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Iraq PM: Half of IS Families Detained Near Mosul Are Turkish

September 21, 2017 By administrator

By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS,

BAGHDAD — Turkish nationals make up half of the hundreds of families being held in a camp near Mosul for suspected links to the Islamic State group, Iraqi Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi said in an exclusive interview with The Associated Press Saturday.

The Iraqi leader also confirmed that the German teenage girl found in Mosul last month is still being held in a Baghdad prison and may face the death penalty.

At the camp near Mosul, Iraqi forces are holding 1,333 women and children who surrendered to Kurdish forces. The families handed themselves over after an Iraqi offensive drove the extremist group from the northern town of Tal Afar, near Mosul at the end of August.

Many of those detained at the camp are not guilty of any crime, al-Abadi said and his government is “in full communication” with their home countries to “find a way to hand them over.”

So far, al-Abadi said, Iraq has repatriated fewer than 100 people.

“But we are working very hard to accelerate this. It is not in our interest to keep families and children inside our country when their countries are prepared to take them,” he added.

Sixteen-year-old Linda W. ran away last summer from her hometown of Pulsnitz in eastern Germany after communicating with extremists from the Islamic State group online. She was found in the basement of a home in Mosul’s Old City by Iraqi forces, arrested and brought to Baghdad.

Iraqi intelligence officials told the AP the girl allegedly worked with the IS group’s police force.

Al-Abadi said Iraq’s judiciary will decide if the teen will face the death penalty.

“You know teenagers under certain laws, they are accountable for their actions especially if the act is a criminal activity when it amounts to killing innocent people,” Al-Abadi said.

The German teen is being held in a prison at Baghdad’s airport together with other foreign women found in Mosul, including citizens from Belgium, France, Syria and Iran. Hundreds more non-Iraqi women with IS links and suspected of carrying out terrorist attacks are being held at a prison in the Mosul area, Iraqi officials told the AP earlier this week.

Also this week, Baghdad’s central criminal court sentenced a Russian national to death by hanging for his membership in the IS group.

The individual was tried under Iraq’s anti-terrorism law and confessed to carrying out “terrorist operations” against Iraqi security forces since 2015, said Abdul-Sattar Bayrkdar, spokesman for Iraq’s supreme judicial council.

Iraqi has repeatedly faced criticism for its use of the death penalty. Iraq consistently ranks among the top countries in the world in numbers of executions.

When al-Abadi attempted to fast-track death sentences in 2016, the United Nations warned the move would likely result in “gross, irreversible miscarriages of justice … given the weaknesses of the Iraqi justice system,” according to a statement from U.N. High Commissioner for Human Rights Zeid Ra’ad Al Hussein.

Tens of thousands of foreigners traveled to Iraq and Syria to live in the IS group’s self-styled Islamic caliphate. As the territory under IS control has rapidly shrunk over the past two years, Iraqi forces have arrested and detained thousands of men, women and children for suspected IS links.

Iraqi forces retook the country’s second largest city of Mosul from the extremists in July, leaving only scattered pockets of IS held territory in Iraq.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Iraqi PM, ISIS, Turkish

The Bulgarian journalist who revealed the links between Azerbaijan and ISIS Daesh by supplying weapons … dismissed!

August 26, 2017 By administrator

The Bulgarian journalist, Dilyana Gaytandzhieva, who revealed in an article published on July 2 in the Bulgarian newspaper “Trud Daily” (Labor) that the flights of Azerbaijani companies supplied arms to the soldiers of the Islamic State in Iraq and Syria has been fired! According to the journalist, the security services of Bulgaria interrogated her on 24 August about his revelations about the supply of arms from Azerbaijan to Daech and Al Nusra by flights from the Azerbaijani company Silk Way. After the interrogation, she was removed from the newspaper “Trud Daily” by her editorial staff. D. Gaytandzhieva said he wanted to continue his investigation into this particularly sensitive issue. His writing did not give him time.

According to an extensive investigative report published by the Bulgarian Trud newspaper, during the last three years, at least 350 diplomatic flights on board Silk Way Airlines—an Azerbaijani state-run company—have transported weapons for war conflicts across the world.

