Gagrule.net

Gagrule.net News, Views, Interviews worldwide

  • Home
  • About
  • Contact
  • GagruleLive
  • Armenia profile

What favors dictatorship in Iraq’s Kurdistan Region?

September 16, 2015 By administrator

450x360xIraqi-Kurdistan-president-Massoud-Barzani-photo-afp.jpg.pagespeed.ic.xpJMKlzvt3Dr. Showan Khurshid | NRT

The crises we face today, in the Federal Region of Kurdistan, are not just because of ISIL’s attacks and financial shortages. We could have avoided them had it not been for the troubles at the foundations of our political system – one manifestation of which is the tension arising from the persisting demands that the current president, Mr. Massoud Barzani, stays in power, despite the fact that he served two initial terms, of four years each, and was given a two-year extension. This tension shows that Kurdish leaders or some of them have not adopted democracy as a peaceful means to organize the struggle for power. Obviously, Mr. Barzani’s interests are not limited to ruling just a few more years – had it been so, he might not have even bothered. The real aim is to stay in power as long as he can and then pass it on to his son. Barzani’s eldest son has already been groomed to wield power. As the head of national intelligence services, he has been playing important role in the ongoing undemocratic phase of the struggle for power. As such, it seems that we are in for a project for establishing a dictatorship or at least a dysfunctional democracy that leads us to eventual degeneration. Whether these less desired projects succeed or not are the topics of my discussion below. More precisely, in this part, I will point out those factors that favor building dictatorship. The second part will deal with those factors that make establishing dictatorship more difficult.

1. The Judiciary

Dictatorship can thrive in the absence of a powerful and independent judiciary. This is not to say that there are no brave judges who have defied the ruling elite in order to do justice. However, the fact that some of these judges are punished without much protest from their colleagues and the fact that many officials can escape prosecution even for grave transgressions reflect that the judiciary is not powerful and sufficiently independent.

2. Financial Auditory System

Lack of an effective auditory system allows phenomenal corruption, the proceeds of which are then used in recruiting or buying off dissenting voices and influential figures. Of course, we should expect such a situation when the auditors are bribed or not protected sufficiently.

3. The Weakness of the Parliament

We have to give credit to the current parliamentary leadership and several MPs for enhancing the position of Parliament and enabling it to play a more significant role in the drive for democracy, in comparison with previous terms. However, it is not powerful enough yet. For instance, it has not been able to set up inquiries into transgressions carried out continuously by influential figures in the ruling elite. Nor has it been able to pass all the laws the current situation requires. The limitation on the power of the Parliament is by design. The leaders of the parties, do not deign to take up seats in the Parliament, most likely to avoid being exposed in the public as inapt debaters and speakers, yet they want to have the final say to themselves.

4. Failing to adopt the principle of Neutrality of State

One of the reasons that establishing democracy is so difficult in the Islamic world, in general, is the mixing of religion and state. No doubt, the Islamic mentality is antipathetic toward the liberal freedoms, which are a precondition for democracy and involve freedom of conscience in choosing belief or disbelief, the right to express opinion even if it was against religions, and personal freedom, in regard to marriage and relationship between sexes. The majority of Islamists do not express openly their aversion to democracy. On the contrary, they even argue that Islam brought about the real democracy – despite the fact that in the whole of Islamic history no election has taken place.

So it seems there is a kind of “Islamic democracy,” even though they do not market it under this banner. The main feature of this democracy, ironically, is to impose a major condition that no law contradicting “unchanging principles [or the dogma] of Islam should pass.” This contradicts the essence of democracy, which is that people make the laws they choose; insofar these laws are in accordance with a respect of basic liberal rights.

In the current stable democracies, the state does not adopt any religion. In Muslim countries, the general assumption is that there is no need for such a separation, because, as it is believed, the separation was only necessary in the West, and that is because of the excess of Christianity, and that Islam is free from such shortcomings, naturally. That is why even the majority of supposedly secular political parties accept uncritically that demand of Islamists. So the problem is that people, and among them huge numbers of the educated, as well as politicians do not understand how religion undermines democracy and how that favors establishing a dictatorship.

(1) With such a condition accepted and featured in the constitutions of most Islamic countries, Islamic forces inside and outside legislative bodies can have strong bargaining positions through which they wring concessions, which usually aim at promoting the role of religion in the society and putting additional restrictions on secular intelligentsia. Some of the obvious consequence of this influence is that the state pays thousands of clergy and other employees of mosques. The state establishes religious schools and colleges. Islamic institutions have a free hand in building numerous mosques, set up dozens of religious TV and radio stations, publish books, and periodicals, teach and organize events. This means the whole population is constantly subjected to religious indoctrination. While in the meantime the state also disallows and prosecutes or does nothing in the way of protecting those who are critical of the religion. This is the reason that in many Islamic countries those who are suspected of atheism, blasphemy or secularism are either prosecuted by the state or left exposed to lethal attacks by Islamists.

(2) A part of the ideas directed at the population is concerned with discrediting liberal democracy under the pretext that the West allows atheism and promiscuity. This means that liberal democracy is not on demand across much of the Islamic world and with the absence of liberalism, democracy, no doubt, does not take off – obviously, there has not been a real and stable democracy without association with liberalism.

