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Iraqi Kurds block aid to Christian militia

January 3, 2017 By administrator

An Iraqi Christian forces member from the Nineveh Protection Unit, or NPU lights a candle at the Church of the Immaculate Conception in the town of Qaraqosh (also known as Hamdaniya) Oct. 30, 2016. Photo: AFP

By William J. Murray

QARAQOSH, Iraq,— The Christian town of Qaraqosh, Iraq, located on the Nineveh Plain, is in ruins. It is far worse than its appearance, which is bad enough. Other than a handful of volunteers to clean up the streets, and the 300 or so members of the Nineveh Protection Unit, or NPU, the town is deserted.

The Christian town has enemies other than the ruthless Islamic State, or ISIS, which left it in ruins. Currently the Kurdish militia, the Peshmerga, is blocking aid to the NPU that guards the town, because the NPU is the Assyrian Christian militia. It is the only armed Christian group in Iraq.

The Kurds and some Shia have territorial claims on the Nineveh Plain. While for appearance and funding from Washington, the Kurdish support Christian interests for now, the historical relationship between the two groups includes participation in the slaughter of Christians by the tens of thousands. There is no room for a Christian enclave, particularly one that is armed, in the future of an independent state of Kurdistan, which the Kurds are foolish enough to believe that Washington will support.

On a recent day, I personally was escorting three trucks of supplies to the NPU, one two-ton truck with food and two pickups filled with bottled water, when the Peshmerga stopped us at their main checkpoint between Erbil and Qaraqosh. I had authorized the aid, which amounted to a 20-day supply of food for the 300-man NPU garrison guarding Qaraqosh.

For more than two hours, solutions of varying kinds were explored. Taking certain measures that cannot be discussed here, we were finally able to deliver the aid to Qaraqosh. When we arrived at the NPU warehouse in Qaraqosh, the supplies for the day consisted of two bags of onions – that was all. There, we unloaded 1,000 kilograms (2,200 pounds) of rice and other supplies.

During my time in Qaraqosh, I should have felt somewhat surprised by the evil done by the Islamic State, but knowing the master it serves, I was not.

Before its destruction, the entire town was looted of everything, from simple home furnishings to heavy machinery. All looted materials from Iraq, and Syria as well, have been taken to Turkey for resale to fund the ongoing operations of the Islamic State. Of course, the Turkish government is aware that such an enormous amount of looted material is being sold at huge discounts in its nation, but it does nothing about it. The machinery from factories in Aleppo, for example, is adding value to the Turkish state. Until the snake bit one of its masters, Turkey was a patron of the various Islamist groups in Syria and Iraq.

I spoke with the NPU commander in charge of the guard and the cleanup. I learned that 25 percent of the buildings in Qaraqosh were completely destroyed and another 50 percent burned out. Only about 25 percent of the buildings remain intact enough for use once glass is replaced and power, water and sewage disposal are restored. In the case of buildings burned by the Islamic State, chemicals were used to produce high enough temperatures to melt the steel supports inside the concrete. Most of the burned buildings must be demolished.

Even the pews in the churches have been taken, probably for firewood. Burned prayer books and Bibles litter the grounds. Every cross was destroyed, even decorative crosses on outside walls that did not resemble the Cross of Christ.

I stood at the very point where an Islamic State suicide bomber blew up his car bomb and killed advancing Iraqi and NPU forces during the battle to liberate Qaraqosh. Islamic State fighters prefer death, with 72 imaginary perpetual virgins, to life. Before death, their religious leaders give them permission to steal, enslave, rape and kill other human beings they view as infidels.

The arming of the NPU in the Nineveh Plain was a new development in Iraq. President George W. Bush had made the decision after the second Gulf War that Shia and Sunni militias could remain armed, but in order to avoid the appearance that the U.S. was “supporting Crusaders,” no Christian militia could exist. Christian majority towns were not even allowed to have Christian police units in their areas. Christian neighborhoods in Baghdad were soon victimized by both Sunni and Shia gangs of thieves and kidnappers, as well as dedicated Sunni terror groups bound on running off both Christians and Shia. The predicable result was a decrease in the Christian population of between 60 percent and 75 percent. An integral part of Iraq’s population was lost, a part that contributed greatly to the harmony of the nation before 2004. Christians were the moderating force in both Iraq and Syria.

