political bureau member of the Patriotic Union of Kurdistan (PUK).

The PUK of former Iraqi president Jalal Talabani is the KDP’s historic rival but the relatively recently founded Gorran (Change) party has six more seats with 24.

Together with Islamist parties, they control 59 of the 111 seats in the Kurdish regional parliament that elects the president.

“If it were a stable democratic system, they would just vote him out of office. But it’s not,” said Kirk Sowell, a Jordan-based political risk analyst who is the publisher of the biweekly newsletter Inside Iraqi Politics.

Barzani and his clan hold several key positions that give him control, for example, of the intelligence service and key media outlets.

With no solution in sight as the clock ticks down to the deadline, Kurdistan’s main factions are entering a phase of intense negotiations.

The air campaign Ankara launched inside Iraq against its own Kurdish rebels late last month has left Barzani in an uncomfortable position.

The Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK) is outlawed in Turkey and has long had mountain bases on the Iraqi side the border but the flare-up prompted Barzani’s office to ask the rebels to take their struggle elsewhere.

“It’s really bad timing… It’s an impossible position because ordinary Kurds all support the PKK and Barzani can’t be perceived as being anti-PKK,” Sowell said.

Yet the Kurdistan Regional Government (KRG) and Barzani’s party are inextricably tied to Turkey.

Interim period

The Turkish government and Turkish companies have invested billions in the autonomous Kurdish region.

The KRG also needs Turkey to export oil — virtually its only source of revenue — through the port of Ceyhan.

“They’re like an economic colony of Turkey,” Sowell said.

The Barzanis are Kurmanji-speaking Kurds, the same northern dialect used in PKK areas, and their relationship has often been one of rivalry.

Barzani’s KDP was criticised for failing to protect the Yazidi minority during a major IS onslaught a year ago, while the PKK and its Syrian sister party are widely seen as the Yazidis’ saviours.

The PUK draws its support from Sorani-speaking Kurds from the south of the autonomous region and has close ties with Iran.

But while the KDP’s domestic rivals have tried to gain traction from Barzani’s contradictions, analyst Michael Knights argued Kurdish parties had displayed a strong ability to compartmentalise issues.

“The Turkey-PKK clash has been used by the PUK and Gorran to critique the Barzanis but only in an opportunistic, tactical way,” said Knights, of the Washington Institute.

Gorran and the PUK want a more parliamentary system curbing the president’s powers while Barzani wants the president to be elected through a popular vote.

“Precisely because there is a security crisis, a financial crisis, a services crisis, and now these border tensions and strikes on Kurdish villages, we need to find a solution to the presidency issue,” Imad Ahmed said.

“But the PUK is trying to approach this by looking for consensus… It would not make sense to add another problem,” he said.

However Abdulrazaq Ali, spokesman of the Gorran party, said the only thing all the parties might agree on in the next few days is to disagree for a little longer.

“Because of the KDP party’s stubborn stance on our demands, it is possible we will not solve this issue through consensus,” he said.

“I think that when Barzani’s term ends on August 20, he will enter a phase of interim presidency until the constitution is amended or early elections produce a replacement,” Ali said.

Read more about The Monarchy of Iraqi Kurdistan

Source: Ekurd

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Barzani, Kurdistan, political future

The coward Barzani asking PKK Kurd “withdraw’ from northern Iraq

August 1, 2015 By administrator

BAGHDAD – The Associated Press

n_86277_1Iraq’s Kurdish regional government called on the outlawed Kurdistan Worker’s Party (PKK) to “withdraw” from Iraq’s Kurdish territory Aug. 1 to prevent civilian deaths amid a campaign of Turkish airstrikes targeting the group.
A statement from the office of Kurdish Regional Government (KRG) President Massoud Barzani said the PKK “should withdraw its fighters from the Kurdish region so to ensure the civilians of Kurdistan don’t become victim of that fighting and conflict.”