(3) This situation also engenders extremism. Simply put, with the masses of people exposed to religious teachings, a great many will try to receive his or her information from the original sources and the history of early Islam. But what they will find is encouragement of jihad, the need to establish an Islamic state with Sharia as the basis for its constitution.

As such, an antidemocratic mentality, the hallmark of extremists, will come automatically to people influenced this way. Extremists who follow the Western model of politics and lifestyle are counted as aggressors against Islam. With such ideas, it will be just a matter of time before someone or some groups decide that time for talk is up and action is needed and the target will be the secular individuals and later on, governmental institutions.

Yet, when this happens the ruling elites of the Islamic world are, shockingly, surprised that they have been dragged into bloody confrontation with Islamic forces, despite their feeling that they have done everything right in respecting and accommodating Islam – of course, unable to understand it is exactly this excessive accommodating of Islam that engenders extremism and terrorism in the first place.

This is not a wholly unwelcomed prospect for the ruling elite of the Islamic world though, because this situation gives them a unique opportunity to pose as if they are fighting extremism for which they demand or justify wielding greater power. The initial inference here is that mixing religion has given the ruling elite opportunity to assume and ask for greater power and as such has been facilitating for dictatorship.

(4) As importantly, Islamic indoctrination has affected the political and cultural education. People in the Islamic world do not read to educate themselves in politics, including their rights, the proper organization of states, the proper function of democracy, nor do they care about the basic sciences that underpin marvelous advances in technology and medicine. Obviously, the populations of the Islamic world are not in fertile ground for democracy. Such a population would very likely vote Islamist in an election as has happened many times over.

5. The lack of clear criteria for assessing the performance of the authority

Witnessing an election campaign in stable Western liberal democracies, one can note that the ideas used to win over voters revolve around certain basic themes: respect for individual rights; provision of quality social services, like municipal services, health, education; ensuring a prospering economy; maintaining or improving security at home and abroad. Judging the achievement of the KRG on the bases of these criteria will not yield any impressive scores. However, majority of the population can easily be taken in by nationalist rhetoric. The ruling elite takes good advantage of this. Thus in the eye of many, the president is a hero, just because he challenges the central authorities.

Recently, though, the image of the relentless hero of Kurdish nationalism has been undermined by the failure of forces led by officers loyal to him to defend Shingal and areas around Mosul, leaving hundreds of thousands of people to the barbarism of ISIL, and failing again to prosecute those officers responsible for the debacle.

The point here is that playing on nationalist sentiments usually allows a wide margin for rulers to escape the proper assessments that are necessary for establishing liberal democracy.

In the following article, I will write about the factors that make establishing dictatorship difficult in the Federal Region of Kurdistan.

6. The Strange Case of Political Party Culture of Iraqi-Kurdistan

Perhaps, the culture of political parties in Kurdistan is as serious threat to democracy as “Islamic democracy” itself. Here the party is not just an electioneering machine aimed at finding the winning ideas and disseminating them among people to win them over, as it is the case in stable democracies. Most Kurdish parties are also power and business enterprises. The two main political parties, the KDP and PUK, for instance – this may also apply to other parties though to lesser extent – own numerous business, banks, land, and properties. Moreover, these parties command their own militia as well as secret services – in fact, Kurdistan does not have its own army, the loyalties of various units of army are first and foremost are for the leadership of political parties, and there is a real fear that in the event of disagreement among the various leaderships, the Kurdish army will splinter with various units fighting each other. There are also hundreds, if not thousands of officials, of these parties who use the parties’ clout, including their armies and secret services to appropriate land and properties and procure business deals for themselves.

Accordingly, one should expect that the high-ranking officials must be recruiting the lower ranking ones through various kinds of deals. Still, these parties pay the salaries of thousands of employees who work within various professions, including teaching and administration. This means that the party, particularly KDP, acts as a state within state or a group within a larger one. The PUK, since the ailment of its leader, has been suffering some kind of disintegration and factionalizing. In that sense, the interests of the party and its leadership come ahead of the interests of the people of Kurdistan. This is an obvious reason why the KDP is so adamant on reinstalling Masoud Barzani even though doing so is clearly against the law on which KDP and Barzani himself agreed, and that extending his presidency will end the prospect of democracy perhaps for good.

Another negative effect of this party culture is demonstrated in the factionalizing of the state. Now, each of the major five parties – who all joined the government – has their feuding fiefdoms within the state administrations and departments. Sometimes, one can feel that even the prime minister conspires against one of his ministries, in order to undermine the popularity of the party holding the ministry. In effect, what we see in Kurdistan is a repetition of what has happened and is happening in Iraq, where each participating party in the government has its own fiefdom and the state is always kept underpowered and ineffective. This means that, eventually, Kurdistan might become like Iraq where even the posts are sold and the whole state is left vulnerable to the conquest of ISIL. This might mean that this factor will not facilitate dictatorship, but lead to having a failed state. Yet, this dysfunctionality of the state can also generate popular feeling that some kind of dictatorship is necessary to escape the unbearable situation.

Showan Khurshid is an author and lecturer of Politics at Salahaddin University. He holds a PhD in Political Theory from Cardiff University.