Reported by Dilyana Gaytandzhieva who received a trove of documents from an anonymous Twitter account—Annonymous Bulgaria—the article says that Silk Way Airlines has carried tens of tons of heavy weapons and ammunition headed to terrorists under the cover of diplomatic flights.

The leaked files include correspondence between the Bulgarian Ministry of Foreign Affairs and the Embassy of Azerbaijan to Bulgaria with attached documents for weapons deals and diplomatic clearance for overflight and/or landing in Bulgaria and many other European countries, USA, Saudi Arabia, UAE, Turkey, to name a few.

According to the documents, Silk Way Airlines offered diplomatic flights to private companies and arms manufacturers from the US, Balkans, and Israel, as well as to the militaries of Saudi Arabia, UAE, and the military forces of Germany and Denmark in Afghanistan and of Sweden in Iraq.

Diplomatic flights are exempt of checks, air bills, and taxes, meaning that Silk Way airplanes freely transported hundreds of tons of weapons to different locations around the world without regulation. They made technical landings with stays varying from a few hours to up to a day in intermediary locations without any logical reasons such as needing to refuel the planes.

According to the documents, Azerbaijan’s Foreign Ministry has sent instructions to its embassies in Bulgaria and many other European countries to request diplomatic clearance for Silk Way Airlines flights.

“Some of the weapons that Azerbaijan carried on diplomatic flights were used by its military in Nagorno-Karabakh against Armenia. In 2016, Azerbaijan accused Armenia of using white phosphorus. Armenia denied the allegations and in turn accused Azerbaijan of fabrication, as the only piece of evidence was based on a single unexploded grenade found by Azerbaijan’s soldiers. According to the documents from the Embassy of Azerbaijan in Sofia, white phosphorus munitions were carried on a diplomatic flight via Baku the previous year,” the report reads.

U.S. sends $1 billion worth of weapons
“Among the main customers of the “diplomatic flights for weapons” service provided by Silk Way Airlines are American companies, which supply weapons to the US army and US Special Operations Command. The common element in these cases is that they all supply non-US standard weapons; hence, the weapons are not used by the US forces,” said the report.

“According to the register of federal contracts, over the last 3 years American companies were awarded $1 billion contracts in total under a special US government program for non-US standard weapon supplies. All of them used Silk Way Airlines for the transport of weapons. In some cases when Silk Way was short of aircraft due to a busy schedule, Azerbaijan Air Force aircraft transported the military cargo, although the weapons never reached Azerbaijan,” reported Gaytandzhieva.

Click to read Gaytandzhieva’s entire article.

Artsakh Presidential Spokesman Responds
After the publication of the Truda report, Artsakh Presidential spokesperson David Babayan told Public Radio of Armenia that the “Azerbaijan established ties with terrorism at the time it gained independence.”

“This is a well-known fact to everyone, especially the special services of the countries, which immediately deal with the Islamic State and the threat of terrorism,” Babayan told Public Radio of Armenia.
“Chechen militants were getting treated in Azerbaijan during the first and second Chechen wars. It was also providing medical services to Mujahideen during the Afghan war and the Grey Wolves Turkish extremist group, as well as other groupings, which were fighting against Artsakh during the first Artsakh war and the four-day war in April,” said Babayan.

He stressed however that merely reporting the facts was not enough and concrete actions should be taken based on the revelations.

“The international community has a lot to do here. The international community should take measures,” he told Public Radio of Armenia, adding that “we often see adverse developments instead.” “They entrust Baku to host first European Games, the Formula 1, a number of forums and conferences instead of taking anti-terrorist measures against the country.”

“These developments are the logical outcome of the world’s silence in response to Aliyev’s statement on the intention to down civilian planes flying between Stepanakert and Yerevan,” said Babayan, adding that “an evil grows into an epidemics if not uprooted at the beginning. Azerbaijan is one of the countries spreading the epidemics, one of the cradles of international terrorism.”

 

Filed Under: News Tagged With: Azerbaijan, Bulgaria, dismissed, ISIS, Journalist

Armenian family tells about life in ISIS-controlled Raqqa

August 19, 2017 By administrator


An Armenian family told about living under the control of self-proclaimed Islamic State in Syria’s Raqqqa before they managed to flee.