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Barzani, Kurd, PKK, Turkey

Let’s be realistic about Iraqi Kurdistan; it’s a deeply unpleasant autocracy

July 28, 2015 By administrator

By Alastair Sloan | The Middle East Monitor

450x360xIraqi-Kurdistan-president-Massoud-Barzani-photo-reuters.jpg.pagespeed.ic.FsS8mFkQVCIn May last year, who in the West had heard of the “Peshmerga”? Wasn’t that a kind of scarf? No, the BBC, CNN and Sky News told us, these were warriors for freedom, brave Kurds, rallying against the ISIS threat when the Iraqi army had fled in disarray. Even Marie Claire, the woman’s lifestyle magazine, did a piece on them, highlighting with some justification the role that female fighters play in their ranks.

What’s more, the Peshmerga weren’t scary Arabs, which meant we could send them guns. And boy did we send them guns. The United States air-dropped Russian-made weapons almost immediately, although where they had bought them remains unclear. Then Washington agreed to send, via Baghdad, fifteen thousand hand grenades, eighteen thousand assault rifles, forty-five thousand mortar rounds, forty thousand RPG rounds and nearly three thousand RPG launchers.

Germany, in a rare example of the government exporting weapons to a live conflict zone, armed four thousand Kurds with equal alacrity, sending troop transport vehicles, Milan anti-tank rocket launchers, armour-piercing bazookas, heavy machine guns, sixteen thousand rifles, eight thousand pistols and six million rounds of ammunition.

Despite its slashed defence budget, even Britain joined in, gifting half a million more bullets, forty heavy machine guns and an unspecified number of mortars and sets of body-armour. While a British presence in Iraq is almost comically small (“David Cameron is not in Iraq”), the British Army has deployed its considerable expertise in training Peshmerga forces on how to avoid and defuse mines and improvised explosive devices (IEDs). We have also supplied fifty tonnes of non-lethal and medical equipment, according to the Ministry of Defence; meanwhile, RAF pilots have helped to deliver a further “three hundred tonnes” on behalf of other nations.

This, apparently, is still not enough. “Ninety per cent of the burden of this war is on the shoulders of the Peshmerga,” claimed Masrour Barzani, the chief of the Kurdish intelligence corps, “and ninety per cent of the work is done by the Peshmerga, but we are only getting ten per cent of the weapons.” Barzani’s brothers are both leading Kurdish generals. His father, Masud, is President of Kurdistan.

Now, let’s be clear, the Peshmerga are certainly brave and they are certainly holding back ISIS, but their rulers, the Barzani clan, are dictators and gangsters. Masud Barzani isn’t meant to be president; there is a strict two term limit on the post, which he’s just ignored. When a Kurdish poet wrote a satirical piece recently poking fun at the Barzani family, he was arrested and executed. If Kurdish businessmen don’t pay the right bribes to the Barzanis, they too face arrest. Numerous journalists writing critically about the clan have simply disappeared.

“You son of a dog, if you publish that magazine tomorrow, I’ll entomb your head in your dog father’s grave,” one newspaper editor was told. Eighteen months later, he was shot dead outside his home. When Arab Spring-inspired street marches hit Kurdistan in 2011, there were over three hundred and fifty attacks on journalists by the Barzanis’ thugs. There have been hundreds more since then.

The Barzanis also appear to be overseeing a campaign of ethnic cleansing, both directly in Iraqi Kurdistan and via their affiliated fighters in Syria. They deny these charges, but diplomats and several aid workers attest to seeing Sunni Arabs driven from their homes in their thousands, their former dwellings burned to the ground. Many of the displaced Sunnis have lived there for decades, having been encouraged to move there by Saddam Hussein.

Looting, arson and forcible removal hardly seems a recipe for ongoing stability, and with the West simply standing by, often the only place for the Sunni Arabs to go is into ISIS-controlled territory.

You will see or hear almost none of this in the Western media. CNN, Bloomberg and other major outlets have all interviewed Masrour Barzani, giving him a platform to call for yet more weapons to strengthen his nascent mafia state. The Kurds remain lionised in the media to the extent that former soldiers and Western adventurers have been inspired to fight alongside them. In reality, there are no good guys in this fight.

So while the Western arms continue to pour in for the Barzani clan and their troops, are we helping “degrade and destroy” ISIS, or simply propping up another local dictatorship? The Iraqi Kurds certainly haven’t shown any desire to attack ISIS beyond their own borders. Hats off to the Peshmerga for the work they’ve done, but let’s be realistic about what Kurdistan is; a deeply unpleasant autocracy run by mafia bosses who kill, imprison or displace anyone who gets in their way.