Source: eKurd

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: dictatorship, Iraqi, Kurdistan

Iraqi defense minister escapes assassination attempt

September 7, 2015 By administrator

Iraqi Defense Minister Khaled al-Obeidi (C) delivers a speech during a press conference in the Iraqi capital, Baghdad, on September 6, 2015. (© AFP)

Iraqi Defense Minister Khaled al-Obeidi (C) delivers a speech during a press conference in the Iraqi capital, Baghdad, on September 6, 2015. (© AFP)

The Iraqi defense minister has escaped an assassination attempt in the country’s embattled northern province of Salahuddin, where unidentified militants opened fire on his convoy.

A source in the Iraqi Defense Ministry, requesting not to be named, told Arabic-language al-Sumaria satellite television network that Khalid al-Obeidi was on a visit to the Tal Abu Jarad area, which lies north of the provincial capital city of Tikrit, on Monday, when a sniper opened fire.

The source added one of Obeidi’s guards was wounded in the assault, but the minister himself was unharmed.

There was no immediate claim of responsibility for the attacks. However, Iraqi officials usually blame such assaults on Daesh Takfiri terrorists.

Obeidi was touring the area to watch over military operations in the oil-rich city of Baiji, located some 210 kilometers (130 miles) north of the capital, Baghdad.

Daesh kidnaps over 100 Iraqi children

Meanwhile, members of the Daesh Takfiri militant group have abducted more than 100 children from various districts of the northern Iraqi city of Mosul.

The spokesman for the Kurdistan Democratic Party in Mosul, Saeed Mamouzini, said Daesh extremists have kidnapped 127 minors, aged between 11 and 15, over the past few days in the city, located some 400 kilometers (248 miles) north of Baghdad.

He added that the Takfiris have shifted the abductees to their training camps on the outskirts of Mosul, where they are being forced to undergo training to carry out acts of terror.

Separately, Daesh militants abducted 35 civilians in al-Khan village, located on the outskirts of Hawijah city, on Monday, alleging that they had burnt the terrorists’ black flag and called on Daesh elements to leave the area.

The terrorists later moved the abductees to an unknown location, and there is no information about their fate and whereabouts.

Gruesome violence has plagued the northern and western parts of Iraq ever since the Daesh Takfiris launched an offensive in June 2014, and took control of portions of Iraqi territory.

The militants have been committing vicious crimes against all ethnic and religious communities in Iraq, including Shias, Sunnis, Kurds, Christians and others.

Units of army soldiers and volunteer fighters are seeking to win back militant-held regions in joint operations.

Source: presstv.com

Filed Under: News Tagged With: assassination, Defense Minister, escape, Iraqi

Iraqi parliament to question Massoud Barzani for Sinjar, Mosul fall Report:

August 27, 2015 By administrator

450x360xIraqi-Kurdistan-president-Massoud-Barzani-2014-photo-afp.jpg.pagespeed.ic.OEPgJisO5U

Iraqi Kurdistan president Massoud Barzani. Photo: AFP

BAGHDAD,— At least 76 signatures have been collected in the Iraqi Parliament to question Massoud Barzani on the 2014 fall of Sinjar (Shingal) and Nineveh to Islamic State (IS) fighters.

Barzani, who’s term as President of the Kurdistan Regional Government (KRG) ended on August 20, was leader of the region during IS’ rampage across northern Iraq.

A member of the Patriotic Union of Kurdistan in Iraqi parliament, Bakhtiar Shaways, told Xendan and that the State of Law Coalition Deputy Awatif Nima has received the approval of 76 deputies and has delivered the demand to parliament leadership board.

Iraqi MP Bakhtiyar Shaways told NRT on Tuesday that Kurdish MPs have declined to sign the petition.

“Iraqi Parliament member from the State of Law bloc, Awatif Nima, sent the request to the Parliament’s leadership after she collected the signatures,” Shaways said.

Iraqi lawmakers claim Barzani bears responsibility for the fall of Sinjar and Nineveh and should face a hearing.

The KDP party led by Barzani 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’ saviors.

Islamic State has extended its control on most parts of Sinjar district on August 3, 2014 after Iraqi Kurdish KDP forces withdrew from Sinjar without a fight, leaving behind the Kurdish Yazidi civilians, which led thousands of Kurdish families to flee to Mount Sinjar, where they were trapped in it and suffered from significant lack of water and food, killing and abduction of thousands of Yazidis as well as rape and captivity of thousands of women.

The Yazidis beg the KDP Peshmerga to at least leave them their weapons so as to give them a chance at defending themselves against IS militants, but the Peshmergas refuse, Yazidi refugees in Iraqi Kurdistan said.

Thousands of Yazidi Kurdish women and girls have been forced to marry or been sold into sexual slavery by the IS jihadists, according to Human Rights organizations and observers.

Barzani is not the only leader to be called on for questioning regarding the fall of Iraq’s Nineveh province to extremists.

Iraq’s Parliament referred a report to the judiciary on August 16, calling for former Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki and dozens of top officials to face a trial for their roles in the fall of Mosul, Iraq’s second-largest city.