The family used to pay IS-imposed tax known as Jezyah to avoid punishment and to be protected, EBL News reported.

“During the time of ISIS, you had to dress up and behave in certain ways, if you didn’t fulfil the orders you would be punished according to your offence,” according to members of the family, who said that their religious rituals were banned under IS authorities.

Months later, however, the family found themselves in the situation when they could no longer afford food and water, while having to deal with regular power shortages. They were hiding in the cellar before they managed to escape to the liberated territory where they started a new life in a small village outside the city.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Armenian family, ISIS

Armenian guerrilla fighter Nubar Ozanyan killed in Syria while fighting ISIS

August 17, 2017 By administrator

An Armenian was killed while fighting ISIS (DAESH) forces in Syria, the Armenian Weekly reports, citing its sources.

Nubar Ozanyan, a member of the Communist Party of Turkey (Marxist-Leninist (TKP/ML)) and the Liberation Army of the Workers and Peasants of Turkey (TIKKO), was killed in Rojava, Syria on Aug. 14.

Following his death, the Istanbul-based Nor Zartonk movement released a statement in Turkish praising Ozanyan’s fight against ISIS.

“We have learned with great sadness that Armenian revolutionary commander unger (comrade) Nubar Ozanyan died when fighting against ISIS with TKP/ML and TIKKO in Rojava, on Aug. 14, 2017. With revolutionary modesty, commitment, resolve, courage, and internationalist spirit, unger Nubar has been one of the important bearers of the Armenian revolutionary tradition. We are deeply saddened to have lost a genuine revolutionary who has succeeded in becoming an agent of the revolution,” read the Nor Zartonk statement, as translated by the Armenian Weekly.

According to some reports, Ozanyan had taken part in the Nagorno-Karabakh (Artsakh) Liberation War in the 1990s. “From Lebanon and Palestine to Nagorno-Karabakh and Rojava, we are so honored to have known Orhan, who showed us what it means to be a guerrilla,” the International Revolutionary People’s Guerrilla Forces (IRPGF) tweeted on Aug. 15.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: fighter, ISIS, Killed, Nubar Ozanyan

Lebanese army gearing up for operation against ISIS with help from Hezbollah: Reports

August 8, 2017 By administrator

The Lebanese military is reportedly making preparations to launch a long-awaited operation against hundreds of Islamic State terrorists operating along the Syrian border with the help of the country’s Hezbollah resistance movement.

The Associated Press reported on Tuesday that the offensive will also involve Hezbollah resistance fighters and the Syrian military.

More than 3,000 Lebanese troops, including elite special forces, are expected to take part in the upcoming campaign to rid the border regions of Takfiri elements.

Meanwhile, a source at Lebanon’s presidential palace told The Daily Star that the counterterrorism mission will be discussed at a meeting of the Higher Council of Defense headed by President Michel Aoun later on Tuesday.

The meeting will focus on military plans on the outskirts of the town of al-Qaa and the village of Ras Baalbeck as well as the current security situation in Lebanon.

The operation follows Hezbollah’s six-day joint offensive with the Syrian army at the highlands of Arsal bordering Syria. Lebanon’s army did not formally declare its role in the offensive, but shelled terrorist positions in the operation area.

The resistance movement later said it had accomplished the main objective of the Arsal campaign.

Lebanon’s border areas have been hardly hit by the spillover from the Syria crisis over the past few years.

Some 400 Daesh terrorists are holed up in areas on the Lebanese side of the frontier, while hundreds more are on the Syrian side, according to Lebanon’s Interior Minister Nohad Machnouk.

On Monday, the Lebanese army pounded Daesh positions in the vicinity of al-Qaa and Ras Baalbeck.

The attack came in retaliation for the Daesh firing of seven Grad rockets into Lebanese territories.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Army, gearing, ISIS, Lebanese

Iraq declares victory over ISIS in Mosul after bloody eight-month battle to recapture city

July 9, 2017 By administrator

Mosul liberated The Prime Minister Haider Abadi has arrived in the city where 900,000 have been displaced to praise the “heroic fighters and the Iraqi people to achieve the great victory”

Iraq has declared victory over ISIS in the city of Mosul after bloody eight-month battle to recapture it from terrorists.