After the retreat of the Islamic State from Qaraqosh toward Syria, their flag emblazoned with the phrase “Allah Akbar” was removed from the Church of Immaculate Conception. The black Islamic flag was replaced by the Iraqi Army, as they raised the national flag of Iraq. Yet this flag has written in black in its center the phrase “Allah Akbar.” This one symbolic act illustrates why the Christians of Iraq cannot expect equality and justice.

The Islamists who destroyed the town of Qaraqosh used explosives that could have been of use in battle, but instead were used to blow up bell towers and destroy large crosses and statues of Jesus and Mary. The zeal of the Islamists to destroy all traces of “infidels” was so great that not even the dead were spared their places of rest, as graves were desecrated in Christian cemeteries.

Qaraqosh is symbolic of the condition of Christians in the Middle East. They are under attack by radical enemies and under siege by those who should be their friends. Saudi Arabia continues to pour billions of dollars into Syria to establish a Sunni Caliphate, and Shia majority Iran works with the Iraqi army to defeat the Sunni uprising as the Christian minority suffers. Their suffering has been ignored for the past eight years by the White House. Those desiring to immigrate to the United States have been pushed to the back of the line by a president who prefers Sunni Muslim immigrants from the Middle East.

It would seem natural for the Christians to have a friend in Old Testament Israel, but that is not the case. The Israeli high command prefers a state of chaos on its northern border rather than having unified Arab states with standing armies. Israel has backed up this stance with missile strikes against Syrian government targets over the past six years, although those actions have assisted the Islamic State, al-Nusra and al-Qaida at times.

For different reasons, known only in the mind of President Barack Obama, the official policy of the United States has been a state of chaos in the entire Middle East. The White House has at some points assisted one Islamist group in one nation, while fighting that same group in another area. Several battles have erupted between militias backed by the CIA and the Pentagon, and at least once the United States switched sides in the middle of a battle.

Christians have never fared well during states of war in the Middle East. But the agendas of powerful nations such as the United Kingdom, the United States and Russia are better advanced during periods of chaos than during times of peace. What can be done to help the Christians of Qaraqosh and the rest of the Nineveh Plain? Prayer and assistance from a church in the West, which is now mostly silent, is the request I hear most often from the Christians of Iraq and Syria.

By William J. Murray

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: aid, block, Christian, Iraqi, Kurd

Secret Documents reveal Iraqi Kurdistan govt “Barzani” attempts to sell oil fields to Turkey

December 28, 2016 By administrator

SULAIMANI, Iraq’s Kurdistan region,— Iraqi Kurdistan Region’s Minister of Natural Resources, Ashti Hawrami, proposed a project to the Turkish Minister of Energy and Natural Resources regarding selling part of the oil fields’ divisions in Iraq’s Kurdistan Region for $5 billion, according to a secret document leaked by whistle-blower organization Wikileaks.

Hawrami put forward a three-part proposal to Turkish minister Berat Albayrak through an email sent on 19 March 2016 to sell part of the oil field shares in Iraq’s Kurdistan Region to the Turkish government for $5 billion, the Wikileaks’ documents, which NRT obtained a copy of, reported.

According to the Wikileaks documents, the money that the KRG minister demanded from Turkey would be part of a loan paid to the KRG by the Turkish government.

Hawrami highlighted the KRG’s needs for the $5 billion as below:

First: $1.150 million loan paid to the KRG by the Turkish government.

“To date, the total amount of the Loan paid to the KRG by Turkish side stands at $1,150m (the payment was made in three installment of $500m, $500m and $150m),” the Wikileaks document stated.

Second: $514 million loan from TEC for services to be provided to the Kurdish government. “In addition to these Loans, now the total amount due to TEC for services provided to the KRG is in access of $514 million, and this amount is rising every month.”

Third: $1 billion for payments to Turkish construction and other Turkish contractors to complete the proposed projects.

“The KRG needs immediate funding of around $800m plus a further $1,000m over the next 18 months to pay the contractors to restart and complete these vital projects,” the document added.