Source: eKurd.com

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Iraqi, Massoud Barzan, Mosul, Parliament, question, sinjari

Armenian Genocide bill discussed at Iraqi Kurdistan parliament

April 29, 2015 By administrator

Kurd-Flag-ArmenianA bill on the recognition of the Armenian Genocide, and which an Armenian MP had introduced to the parliament of the Iraqi Kurdistan autonomous region, has caused debates among the local political forces.

The parliament’s Armenian member, Yervant Nisan, informed that he collected signatures from all parties in the parliament, and in favor of the draft law he introduced, reported the Rudaw website.

Although the parliament’s Kurdistan Patriots Union (KYB) openly supported this bill, the Kurdistan Democratic Party (KDP) and the Movement for Change (Gorran) platform preferred to remain silent on this matter.

KYB MP Rewas Fayik noted that he signed for this bill and its passing in the Iraqi Kurdistan parliament will be something ordinary.

Several KDP MPs likewise signed in favor of the passing of this proposed law.

KDP member Muhammad Amir Dershewi, for his part, said everyone knows that genocide was committed against the Armenians, and stressed that the parliament of the Kurdistan autonomous region must take the initiative.

Forty Iraqi Kurdistan MP’s signed under this bill, which calls for the recognition of the Armenian Genocide, and it was submitted to the presidency of the parliamen

Filed Under: Genocide, News Tagged With: Armenian, Bill, Genocide, Iraqi, Kurdistan

At least 160,000 Iraqi Christians flee Mosul: Iraqi MP

December 13, 2014 By administrator

390055_Iraq-Mosul-ChristiansAt least 160,000 Iraqi Christians have been forced out of their homes in the city of Mosul after the ISIL Takfiri terrorists seized Iraq’s second-largest city in June, a Christian lawmaker says.

“Christian families have been displaced from the city because of violence and death threats from this terrorist group,” the parliament member, Emad Yukhana, said on Saturday.

He added that few European countries had taken in some of the displaced Iraqi Christians.

“The majority of Christians have taken shelter in [northern Iraqi semi-autonomous] Kurdistan [region],” the lawmaker said.

Thousands of Iraqi Christians have been forced out of their homes in the city of Mosul in July following an ultimatum by the ISIL terrorists to them to convert to Islam, pay taxes or face death.

ISIL militants took control of Mosul in a lightning advance on June 10, which was followed by the fall of Tikrit, located 140 kilometers (87 miles) northwest of the capital, Baghdad. Tikrit has been reportedly retaken by the Iraqi army.

The militants have since been controlling some areas in northern and northwestern Iraq, committing crimes in those areas including mass execution of civilians as well as army troops and officers.

Some 1.2 million Christians were living in Iraq before the US-led invasion of the country in 2003, which overthrew longtime dictator Saddam Hussein. The figure has since dwindled to about 500,000.

The Takfiri militants have been carrying out horrific acts of violence, including public decapitations and crucifixions, against all Syrian and Iraqi communities such as Shias, Sunnis, Kurds and Christians.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Christians, flee, Iraqi

Humanitarian bus for the Iraqi Kurdistan with Elise Boghossian * (1)

November 19, 2014 By administrator

arton105405-480x384It’s always disturbing to come back here and back into this universe. Through customs at the airport with its billboards phone or Dior, waiting for his bag among some European clusters, journalists and oil investors, leaving the major luxury hotels in the city and roll over tens of kilometers in large plains, to find the most remote camps, the refugees themselves with the same clothes, shaved or long hair, the time seems to have stopped them. Even the recycling center where the Yazidis live has not changed, the gates acting bed with crows and staging, it’s almost beautiful, as if an artist had put his leg at work. The same decor, the same newspaper, the same abandonment.

Viyan picked me up at the airport. He is Kurdish, pharmacist and founder of the Kurdistan Medical Charity Foundation. Dilnaz my friend’s daughter, the princess, had introduced me as a man of the field very reliable, dedicated. The grandfather Viyan was tortured to death by Turkish Armenians because it housed in 1915 in Turkey. His father then escaped to Baghdad, it was a very close family friend of the princess. Viyan was educated in Ukraine, and he puts his time, his energy, his entire life to serving refugees, whatever their origin, their religion, their language, whether Syrian, the Yazidis, Christians, refugees Salaheddin, Ramadi, Falluja, the Sunni, the Shabak and persimmons. Two hundred volunteer doctors and nurses working with him. We had a few exchanges before my arrival in September, our collaboration with patients was successful and we are pleased at the prospect of continuing to work together.