The Prime Minister, Haider Abadi, arrived in the city one day after Iraqi state television said victory was “within hours”.

His office wrote on Twitter: “Prime Minister Dr. Haider Abadi arrives in the liberated city of Mosul and blesses the heroic fighters and the Iraqi people to achieve the great victory.”

The city was overrun in 2014 when ISIS declared its caliphate and a mission to recapture the city – backed by the US – began in October last year.

Iraqi special forces are closing in on the last remnants of ISIS in Mosul, fighting savage encounters in an area only the size of two football pitches.

Senior army commanders do not expect any of the fanatics will surrender in their last-stand battle around the al-Nouri Mosque – now dubbed “ISIS’s ground zero”.

The ISIS fighters are now surrounded by tough soldiers from the Iraqi army’s elite Golden Division.

Estimates vary on how many fanatics are still alive in a shrinking, constantly shifting battle zone.

Iraqi generals believe there are more than 1,000 left but many are mortally wounded and dying as their lunatic fellow terrorists battle to hang on to the bitter end.

Other observers suspect there is just a handful of fighters left, maybe no more than 100.

Months of urban warfare have displaced 900,000 people, about half the city’s pre-war population and killed thousands, according to aid organisations.

Without Mosul, ISIS is confined to rural areas of Iraq’s desert.

Filed Under: News Tagged With: defeated, Iraq, ISIS, Mosul

ISIS withdraws from Syria’s Aleppo

July 1, 2017 By administrator

ISIS withdraws from Syria's Aleppo The Islamic State group no longer has a presence in Syria’s Aleppo province after withdrawing from a series of villages where regime forces were advancing, a monitor said on Friday, Al-monitor.com reports.

“IS withdrew from 17 towns and villages and is now effectively outside of Aleppo province after having a presence there for four years,” said Rami Abdel Rahman, head of the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights. Regime forces had been advancing on a sliver of southeastern Aleppo province around a key highway linking Hama province to the southwest and Raqa province further east. Abdel Rahman said regime forces seized control of the road late Thursday night, prompting the remaining IS fighters to flee. A Syrian military source in rural Aleppo confirmed the withdrawal.

“The military operation is ongoing and Daesh withdrew from the Aleppan countryside towards rural territory in Hama and Raqa,” the source told AFP, using the Arabic acronym for IS. “The Syrian army is clearing out the last few metres,” the source added.

Since early 2015, multi-front offensives against IS have eaten away at territory the group held in Aleppo province.

US-backed Kurdish and allied Arab fighters ousted the jihadists from Kobane on the Turkish border in 2015 and from the key city of Manbij last year. Rebels backed by Turkey seized the town of Al-Bab in February, and Syrian government troops have steadily chipped aw ay at IS towns in the south of the province. In neighbouring Raqa province, a US-backed offensive is bearing down on the provincial capital of the same name, which has served as the jihadists’ de facto Syrian capita

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Aleppo, ISIS, Syria, WITHDRAWS

Iraqi forces recapture iconic Nuri Mosque in Old Mosul

June 29, 2017 By administrator

end of islamic State in MosulThe Iraqi army has recaptured the venue of the iconic Grand al-Nuri Mosque in Mosul, with the country’s state TV implying the liberation of the city, which has been under Daesh control since 2014.

“Their fictitious state has fallen,” an Iraqi military spokesman, Brigadier General Yahya Rasool, told state TV on Thursday.

Earlier, the Iraqi military announced the news as it continues to gain more advances in Mosul’s Old City.

Shortly after the announcement, the Iraqi state television reported the fall of the “mythical state,” in reference to Daesh’s so-called caliphate.

The TV said the recapture of the mosque means Mosul, as the terror group’s command center, has been liberated, while Iraqi forces are in the middle of a mop-up operation to cleanse the city of remaining Daesh elements.

Daesh extremists late on June 21 blew up the Grand al-Nuri Mosque and its Hadba (Hunchback) minaret.