Fourth: $700 million to pay companies operating in the Chamchamal and KorMor Gas project. “For various reasons, including the KRG’s financial problems the current Operator of these fields has not been paid by the KRG for its entitled remuneration, which the Operator estimated to be a very large amount … but withheld from the Operator is around $700m, which needs to be settled soon.”

Fifth: Payments of $750 million for implementing the Gas and Oil Pipeline Constructions.

“In order to tie in the new oil discoveries like Shaikan to boost KRG’s oil export and to construct a new strategic gas pipeline to export a 20 to 30 BCM of gas from ChemChemal/KorMor and Miran/BnaBawi projects, the KRG needs to fund the pipeline infrastructure, particularly to enable the gas assets to be developed within the next 2 year,” according to Wikileaks document. “The total costs of these pipeline is estimated to be around $750m.”

Sixth: a payment of $540 million to “support KRG’s reduced budget shortfalls and to protect the 20% Shaikan Government Interest due to KRG’s non-payments.”

The KRG minister also gave three options to the Turkish government to expand its support to the KRG, the Wikileaks report revealed.

In the first option, Hawrami stated that the KRG would pay back the loans as the financial capability of the KRG improved, which was stated as possibly beginning in 2019 and ending by 2021.

“Extend the additional Loans of $3,740m to the KRG in the same way as the existing Loans, to be repaid as the financial position of KRG improves.”

“Extend the additional Loans of $3,740m to the KRG provided that the KRG allocates certain identifiable streams of cash flow from an agreed list of Oil and Gas Assets, or even some Oil Cargos in Ceyhan to the Turkish Side to ensure that all the Loans plus agreed interests are repaid, again the time line to be agreed,” the second option stated.

Hawrami’s third option was that the Turkish government buys the KRG’s shares in the Kurdistan Region’s oil fields.

“Rather than just being offered the cash flow of the Oil and Gas Assets, the KRG prefers and proposes that the Turkish Side be assigned the long-term working interests and benefits of these assets,” the document said.

“In this case the Turkish Side may benefit more from any upside profitability of these Assets, but the KRG will also offer a guarantee to the Turkish Side against any possibility of underperformance of the Assets.”

Hawrami also offered three proposals for his Turkish counterpart regarding the third option referred to in the email.

The first proposal stated that the Turkish government buys the shares of TaqTaq, Tawke and Shaikan oil fields from the KRG.

“The KRG proposes the Turkish Side considers converting the current outstanding Loans and the TEC outstanding entitlements to a long-term investment in the TaqTaq, Tawke and Shaikan producing Fields … The KRG proposes to transfer these assets to the Turkish side on an 8% discount basis.”

In the second proposal Hawrami offered the Turkish government the option to buy the KRG’s division in the BnaBawi and Miran projects.

“These two streams of free cash flow are expected to generate $2,705m at 7.5% discount (7.5% interest rate). The KRG proposes to transfer these assets to the Turkish Side on a 10% discount basis.”

In the third proposal, the KRG minister offered the Turkish government the option to buy the KRG’s division in the Khurmala oil fields.

“KRG proposes that the Turkish Side considers advancing a further new payment to the KRG, again not as a loan, but against KRG assigning 50% net working interests in the Khurmala Field – in both the Shallow and the Deep reservoirs. The current operator to retain 30% working interest and the KRG to hold 20% carried interest.”

The Wikileaks document reveals the complete amounts, and documents of the KRG’s divisions in the oil fields, and all the ways proposed of selling them to the Turkish government for receiving the $5 billion.

Kurdistan considered as the most corrupted part of Iraq. According to Kurdish politicians and observers billions of dollars are missing from Iraqi Kurdistan’s oil revenues.

Senior KRG officials including Kurdish leader Massoud Barzani have long been accused by the opposition and observers of corruption or taking government money.

Lawmakers and political figures have previously criticized and accused the KRG of not being transparent with oil exports and revenues.

Members of Kurdistan Parliament have claimed that millions of dollars have gone missing from the region. The region’s Ministry of Natural Resources has rebutted those accusations as unfounded.

Many Kurdish politicians and observers believe that many of the oil industry projects in Iraqi Kurdistan are conducted in a non-transparent way. Some have even described them as secretive.