Compared to last summer where NGOs were not present, we feel a desire to put in place a real organization. Public gardens Erbil have been emptied. The night is too cold, and the recent massive influx of refugees from Kirkuk and Kobané have resulted in the opening of old plants, the development of caves or abandoned malls. UN trying to unite all the humanitarian organizations and UNHCR provides each family kits of blankets and clothing, water, diapers and food. In tents, each family maintains its space. The shoes remain at the entrance and walk in socks on the tarp placed on the ground, the picture of the Virgin Mary with a rosary hanging on the foot screws of the bulb, the teapot is always ready on the small stove land mattresses are stacked with folded blankets near a wooden crate containing rice, eggplant and tomatoes, the richest have a radio. At the entrance of these buildings with between 400 and 1500 individuals, one or two prefabricated possible to register new arrivals, and Kurdish and foreign volunteers meet the physical necessities. According to the religion of refugees, we can also meet a priest, imam, etc. The authorities are trying to poach doctors from hospitals in the city, themselves also clogged. So some care is provided, particularly among the elderly and children. For the rest, we must wait …

In the surrounding plains and neighboring villages is even worse. Near déchèteries or herds of black sheep camps are secured by barbed wire and peshmergues. Epidemics heat last summer resulted in many deaths, and the image of the camps, cemeteries are overloaded. Tractors return the land around the camps to enlarge because it took hundreds of host families that arrived last week. Simply in the province of Duhok, 3 hours drive north of Erbil, there 17 camps for 850,000 residents, it leaves an idea of ​​the percentage of care actually charged and the number of refugees in all three provinces Kurdistan. With their fifty seats, tents furnished by UNICEF are trying to avoid breaking the school with children. But the despair of these families as children themselves already seem old. Sometimes we see them play, improvising games balls from mud and making holes in the ground. Teenagers carry water, offer waxing your shoes, beg you to give them work. From Mosul, Baghdad, Aleppo … parents are teachers, architects, shoemakers, restorers of objects of art, cooks. We read in their eyes the shame of becoming a beggar overnight.

There is an explosion of pregnancies in the camps, “attacks like everywhere, people have nothing to do,” is the refrain yes, but in the camps is different. When you’ve lost everything, you’re reduced to a beast waiting as time passes, or that life stops, desperation sometimes leads to the worst crimes. In these times, it used to have something like poetry. In the back of this scene, you find yourself in Baudelaire, and these pretty girls rounded belly are living proof; they age laugh, live their first carnal pleasures or to spend their time on the benches of our universities, but their faces are frozen. The only medical camp cabin has a small refrigerator lock with some antibiotics, gynecological gloves, some pads contraceptive pills and condoms, the valve does not work, dirt and dust are such that you wonder resistant infections .

On the truck, we validated purchase at Le Mans last week and had to be put in place to enter the territory permissions. By Patrick Jouan who worked at the RATP, we chose a model 8m long with 4 cabins + convertible infirmary care and pharmacy. It’s little, but it’s a start … I think I was a little, even very stressed at the idea that the truck is stopped at the exit of the boat in Turkey, or before entering the territory Kurdish. And two jokers carried me and continue to bring me luck: Consul General Frederic Tissot and Princess.

Official appointments were held with the Governor of Duhok, the adviser to the Prime Minister Barzani, the Ministry of Health. I could enter the “passport” of the truck, and it will have a number plate on the way to the Kurdish territory. We Viyan registered on the registration and pass as owner of the truck. The truck will take the boat these days in Marseille to Mersin, and an official team will go retrieve it off the boat in Turkey. All development work, installation of water and its disposal, electricity, insulation, air conditioning, heating, stretchers, cabinets … will ultimately be made here. In France, the waiting times were too long for companies who manage ambulances to wait six months to install our clinic standards. And costs ranged around 20,000 euros. With Azad who runs a manufacturing plant, we have a team of professionals operating framed by an architect who works with the state. It has already drawn up plans gracefully. Our ten workers are refugees: Syrians, Kurds, Yezidis, Christians, and they are so happy to contribute in exchange for some treatments and medications that some even offered to work for free. And the final price in comparison to Paris, we will not exceed the $ 8,000 all inclusive. I also expect the price of the boat, customs before returning to Kurdistan, many details, so many details to create a small hospital of 20m2.

Gynaecology Without Borders offers the installation of a cabin with a gynecological examination table, delivery sets and technical equipment. With UMAF we will also have to supply some medicines pharmacy.

It was also necessary to meet the staff ready to work every day for four months. Staff will be employed. We recruited a Kurdish driver, a Syrian worker, nurse Aleppo. Three full-time doctors will join the team: a gynecologist, a general practitioner and my dear Abdelkarim with which our paths crossed for the 3rd time!

Abdelkarim is a native of Dara who worked in the Jordanian Syrian refugee camps in 2013, I often croisais when I was with the Moroccan military Zaatari. It is a plump sixty years man, with an ocean of sweetness and sadness in his eyes, and as a physician would like to have for our children. He treats so many children with listening, attention and professionalism unique. And last September, chance that I came across him in a Yezidi sanctuary Lalesh installing my acupuncture consultation. He was sheltered under the trees, it was 50 degrees that day, and dozens of families were clustered around him. It was great to see a familiar face in a sacred place, a refuge against Daech. And yesterday in Erbil, we still came face to face with the Department of Health! Not having a valid passport, he went on his own to Kobané treat children, and he returned to Kurdistan illegally. In fact, the authorities have stuck him a warning and he has the right to practice without a contract. And we were overjoyed with Viyan when he agreed to work in our mobile clinic.

It is in times like these: warm smile Duhok Governor ready to open its doors, the knowing look of Abdelkarim, discreet kindness of the princess, Viyan solidarity and warmth of its people, support Henri-Jean gynecology, UMAF for drugs, Mylène and its decisive role in helloasso, Azad to isolate the clinic, Rene and Simon for parliamentary reserve Olivier for his confidence, Fabienne for his support for the most hours later, Patrick for his collaboration, Rachel, Valerie, Xavier Benedict, for his hands … Laurence, which clings to the hope that everything is still possible, even at the scale of an ant. At night, close your eyes the quiet heart, because each in its own way, brings beauty to the world.