Iraqi authorities and officials from the US-led coalition purportedly fighting Daesh terrorists said the destruction of the site, sometimes referred to as Iraq’s Tower of Pisa, is a sign of the extremists’ imminent loss of Mosul.

The Iraqi army forces have besieged the last Daesh positions in the southern areas of Old Mosul and they expect to purge the area of the terrorists by the next few days.

The combined pictures created by AFP on June 22, 2017 shows Nuri Mosque’s leaning Al-Hadba minaret before and after it was destroyed by Daesh Takfiri terrorists on June 21, 2017.

Iraqi government forces are nearing the end of their eight-month campaign to capture the de-facto capital of Daesh in Iraq.

The media bureau of the Iraqi Joint Operations Command announced in a statement on Wednesday that army troopers had established full control over Hadarat al-Saada and al-Ahmadiyya neighborhoods northwest of Grand al-Nuri Mosque, where purported Daesh ringleader Ibrahim al-Samarrai aka Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi announced the formation of the group’s so-called caliphate back in 2014.

Earlier on Wednesday, Federal Police Forces Commander Lieutenant General Shaker Jawdat said security forces were moving through al-Farouq district and advancing towards Bab al-Toub, Serjkhana, Bab al-Jadid and Bab al-Lakash areas in the heart of Mosul’s Old City.

He revealed that government troops were in control of more than 70 percent of Daesh’s last bastion in Mosul.

Jawdat noted that army troops were engaged in fierce battles with an estimated 300 Daesh militants in the Old City.

Iraqi forces seize more ground

Reports coming out of Mosul say Daesh terrorists have been using Mosul residents as human shields. The militants force women and children to cover them in the streets as they know that Iraqi security forces will not target civilians

Moreover, when the terrorists lose a region, they use human shields to secure their way out of the area.

The Iraqi forces took control of eastern Mosul in January after 100 days of fighting, and launched the battle in the west on February 19.

An estimated 862,000 people have been displaced from Mosul ever since the battle to retake the city began nine months ago. A total of 195,000 civilians have also returned, mainly to the liberated areas of eastern Mosul.

Filed Under: News Tagged With: End, Iraq, ISIS, Mosul

Hundreds of civilians flee Mosul as IS loses grip on city

June 25, 2017 By administrator

mosul flee isisIraqi forces are creating safe passage routes for civilians trapped by IS by dividing the militant group’s territory. Despite that effort, the UN said civilians under IS occupation face “almost unimaginable” danger.

The Iraqi army opened escape routes Saturday for hundreds of civilians trapped by fighting with “Islamic State” (IS) militants in Mosul’s Old City.

IS appears to be mounting a last stand in what was once the self-declared capital of its self-styled “caliphate.”

The Iraqi forces, trained in urban warfare by the US military, were channeling their attack along two perpendicular streets that come together in the center of the Old City. Their aim is to isolate the militants into four pockets.

Despite that effort, the United Nations issued an alarming warning Saturday that local civilians are in grave danger, claiming 12 were killed and hundreds injured Friday.

“Fighting is very intense in the Old City and civilians are at extreme, almost unimaginable risk. There are reports that thousands, maybe even tens of thousands, of people are being held as human shields [by Islamic State],” Lise Grande, the UN humanitarian coordinator in Iraq, said in a statement. “Hundreds of civilians, including children, are being shot.”

Iraqi officials are hoping to declare victory in the crucial city in the coming days, to coincide with the Muslim Eid holiday, which marks the end of Ramadan.

Fleeing to safety

Helicopter gunships were providing air support for the Iraqi ground troops, firing on jihadi emplacements in the Old City.

Hundreds of civilians took advantage of the safe corridors to flee to the safety of the government-held parts of Mosul, west of the Old City. At least 100 civilians reached safety during one 20-minute period on Saturday.

Some were injured and carrying malnourished children. “My baby only had bread and water for the past eight days,” one mother said.

Iraqis fleeing the Old City of Mosul But more than 100,000 people, of whom half are thought to be

children, remain trapped in IS territory, which is now less than 2 square kilometers (1.2 square miles).