 

 

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: autocracy, Barzani, Kurd

Kurdish Barzani Told Davutoglu: ”Turkey Has the Right to Attack PKK” report

July 25, 2015 By administrator

Barazani right, Davutoglu Left

Barazani right, Davutoglu Left

SULAIMANI – Kurdistan President Masoud Barzani was aware of Turkish plans to bombard areas inside the region where the Kurdistan Workers’ Party operates, Anadolu Agency reported Saturday.

Barzani reportedly discussed the airstrikes with Turkey’s Prime Minister Ahmet Davutoglu over a phone call.
The Anadolu report also stated that Barzani told Davutoglu he is ready to support Turkey in fighting against “terrorists.”
“Barzani told me that the Turkish operations against Islamic State (IS) group and PKK is your right,” Davutoglu said.

Turkish warplanes began launching airstrikes across northern areas inside the Kurdistan Region on Friday, effectively ending a two-year ceasefire between Ankara and PKK fighters.
Following the air raids, the PKK-affiliated Group of Communities in Kurdistan (KCK) called for increased attacks on The AK Party, to which President Recep Tayyip Erdogan and PM Ahmet Davutoglu belong.
Tensions between Ankara and the PKK have reached a high this week following a bombing in the southern Turkish city of Suruc on Monday, in which a suicide bomber, believed to have ties to IS, attacked a group of young Kurdish activists preparing to transport aid to the devastated city of Kobane, just 10 km across the border.

PKK members killed two police officers following the attack, claiming that the Turkish government was being complacent as IS militants cross the border in each ways.
Read more at http://www.liveleak.com/view?i=007_1437845531#DOQWQbxCVlWDK1gS.99

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Barzani, Davutoglu, PKK

New video Mustafa Barzani and Saddam Hussein what went wrong, “Halabja massacre” Episode 14

March 17, 2015 By administrator

Saddam-Barazani

Mustafa Barzani and Saddam Hussein what went wrong

Ba’ath Coup of 1968 and 1970 peace accord and the Collapse of the peace accord the triggering of the first largest Armenian migration from Iraq 1970  (The Untold Story)

In July 1968 the Ba’ath Party, supported by the army, overthrew the Arif government and assumed control of Iraq, returning Ahmed Hassan al-Bakr back to power. The Ba’ath realized the toll the military operations in Iraq were taking and signaled its willingness to settle the Kurdish issue peacefully. The Ba’ath initially hoped to seek an agreement with the Talabani-Ahmad faction to bypass Barzani, prompting Barzani to enter into hostilities with the government again, shelling Kirkuk in March 1969. Barzani’s ability to secure aid from Iran caused trouble for the new Ba’ath government, which saw that it would prevent any conclusive victory militarily.

By May 1969 the government indicated its willingness to negotiate with Barzani, culminating in formal negotiations by December that year. Barzani demanded that the Ba’ath sever ties with pro-government Kurds and the Ahmad-Talabani faction, and recognize him as the sole power within the KDP, as well as terms of autonomy was also discussed. With Dr. Mahmoud Othman conducting negotiations on behalf of the KDP, and Saddam Hussein on behalf of the government, the final agreement was reached on March 11, 1970.[31] The final terms of the agreement recognized the Kurdish people and considered Kurdish language a second official language of the republic with Arabic, along with autonomy in northern Iraq excluding Kirkuk, Khanaqin and other Kurdish cities, in exchange of full control of Iraqi army over Kurdistan.

Collapse of the peace accord 

The government began reconstruction in northern Iraq and work towards creating an autonomous region, appointed five Kurdish men to junior-level ministries in the government, incorporating the Kurds along with the ICP into the National Front and provided Barzani with a stipend to manage the KDP. Ibrahim Ahmad and Jalal Talabani also reunified with the KDP. However relations quickly began to deteriorate as Barzani accused Iraq of continuing Arabification to decrease Kurdish standings in contested cities such as Kirkuk and in not being committed to a genuine autonomous zone. An assassination attempt took place against Barzani on September 1971 when Barzani received religious officials in his headquarters. The clerics had thought they were carrying suitcases with recording devices for the benefit of Baghdad, but had instead been wired with explosives. The explosion did not kill Barzani but killed others participating in the meeting, and in the confusion Peshmerga guards rushed in and killed the clerics. The government drivers who drove the clerics tried to salvage the assassination and tossed a grenade, killing a Peshmerga and wounding twelve, but missing Barzani, before they themselves were shot and killed.[33] Despite being unable to capture any of the conspirators for questioning, Barzani would maintain that Saddam Hussein was personally responsible for the attack.[34]