Elise Boghossian

* Organic Express

• 2001: Mission to the casualties of the war in Nagorno-Karabakh • 2002: creation of the humanitarian association Shennong & Avicenna • 2011 defended his thesis in Chinese medicine in Nanjing • 2013: Missions to Syrian refugees • 2014: September , contact mission in Iraq Yezidis and Christians refugees in November, back in Iraq for a humanitarian project bus.

With the purchase of a bus and planning clinic in the Shennong & Avicenna association can provide emergency care for the management of pain and Yezidi Christian refugees in Iraq. A goal painkiller 7000 consultations by spring 2015. To help finance the project:
www.helloasso.com/associations/shennong-avicenne/collectes/aidez-nous-a-la-creation-d-un-dispensaire-mobile-anti-douleur

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: bus, humanitarian, Iraqi, Kurdistan

Iraq Catholic leader says Islamic State worse than Genghis Khan

July 20, 2014 By administrator

By Dominic Evans and Raheem Salman Baghdad,

An Iraqi Christian boy fleeing the violence in the Iraqi city of Mosul, stands inside the Church of the Sacred Heart of Jesus Chaldean Church in TelkaifAn Iraqi Christian boy fleeing the violence in the Iraqi city of Mosul, stands inside the Church of the Sacred Heart of Jesus Chaldean Church in Telkaif near Mosul, in the province of Nineveh, July 20, 2014.
Credit: Reuters/Stringer

(Reuters) – The head of Iraq’s largest church said on Sunday that Islamic State militants who drove Christians out of Mosul were worse than Mongol leader Genghis Khan and his grandson Hulagu who ransacked medieval Baghdad.

Chaldean Catholic Patriarch Louis Raphael Sako led a wave of condemnation for the Sunni Islamists who demanded Christians either convert, submit to their radical rule and pay a religious levy or face death by the sword.

At the Vatican, Pope Francis decried what he said was the persecution of Christians in the birthplace of their faith, while U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon said the Islamic State’s actions could constitute a crime against humanity.

Hundreds of Christian families left Mosul ahead of Saturday’s ultimatum, many of them stripped of their possessions as they fled for safety. They formed the remnants of a community which once numbered in the tens of thousands and traced its presence in Mosul to the earliest years of Christianity.

People of other faiths in the once diverse city, including Shi’ites, Yazidis and Shabaks, have also fled from the ultra-conservative militants, who have blown up mosques and shrines and seized property of fleeing minorities.

“The heinous crime of the Islamic State was carried out not just against Christians, but against humanity,” Sako told a special church service in east Baghdad where around 200 Muslims joined Christians in solidarity.

“How in the 21st century could people be forced from their houses just because they are Christian, or Shi’ite or Sunni or Yazidi?” he asked. “Christian families have been expelled from their houses and their valuables were stolen and …their houses and property expropriated in the name of the Islamic State.”

“This has never happened in Christian or Islamic history. Even Genghis Khan or Hulagu didn’t do this,” he said. Hulagu Khan led a Mongol army which sacked Baghdad in 1258, killing tens of thousand of people, destroying a caliphate which lasted nearly 600 years and leaving the city in ruins for centuries.

“WORLD MUST ACT”

Muslims at the service held up leaflets declaring “I am Iraqi, I am Christian”, some writing it on their shirts.

Others marked themselves with an “N”, the first letter of the Arabic word for Christian, “Nasrani” or Nazarene. The Islamic State has been putting an “N” on Christian property marked out for seizure.

One of Zako’s deputies, Bishop Shlemon Wardooni, called for an international response. “The world must act, speak out, consider human rights,” he said, adding that the Iraqi state was weak and divided and Muslim leaders had remained silent.

“We haven’t heard from clerics from all sects or from the government,” he told Reuters on Sunday. “The Christians are sacrificed for Iraq.”

Iraqi Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki condemned the treatment of the Christians and what he described as attacks on churches in Mosul, saying it showed “the extreme criminality and terrorist nature of this group”.

He said he instructed a government committee set up to support displaced people across Iraq to help the Christians who had been made homeless, but did not say when the army might try to win back control of Mosul.

Iraq’s security forces, which wilted under the weight of last month’s Islamic State-led offensive, have been reinforced by Shi’ite militia fighters and are trying to push back the Sunni militants further south. So far they have failed to take back significant territory from the insurgents.

Pope Francis said he was troubled by the Islamic State ultimatum in his weekly public prayers on Sunday. The Chaldeans are Eastern Rite Catholics in communion with Rome.

“I learned with great concern the news that came from the Christian communities in Mosul and other parts of the Middle East, where they have lived since the birth of Christianity and where they have made significant contributions to the good of their societies,” he said.

“Today they are persecuted. Our brothers are persecuted. They’ve been driven away. They must leave their homes without being able to take anything with them.”

REFUGEES ROBBED

U.N. Secretary General Ban condemned “in the strongest terms the systematic persecution of minority populations in Iraq by Islamic State (IS) and associated armed groups,” a statement by his spokesman said.