Journalists killed

A land mine claimed the lives of three journalists in Mosul this week. Veteran French war correspondent Veronique Robert, 54, who was wounded in the land mine blast that killed two of her colleagues in Mosul earlier this week, has died of her injuries, her employers France Televisions announced Saturday.

She was working on a story with her French colleague Stephan Villeneuve, 48, and Iraqi Kurdish reporter Bakhtiyar Addad, 41, when the land mine exploded on Monday, killing Villeneuve and Addad almost immediately.

A fourth journalist with them, Samuel Forey, suffered light injuries.

The fall of Mosul would essentially end the Iraqi half of the IS “caliphate” as a quasi-state structure. But the militants would still hold sizable tracts of mostly rural territory in both Iraq and Syria.

It was in Mosul in the summer of 2014 that IS leader Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi announced himself to the world for the first time as the “caliph,” or ruler of all Muslims. Mosul’s population at the time was more than 2 million.

Raqqa, the IS’ so-called capital in Syria, is also under siege by a US-backed Kurdish coalition. It is thought to be only a matter of time before the jihadis lose their grip there as well.

bik/sms (Reuters, dpa, AFP, AP)

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: flee, ISIS, Mosul

IS’s Destruction Of Mosul’s Grand Mosque Called ‘Declaration Of Defeat’

June 21, 2017 By administrator

The famous leaning "hunchback" minaret of the Grand Al-Nuri Mosque in Mosul.

The famous leaning “hunchback” minaret of the Grand Al-Nuri Mosque in Mosul.

Islamic State extremists on June 21 blew up Mosul’s Grand Al-Nuri Mosque and its iconic leaning minaret in what the leader of Iraq called “an official declaration of defeat.”

The mosque, built in 1172, and its minaret known as “the hunchback” were chosen as the venue where IS leader Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi in July 2014 declared himself “caliph” of what he hoped would be a militant empire growing out of Iraq and Syria.

His black flag had flown over the mosque’s famous minaret for three years, and its destruction now marks the group’s concession that it is near defeat, Iraqi Prime Minister Haidar al-Abadi said afterwards.

Before the blast, Iraqi forces had encircled IS’s stronghold in the Old City, the last district under the militants’ control in Mosul,and had been making slow but steady progress toward retaking control of the heavily populated area.

U.S. Army Major General Joseph Martin, a senior U.S. commander in the battle against IS, called the mosque’s devastation “a crime against the people of Mosul and all of Iraq” and “an example of why this brutal organization must be annihilated.”

Iraq’s military said the militants blew up the mosque as Iraqi forces were advancing toward targets deep in the Old City and got to within 50 meters of the mosque. It called the move a “historical crime.”

The destruction of two of Mosul’s best-known landmarks adds to a long list of world heritage sites the militants have destroyed in Iraq and Syria, including dozens of sites in Mosul and many of Palmyra’s famed monuments.

IS militants who seized control of Mosul in June 2014 had previously targeted the minaret, which Iraqis lovingly called Al-Hadba, or “the hunchback,” because it listed like the leaning Tower of Pisa in Italy.

But residents of Mosul protected the mosque at that time by creating a human chain around it.

Iraqi officials had privately expressed the hope that the mosque could be captured in time for Eid al-Fitr, the festival marking the end of Ramadan, the Muslim fasting month. The first day of the Eid falls this year on June 25 or 26 in Iraq.

But because of the mosque’s close association with Baghdadi’s attempt at establishing a caliphate, Mosul residents told reporters they feared it would be targeted if the group ever were on the verge of losing control over the city.

IS’s Amaq news site claimed after the blast that the mosque was destroyed by a U.S. air strike, but that claim was quickly denied by the anti-IS coalition, which said no strikes were carried out in the area on June 21.

The mosque was named after Nuruddin al-Zanki, a nobleman who fought the early crusaders from a fiefdom that covered territory in modern-day Turkey, Syria, and Iraq.

It was built with seven bands of decorative brickwork in complex geometric patterns ascending in levels towards the top, similar to designs found in Persia and Central Asia.

The minaret started listing centuries ago and was long considered an endangered monument.

With reporting by Reuters, AP, AFP, and dpa

Filed Under: News Tagged With: Grand Mosque, ISIS, Mosul

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