Source: http://ekurd.net/kurdistan-sell-oil-fields-turkey-2016-12-27

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: field, Iraqi, Kurdistan, oil, Turkey

Iraqi Kurdistan Dictatorship PM Barzani want to help Erdogan by crashing PKK

December 25, 2016 By administrator

Military force may be an option to fight the presence of the outlawed Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK) in the Sinjar district near Mosul in northern Iraq, Kurdistan Regional Government (KRG) Prime Minister Nechirvan Barzani has said, state-run Anadolu Agency has reported on Dec. 24.

It was PKK and PYD “During the calamity that befell the Yazidi people in Sinjar, obviously the Rojava forces — meaning the PYD [Democratic Unity Party] — played a valuable role in helping to protect them and shepherd them to safety, now KRG want to destroy PKK to please Turkish Dictator 

Barzani said under the present circumstances, the presence of PKK forces in Sinjar will only add to instability in the area and nothing more. The PKK presence is preventing people from returning to their homes. They are hesitating to return for fear of renewed conflict, out of concern as to what uncertain future awaits them and not because, as some allege, that we are the ones stopping them from reclaiming their lives, their homes. We share their concerns, and this is why we strongly believe that the PKK must leave Sinjar,” he told internet news site Al-Monitor in a special interview.

Barzani said they were in touch with Baghdad and Washington over the issue.

“We have been engaging with both Baghdad and Washington on this issue. The ongoing talks have not resulted in any concrete progress, no practical measures so far in terms of getting the PKK to withdraw. The real problem lies within the mentality and the behavior of the PKK. The local Yazidi population does not want the PKK to remain. People want stability,” he said.

Upon a question on whether Barzani would resort to military force to push the PKK out of Sinjar, he said he would.

The KRG has concerns over the possibility that Sinjar could serve as a second headquarters for the PKK in northern Iraq. The Peshmarga forces have been in efforts to get the upper hand in the area. The region is home to around 4,000 Yazidis.

Turkey previously vowed to take precautionary measures by deploying Turkish soldiers to prevent PKK militants from securing a base in Sinjar.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Iraqi, Kurdistan, PKK, PM, Turkey

Iraqi volunteers capture major road Tal Afar and Sanjar effectively seals off Mosul

November 23, 2016 By administrator

iraqi-volunteersIraq’s Popular Mobilization Units, also known as Hashd al-Sha’abi, have captured a road that links the two strategically important towns of Tal Afar and Sanjar to the west of Mosul.

The achievement effectively seals off Mosul, the last stronghold of Daesh in Iraq. The city is already surrounded on the northern, southern, and eastern parts by government troops.

According to Iraq’s al-Sumaria TV network, the road which is Daesh’s last remaining supply route linking Mosul to other Iraqi cities as well as to eastern Syria has now been cut off.

On Wednesday, Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi charged Hashd al-Sha’abi with the task of liberating the nearby town of Tal Afar which lies on a key road used by Daesh terrorists to move back and force to Syria.

A spokesman of the volunteer forces said the liberation of Tal Afar located about 55 km west of Mosul needed highly trained forces capable of fighting in urban areas.

Abadi’s order came as reports said some 70 high-ranking Daesh commanders were leaving Tal Afar for the northern Syrian city of al-Raqqah.

Reports also said the self-proclaimed media minister of Daesh was killed in an Iraqi airstrike in Nineveh province. The man identified as Zaid Khorwah was reportedly responsible for the production of Daesh propaganda videos.

Troops took control of the Kara Tepe village in the northern province and raised the national flag over several buildings there.

Hashd al-Sha’abi fighters meanwhile shot down a Daesh drone which was collecting information on the positions and movements of volunteer forces over western Mosul.

Elsewhere in the town of al-Qaim, about 150 families were reported to have fled Daesh militants.

Iraqi government troops and Kurdish forces were preparing to liberate Hawijah about 282 kilometers north of Baghdad, with one military commander saying that some 2,000 Daesh terrorists were holed up in the city.

Hawijah slipped into Daesh hands in June 2014, and is considered one of the main strongholds of the terrorist group in Iraq.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Iraqi, Mosul, volunteers

Iraqi PM Warns Turkey After It Deploys Troops Near Border

November 1, 2016 By administrator

iraq-warns-turkeyIraqi Prime Minister Haidar al-Abadi has warned Turkey against provoking a confrontation after Ankara sent tanks and artillery near the countries’ border not far from Mosul.