Any systematic attack on a civilian population because of their ethnic background, religious beliefs or faith may constitute a crime against humanity, for which those responsible must be held accountable, he said.

More than 2 million people have already been displaced in Iraq and the local U.N. mission said another 400 uprooted families arrived on Sunday morning in two cities in northern Iraq’s autonomous Kurdish enclave.

Another 700 families were expected in Arbil, barely 50 miles (80 km) from Mosul, it said.

One Christian who left Mosul last week described how he fled with his family when he learned of the Islamic State deadline.

“We gathered all our belongings and headed for the only exit. There was a checkpoint on the road and they were stopping cars there,” 35-year-old Salwan Noel Miskouni said.

When the militants saw they were Christians, they demanded gold and money. The family initially said they had none, one of the fighters took their four-year-old son by the hand and threatened to abduct him.

“My sister emptied her entire handbag with our money and gold and her ID. They let the car pass and the child go,” Miskouni said.

A few Christian families had stayed on, he said, hiding with Muslim neighbors who gave them shelter. But for now, he saw no possibility of returning with his family.

“If (the Islamic State) leaves we will probably go back but if they stay it’s impossible – because they will slaughter us.”

(Additional reporting by Isabel Coles in Arbil and Steve Scherer in Rome; Editing by Tom Heneghan)

Filed Under: News Tagged With: Christian, Iraqi, ISIL

Iraqis turning tide against al-Qaeda – analyst

June 16, 2014 By administrator

Press TV has conducted an interview with Sa’ad al-Muttalibi, from the State of Law Coalition, to discuss Iraqi military’s counteroffensive operations against ISIL militants turning tidelinked to al-Qaeda in the city of Mosul.

Press TV: We were speaking earlier with our guest in Beirut and he was saying that Mr. Maliki himself is also to blame. A lot of people have been saying that. What do you think about the way Mr. Maliki has dealt with the problem and how responsible he could be in the current crisis?

Muttalibi: I think with the matter of blaming or diverting the blame from… ISIL or ISIS and diverting the blame to the Iraqi Prime Minister I think this is … a plot or a conspiracy against Iraq.

There are political entities and media entities from the West in particular and the United States trying to show that it was the Iraqi constitution and the Iraqi elected government behind the failure; where all evidence indicate that the Baath party with al-Qaeda and Daesh and with the collaboration of certain offices from Mosul area, they were part and the tool for allowing Daash to enter.

The people of Daash who entered Mosul did not exceed a few hundred fighters and the problem was with the fifty thousand Iraqi local police who constituted the local police of Mosul, they took off their military or the police uniform and put on the Daesh or the ISIL uniform.

So, the matter of diverting this blame from the original conspirators into the elected government, I think this part of the world conspiracy against Iraq.

Press TV: We are also hearing, at least some of the media saying that the ISIL or these groups have support, for instance, among parts of the Sunni population. Is that something that you can confirm?

Muttalibi: Definitely. ISIL has, there is an incubation environment, an environment in north Iraq where the local people feel some type of belonging to that terrorist group because it is, historically, we have to go back. The Sunnis after long losing power in 2003, they didn’t believe… historical right into governing Iraq. It is the formation of former Iraq in 1921 by the British government installing a Sunni…

So, the Sunnis believe that they have the right to govern Iraq regardless of the result of the election. Therefore, we see this kind of collaboration or assistance provided to the ISIL, of course, we cannot forget the Baath party and their full support to Daesh.

Now, what is turning the tide, the millions of Iraqis that have volunteered, youth Iraqis volunteered to fight, and when I say millions I am not exaggerating. We have the whole of the south, the middle of the Iraq and the south, the whole of that is rising to fight al-Qaeda.

The information that I’ve received from the battle, a tremendous amount of progress has been made. Daesh is on the retreat, ISIL is on the retreat alongside with other terrorist organizations that are working there. They will be driven back to Mosul.

Mr. Maliki, the Prime Minister, is in Samarra now, leading the operations himself from Salahuddin and form Salahuddin which is the city of Tikrit was there, leading the battle from Salahuddin and heading towards the liberation of Mosul.

Naturally, there were some problems on the beginning but now the Iraqi forces are moving at a steady pace and al-Qaeda is being destroyed base after base.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Iraqi, ISIL, turning tide

Militants take two Iraqi towns in eastern Diyala province

June 13, 2014 By administrator

BAQUBA – Reuters
An image downloaded on June 9, 2014 from the jihadist website Welayat Salahuddin shows militants of the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL) firing heavy machine guns during alleged fighting in the northern Iraqi city of Samarra. AFP Photo

Militants gaineDiala provinced more ground in Iraq overnight, moving into two towns in the eastern province of Diyala after security forces abandoned their posts.
Security sources said the towns of Saadiyah and Jalawla had fallen to the insurgents, as well as several other villages around the Himreen mountains, which have long been a hideout for militants.

Kurdish peshmerga forces deployed more men to secure their political party offices in Jalawla before the insurgents arrived in the town. There were no confrontations between them.

The Iraqi army fired artillery at Saadiya and Jalawla from the nearby town of Muqdadiya, sending dozens of families fleeing towards Khaniqin near the Iranian border, security sources said.