With his perception of the Ba’ath soured, Barzani refused to close the border of Iran and continued receiving arms and supplies from Iran, which increased following the Soviet-Iraqi Treaty of Friendship in April 1972 once the United States was concerned about Iraq entering into the Soviet sphere like Syria. Israel also increased support to Barzani hoping to frustrate the Ba’ath in Iraq. The moves would bolster Barzani and his forces, but would alienate many figures within the KDP as well as leftists sympathetic to the Kurdish cause within Iraq.[35] Among the defectors from the KDP was Barzani’s own son Ubeydullah who defected from the movement and preferred to cooperate with the regime in Baghdad.[36] Through much of 1973, Barzani began to rebuild and reorganize the Peshmerga in anticipation of another conflict with Baghdad.[37]

On March 11, 1974, the Ba’ath government passed the autonomy law which it presented to Barzani for approval. With Kirkuk not included and his faith in the Ba’ath for a genuine autonomy low, Barzani rejected the agreement. Joining his son Ubeydullah, a number of disillusioned members of the KDP, angered with Barzani’s opening towards the United States, Israel, and Iran and the perceived betrayal of KDP’s socialist origins, defected to Baghdad.

The Halabja chemical attack:

also known as the Halabja Massacre or Bloody Friday, was a genocidal massacre against the Kurdish people that took place on March 16, 1988, during the closing days of the Iran–Iraq War in the Kurdish city of Halabja in Southern Kurdistan. The attack was part of the Al-Anfal campaign in northern Iraq, as well as part of the Iraqi attempt to repel the Iranian Operation Zafar 7. It took place 48 hours after the fall of the town to Iranian army and Kurdish guerrillas.

The attack killed between 3,200 and 5,000 people and injured 7,000 to 10,000 more, most of them civilians.[1][2] Thousands more died of complications, diseases, and birth defects in the years after the attack.

The incident, which has been officially defined as an act of genocide against the Kurdish people in Iraq,[4] was and still remains the largest chemical weapons attack directed against a civilian-populated area in history.[5]

The Halabja attack has been recognized as a separate event from the Anfal Genocide that was also conducted against the Kurdish people by the Iraqi regime under Saddam Hussein.[6] The Iraqi High Criminal Court recognized the Halabja massacre as an act of genocide on March 1, 2010, a decision welcomed by the Kurdistan Regional Government. The attack was also condemned as a crime against humanity by the Parliament of Canada.

Source: Wikipedia

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Filed Under: News, Videos Tagged With: Barzani, halabja, Iraq, Kurd, Saddam-Hussein, VIDEO)

Vatican: Pope receives President of Iraqi Kurdistan Barzani

June 7, 2014 By administrator

Pope Francis received Friday Massoud Barzani, president of the autonomous region of Iraqi Kurdistan province where there is a very ancient Christian community that has grown with the influx of refugees from the rest of Iraq and Syria, said the Vatican .

While violence peaked in Iraq, more than 4,000 died in violence since the beginning of the year, this autonomous region, after having long been an area of ​​conflict at the time of Saddam Hussein, has become an area safer in a particularly difficult environment.

This is the first time that the Pope received Barzani who is the head of the autonomous region since 2005.

The province of Kurdistan is home to over 200,000 Syrian refugees, including many Kurds but also Christians.

These would be more in the region of 30,000. Among them also Christians who have left Baghdad and other cities further south to find a security, tolerance and greater freedom.

According to Bishop Rabban Al Qas, bishop of Amadiyah-Zahko interviewed by Vatican Radio, he breathes an air of “freedom” in the region, even if it “is not a paradise,” this freedom attracting private entrepreneurs and allowing some economic development.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Barzani, Pope, Vatican

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