Abadi said in a televised news conference that Baghdad does not want a confrontation or a “war with Turkey,” but said Iraqi forces “are ready for it” if it happens.

He added that Baghdad had prohibited Turkish forces from intervening in the fight against Islamic State (IS) fighters to regain control of Mosul and if “Turkey enters the current battle…we will deal with them as an enemy.”

Turkey has deployed tanks and heavy artillery on its southeastern border with Iraq, saying that the forces may be sent into Iraq “if necessary.”

The deployments on November 1 were made in Turkey’s Silopi region bordering a stretch of northern Iraq along Iraq’s strategic Highway 2, which leads to Mosul about 130 kilometers to the south.

Turkish Defense Minister Fikri Isik said on November 1 that Ankara was under no obligation to keep its military forces on its own side of the border.

Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu said on October 25 that Ankara could launch a ground operation into Iraq if it felt its security was threatened. “We are ready to use all our resources, including a ground operation,” he said.

The deployments came as Iraqi special forces battled Islamic State (IS) militants into an eastern neighborhood of Mosul on November 1 — the first time government forces have been inside the city since it was seized by IS militants in 2014.

It also came as the head of the Turkish Armed Forces General Staff, General Hulusi Akar, was visiting Moscow on November 1 for talks with his Russian counterpart, General Valery Gerasimov, about possible military cooperation and what Ankara described as “the situation in the Middle East.”

Turkey has as many as 1,000 troops in northern Iraq at the request of regional Iraqi leaders, and have been training Kurdish Peshmerga fighters.

But the government in Baghdad has called on Turkey to withdraw those forces.

Turkey has not had a direct role in a two-week-old Iraqi operation to recapture Mosul from IS fighters.

But Ankara has said its forces should be involved to prevent Iranian-backed Shi’ite militia fighters from carrying out atrocities against Sunni civilians in Mosul.

At the same time that Turkey has been helping Iraqi Kurdish forces, it has been fighting against U.S.-supported Syrian Kurds from the so-called Kurdish People’s Protection units (YPG) — claiming that the YPG in Syria is associated with Turkish Kurds from the outlawed Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK).

Turkey has been battling PKK militants in southeastern Turkey for more than 30 years in a conflict that has killed tens of thousands.

With reporting by Reuters, AP, AFP, dpa, and CNN Turk

Filed Under: News Tagged With: Iraqi, Mosul, PM, Turkey, warns

Mosul Update: Iraqi forces, allies inch closer to Daesh-controlled Mosul

October 29, 2016 By administrator

Iraqi government forces and fighters from Popular Mobilization Units advance towards the village of Ayn Nasir, southwest of Mosul, on October 29, 2016, during the ongoing battle against Daesh terrorists to liberate the city of Mosul. (Photo by AFP)

Iraqi government forces and fighters from Popular Mobilization Units advance towards the village of Ayn Nasir, southwest of Mosul, on October 29, 2016, during the ongoing battle against Daesh terrorists to liberate the city of Mosul. (Photo by AFP)

Iraqi government soldiers, backed by allied fighters from the Popular Mobilization Units and Kurdish Peshmerga forces, have recaptured more areas and villages around the strategic northern city of Mosul in a large-scale offensive aimed at ending the control of Daesh militants there.

On Saturday, the media bureau of Iraq’s Badr Organization announced that the Popular Mobilization Units had liberated the region of Ayn Nasir southwest of Mosul, located some 400 kilometers north of the capital Baghdad, from the grip of Daesh terrorists.

The pro-government forces also established control over the road linking Hammam al-Alil region to Albu Hammad village.

Additionally, Iraq’s Joint Operations Command (JOC) announced that the 9th Division of the Army and units from Nineveh Liberation Operations Command had taken control of the villages of al-Hamidiyah, al-Shorouq, al-Mokhlat and Jayaf southwest of Mosul, and raised the national Iraqi flags over a number of buildings there.

Iraqi security personnel also freed al-Dawajel region and nearby villages on Saturday.

Moreover, Iraqi fighter jets carried out a precision airstrike against an area in Ta’an region, east of Mosul, and destroyed an arms depot and a bomb-making workshop belonging to Daesh terrorists.