Militants from the Islamic State in Iraq and the Levant (ISIL) overran the northern city of Mosul earlier this week and have since pressed south towards Baghdad in an onslaught against the Shiite-led government.

U.S. President Barack Obama threatened U.S. military strikes against the Sunni Islamist militants who want to establish their own state in Iraq and Syria.

The Kurds, who run their own autonomous region in the north, have taken the control of the oil-rich of Kirkuk and other areas outside the formal boundary of their enclave after the Iraqi army retreated.

June/13/2014

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Diyala, Iraqi, ISIL, militants

update: Militants overrun Iraqi city Tikrit

June 11, 2014 By administrator

Multiple reports from Iraq say that Islamist militants have overrun the central city of Tikrit. It would be the second city to fall into insurgent hands in as many days.

0,,17700325_303,00Insurgents from the jihadist Islamist State in Iraq and Syria (ISIS) took control of Tikrit on Wednesday afternoon, according to independent news site Alsumaria News and other sources.

Tikrit is 150 kilometers (95 miles) north of Baghdad, and the hometown of former dictator Saddam Hussein.

The development comes after insurgents seized the Turkish consulate in the northern city of Mosulearlier on Wednesday, and kidnapped diplomatic staff.

Members of ISIS, a thriving breakaway Islamist militant group, took control of Mosul, Iraq’s second biggest city, in a show of strength against Iraq’s Shiite-led government. Half a million people arereported to have fled Mosul.

Turkish media are reporting that Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan has gathered officials for an emergency meeting to discuss the consulate seizure.

The group’s assault in Mosul saw black banner-waving insurgents raid government buildings, push out security forces and capture military vehicles. They also abducted more than two dozen Turkish truck drivers who were delivering diesel to a power plant in Mosul.

UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon has called for the release of the diplomats.

“No such attack on diplomatic officers and civilians can be justified under any circumstances or under any reason,” Ban said.

The militants have also pushed on to the northern oil refinery town of Biji, with officials reporting the setting alight of its court building and police station overnight.

It’s believed insurgents had warned police and soldiers ahead of time not to challenge them as they approached Biji.

News agency Reuters reported that NATO ambassadors held an emergency meeting on Wednesday on the situation in Iraq, at Turkey’s request.

‘Plan to restore security’

Authorities back in Mosul are determined to recapture the city.

“Mosul is capable of getting back on its feet and getting rid of all the outsiders … and we have a plan to restore security,” said Atheel al-Nujaifi, the governor of Ninevah province, of which Mosul is the capital.

“We have taken practical steps in order to restore order … by mobilizing people into public committees that would retake the city.”

Iraqi Foreign Minister Hoshyar Zebari said the government in Baghdad would work with the semi-autonomous regional government of Kurdistan to defeat the Islamists. The Iraqi parliament was set to meet on Thursday to discuss a state of emergency that might give Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki greater powers in tackling the growing insurgency.

ISIS has controlled the city of Fallujah for the past five months and on Tuesday claimed control of Iraq’s second largest city, Mosul. It has also taken advantage of the civil war in neighboring Syria to gain a foothold there, where it is seen by some as the most capable of those forces fighting President Bashar al-Assad.

The group is believed to be fighting to establish an Islamist emirate that would straddle Syria and Iraq.

jr/dr (Reuters, AFP)

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Iraqi, militants, overrun, Tikrit

  • « Previous Page
  • 1
  • …
  • 3
  • 4
  • 5
  • 6
  • Next Page »

Support Gagrule.net

Subscribe Free News & Update

Search

GagruleLive with Harut Sassounian

Can activist run a Government?

Wally Sarkeesian Interview Onnik Dinkjian and son

https://youtu.be/BiI8_TJzHEM

Khachic Moradian

https://youtu.be/-NkIYpCAIII
https://youtu.be/9_Xi7FA3tGQ
https://youtu.be/Arg8gAhcIb0
https://youtu.be/zzh-WpjGltY





gagrulenet Twitter-Timeline

Tweets by @gagrulenet

Archives

Books

Recent Posts

  • Pashinyan Government Pays U.S. Public Relations Firm To Attack the Armenian Apostolic Church
  • Breaking News: Armenian Former Defense Minister Arshak Karapetyan Pashinyan is agent
  • November 9: The Black Day of Armenia — How Artsakh Was Signed Away
  • @MorenoOcampo1, former Chief Prosecutor of the International Criminal Court, issued a Call to Action for Armenians worldwide.
  • Medieval Software. Modern Hardware. Our Politics Is Stuck in the Past.

Recent Comments

  • Baron Kisheranotz on Pashinyan’s Betrayal Dressed as Peace
  • Baron Kisheranotz on Trusting Turks or Azerbaijanis is itself a betrayal of the Armenian nation.
  • Stepan on A Nation in Peril: Anything Armenian pashinyan Dismantling
  • Stepan on Draft Letter to Armenian Legal Scholars / Armenian Bar Association
  • administrator on Turkish Agent Pashinyan will not attend the meeting of the CIS Council of Heads of State

Copyright © 2025 · News Pro Theme on Genesis Framework · WordPress · Log in