In another Saturday development, Iraqi forces wrested full control over the al-Shoura region, located 45 kilometers south of Mosul, and flew the national flag above several buildings in the area.

Moreover, fighters from Popular Mobilization Units established control over Abu al-Aris and Zuwairaj villages southwest of Mosul.

Popular Mobilization Units also kicked off an operation on Saturday to retake the city of Tal Afar, which is situated 63 kilometers west of Mosul and serves as a supply line between Daesh’s main stronghold in Iraq and neighboring Syria.

“The operation aims to cut supplies between Mosul and Raqqah, and tighten the siege of in Mosul and liberate Tal Afar,” the spokesman for the volunteer forces, Ahmed al-Assadi, said.

Assadi said the operation was launched from the Sin al-Dhaban area south of Mosul, and aims to liberate the ancient city of Hatra  as well as the cities of Tal Abta and Tal Afar.

There are reports that about 50,000 Iraqi ground troops are involved in the Mosul offensive, including 30,000 army troops, 10,000 Kurdish Peshmerga fighters and the remaining 10,000 from police and Popular Mobilization Units.

Iraqi forces have so far liberated nearly 80 towns and villages ever since they began the decisive battle on October 17.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: closer, forces, inch, Iraqi, Mosul

Iraqi PM Abadi urges Ankara, Riyadh to avoid meddling in Iraq affairs

October 22, 2016 By administrator

iraqi-pm-turkey-outIraqi Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi has called on Turkey and Saudi Arabia to stop interfering in the domestic affairs of his country, which is engaged in a campaign against the Daesh terrorist group.

“We want the good of Saudi Arabia and Turkey provided that they do not interfere in the domestic affairs of our country,” he told a forum of Muslim scholars and politicians in Baghdad Saturday.

The opening of the 9th session of the Supreme Council of the World Assembly of Islamic Awakening in the Iraqi capital coincided with the country’s ongoing push to retake its second city of Mosul from Daesh terrorists.

Turkey is adamantly insisting that it wants to play a military role in the Mosul recapture despite Iraq’s opposition, triggering a serious diplomatic row between the two neighbors.

Ankara has deployed troops to a base near Mosul, claiming that they were there to train Kurdish militants for the battle against Daesh.

Abadi said Turkey had sent troops without the Iraqi government’s request, adding Ankara is not battling Daesh but is trying to expand its outreach. Ankara, he said, did not help Baghdad when it was requested.

In the run-up to the Mosul operation, Saudi Arabia replaced its ambassador to Baghdad, who had repeatedly drawn the ire of Iraqi leaders for his meddling remarks. The kingdom downgraded its representation to the charge d’affaires level.

Without naming any country, Prime Minister Abadi said there are countries that support terrorism for their own benefits while others are seeking to sow sectarian discord.

“Daesh did not come to existence overnight. Certain sides used to support the group,” he said.

Takfiri terrorists, he said, do not distinguish between Shia and Sunni Muslims or abide by any principles, adding they are trying to sow sectarian divisions.

Abadi said Iraq is capable enough to counter Daesh and terrorism, calling on the country to remain united. “We will hopefully fight and defeat the Takfiri terrorism,” the prime minister added.

Iraqi Parliament Speaker Salim al-Jabouri, who is a Sunni Muslim, accused terrorists of attempting to spread their radical ideas in the name of religion.

He called for a meeting with the participation of Iraq, Turkey and Saudi Arabia to address their disputes, saying Muslim countries must take measures to counter terrorism.

Islamic Awakening alive despite hurdles

Speaking at the summit, Ali Akbar Velayati, a senior adviser to Leader of Iran’s Islamic Revolution Ayatollah Seyyed Ali Khamenei, said that the Islamic Awakening movement enjoys public support and continues to thrive despite obstacles and challenges in its way.

“Today, abundant opportunities have arisen in the region and Muslims are obligated to continue down their path with Islamic Awakening against the Takfiri ideology,” Velayati said.

Five years since the beginning of the wave of Islamic Awakening, enemies and opponents have practically failed to stop the movement even through creating Takfiri groups and hatching plots for partitioning countries, the Iranian official said.

He further slammed the Saudi regime for its covert role in all crises in the region, from Syria and Iraq to those in Yemen, Libya and elsewhere.

Saudi Wahhabism is using its petrodollars to sow discord in the Muslim world, he added.

Under an enemy plot, Muslim countries in the region have today been occupied with issues such as Daesh and Takfiri terrorism so the occupation of Palestinian territories by the Israeli regime would no longer be their priority, the official pointed out.

Velayati called for a return to true principles and values of the holy religion of Islam as the sole way out of regional problems.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Ankara, Iraqi, meddling, PM abadi, saudi

Iraqi Parliament Dismisses Finance Minister Hoshyar Zebari charges of corruption

September 21, 2016 By administrator

hoshyar-zebariIraqi lawmakers have voted to dismiss Finance Minister Hoshyar Zebari.

Parliament voted by majority on September 21 to dismiss Zebari after questioning him last month on charges of corruption and mismanagement — which he denies.

The vote came after parliament dismissed the country’s defense minister over the allegations last month.

Zebari, a Kurd who previously served for years as Iraq’s foreign minister, became finance minister in 2014.

He has recently led negotiations with the International Monetary Fund for a loan deal and with international lenders for a Eurobond.

Iraq’s economy has been hit by a drop in global oil prices and the costs associated with the campaign against the Islamic State group.

Based on reporting by Reuters and AFP

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: dismiss, finance-minister, Hoshyar Zebari., Iraqi, lawmakers

Iraqi Forces Link Up South Of Mosul, Tightening Control On Islamic State

July 13, 2016 By administrator

A member of Iraqi government forces inspects a wreckage on the side of a road Qayara Air Base late last month.

A member of Iraqi government forces inspects a wreckage on the side of a road Qayara Air Base late last month.

Iraqi government forces advancing toward the city of Mosul, which is held by the extremist Islamic State (IS) group, retook a village from the militants on July 12, linking up along the Tigris River with army troops that have been advancing from a separate direction.

Iraq’s Defense Minister Khalid al-Obeidi said the territorial gain further isolates Mosul ahead of a planned government assault to recapture the northern city.

The advance to the south of Mosul brought the village of Ajhala back under government control to the north of the Qayara Air Base, which was retaken by government forces on July 9.

It also cuts off IS fighters near Mosul that are now in towns behind the front lines of government forces.

The development comes a day after U.S. Defense Secretary Ash Carter said during a visit to Baghdad that 560 more U.S. soldiers are being deployed at Qayara Air Base to establish a combat staging hub for the long-awaited battle to recapture Mosul from IS militants.

Based on reporting by Retuers, AP, and AFP

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: forces, Iraqi, Mosul

Iraqi forces say Fallujah ‘fully liberated’

June 26, 2016 By administrator

General al-Saadi (center) is in charge of anti-terror forces

General al-Saadi (center) is in charge of anti-terror forces

Iraqi troops have cleared out the last pocket of “Islamic State” (IS) resistance and ended the battle in Fallujah, a general said. The news comes over a week after Baghdad declared victory in the war-ravaged city.

The IS militants were routed from Fallujah’s northwestern al-Julan district, marking the end of the month-long battle for the city, Lieutenant General Abdul-Wahad al-Saadi said on Sunday.

The area had been “cleared by the counterterrorism service,” according to al-Saadi.

“From the center of al-Julan neighborhood, we congratulate the Iraqi people and the commander in chief… and declare that the Fallujah fight is over,” Wahad told state TV.

At least 1,800 insurgents were killed in the battle for the western city, he added.

The troops are now set to start removing bombs from the streets and buildings.

Never-ending war

The ancient city, some 50 kilometers (31 miles) west of the capital, Baghdad, was the first to fall to the IS insurgency in early 2014. It has been under the jihadist group’s control ever since.

Iraqi Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi declared victory over the IS forces last week, when Iraqi troops raised their flag above the government complex in the center of the city.

On Tuesday, however, the US-led coalition said that only one -hird of the city could be described as “cleared,” as fighting still continued in several city areas.

The city was only “fully liberated” on Sunday, according to al-Saadi.

The IS still controls large swaths of Iraq, including the country’s second-largest city of Mosul.

Fallujah also saw fierce fighting between US troops and al Qaeda militants in 2004.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: fallujah, forces, Iraqi, liberated

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