The Islamic State Thread

IRAQ'S KURDS SAY 'HYSTERICAL' MALIKI MUST QUIT

A spokesman for Iraqi Kurdish president Massud Barzani said Thursday national premier Nuri al-Maliki had "become hysterical" and should step down after he accused the autonomous region of harbouring jihadists.

Maliki "has become hysterical and has lost his balance," the statement, published on the regional presidency website in English, said.

Addressing the premier, it continued: "You must apologise to the Iraqi people and step down."


Source : Sapa-AFP /mr
Date : 10 Jul 2014 10:06
 
America realizes it has to support the moderate Shia muslims and its been on the wrong side. Just super interesting how quickly the reasons change.

Who do think ran the Iraqi government the U.S supported against the Sunni extremists insurgency and Shia militants? :erm:
 
Who do think ran the Iraqi government the U.S supported against the Sunni extremists insurgency and Shia militants? :erm:

I need less engrish and more english to understand that sentence.
 
I need less engrish and more english to understand that sentence.

Blame the World Cup.

The U.S has been supporting more moderate Shias.

In Iraq for example where they supported the Iraqi government in their war against Sunni extremists on one side, Al Qaeda and Baathists and Shia extremists like The Mahdi Army on the other....
 
CLASHES NEAR RAMADI KILL 11 IRAQ POLICE: OFFICER

Clashes between Sunni militants and Iraqi security forces near Anbar provincial capital Ramadi killed 11 police and wounded 24, an officer and a doctor said on Friday.

The fighting near Ramadi, a city west of Baghdad where anti-government fighters have held shifting areas since the beginning of the year, began Thursday afternoon and continued into Friday.


Source : Sapa-AFP /mm
Date : 11 Jul 2014 11:07
 
SMALL TOWN OVERFLOWS WITH NORTH IRAQ DISPLACED

Tens of thousands of people fleeing militants have sought refuge in the small northern Iraqi town of Sinjar, cramming into schools and mosques. But now, there is simply no room left.

"No place remains for us to settle displaced people," local official Myaser Haji Saleh says despondently.

Huge numbers of people fled a Sunni militant onslaught on the predominantly-Shiite Turkmen town of Tal Afar last month, part of a jihadist-led offensive that saw swathes of territory across five provinces fall out of government hands.

Some 58,000 of them -- mostly children -- made their way to Sinjar, further west towards the Syrian border, flooding into a town with a population of around 300,000.

"We opened schools, mosques and shrines for them," says Saleh, the local official responsible for Sinjar and the surrounding area.

"In the early days, the people provided aid before international organisations arrived," he says.

"We desperately need to open a camp for them, because our problem lies in housing this large number of displaced people."

But a camp would create its own problems, as the area lies several hours from the nearest government-held city, and just a short distance from territory controlled by militants led by the Islamic State (IS) jihadist group.

Sinjar is controlled by peshmerga forces from Iraq's autonomous northern Kurdistan region, and protecting both the town and the camp from insurgents would stretch the peshmerga.

"We are afraid of them being attacked," says Saleh.

"We cannot exclude the possibility of Daash militants attacking them with mortars if they were in a camp," he adds, referring to IS by its former Arabic acronym.

Sinjar is populated mostly by Yazidis, who speak a dialect of Kurdish and live mainly in the mountains of northern Iraq, and the town has long played a key role in Iraq's struggle with militancy.

The town lies along a well-travelled smuggling route, with the US military seizing a trove of documents near Sinjar indicating that hundreds of militants passed through the area from Syria to Iraq in a one-year period between 2006 and 2007.

And in August 2007, suicide bombers killed more than 200 people in a series of brutal truck bombs in Yazidi-populated villages in the Sinjar area.

Now, the town is grappling with displaced families from Tal Afar fleeing a renewed militant offensive that started on June 9 and which Iraq's security forces have struggled to repel.

Sinjar's sewage system has been overwhelmed by the sudden uptick in its population, while families seeking shelter in a local girls' school must make do with just one hour of electricity a day indoors or bear the scorching summer heat outside.

Many have even had to set fire to wooden chairs to cook food.

The United Nations voiced fears of overcrowding, poor hygiene and limited access to safe drinking water causing increased instances of diarrhoeal diseases, following a humanitarian visit to the town this month.

"We do not know what to do, or where to go," says Zainab Jarallah, clinging to her two grandchildren inside the girls' school.

"We have big families, but we do not have anything. What happened was a surprise for us," the 68-year-old adds.

"We saw death with our own eyes."

After seizing Mosul on June 10, IS-led fighters swiftly took control of Sunni-majority areas of five provinces, but Iraqi forces battled for days to keep control of Tal Afar.

On June 23, however, the town fell out of government hands.

Many sought to flee to Dohuk, one of the three provinces in Iraq's autonomous Kurdish region, but non-Kurds require local sponsors before being allowed to enter.

As a result, countless cars sit idle on the side of the road connecting Dohuk to Sinjar, ostensibly belonging to Iraqis who sought to enter Kurdistan but were unsuccessful.

Those who fled to Sinjar have even sought safety in the town's shrine to Sayida Zainab, the daughter of Imam Ali and a revered figure in Shiite Islam.

Women sit within the shrine, while men stay outside, watching over their children as they run and play in a nearby graveyard.

Others who have not found physical structures have had to settle for tying a large piece of cloth between two parked cars to provide some shade from the sun, including a mother cradling her child, born just two days earlier.

Nearby are 39-year-old Saad Yunus and his 44-year-old brother Ali, both fathers who fled Tal Afar with their families, who have themselves had to resort to similar measures to shield their families from the heat.

"All the roads were blocked to us," says Saad. "We are trapped here and within days, our savings will run out.

"We do not know what to do."


Source : Sapa-AFP /kd
Date : 11 Jul 2014 03:59
 
IRAQ ACCUSES KURDISH FORCES OF SEIZING OIL FIELDS

Iraq's oil ministry accused Kurdish peshmerga fighters of seizing oil wells at two key northern fields near the disputed city of Kirkuk on Friday.

"The oil ministry strongly condemns the seizure and control of crude oil (wells) in the Kirkuk and Bey Hassan oil fields this morning by groups of Kurdish peshmerga forces," the ministry said in a statement.


Source : Sapa-AFP /mm
Date : 11 Jul 2014 12:32
 
JIHADISTS EXECUTE FOUR SYRIAN 'SPIES' IN IRAQ

Jihadist militants publicly executed four Syrian men in a western Iraqi town for allegedly spying for President Bashar al-Assad's regime, witnesses and a doctor said on Monday.

Militants flying the flag of the jihadist Islamic State (IS) group brought the men to a main street in Al-Qaim, near Iraq's border with Syria, in a convoy of trucks on Sunday, witnesses said.

One militant then announced that they were spies for Assad's regime, which the IS is fighting in Syria, and the men, their hands bound, were shot dead one by one.

Their bodies were taken away by ambulance, and Dr Mustafa Shawqi from the Al-Qaim hospital confirmed the deaths.

IS jihadists have repeatedly carried out executions in both Iraq and Syria, and have documented their deeds online with grisly photos of their victims, including some who have been beheaded.

Militants seized control of Al-Qaim last month during a major jihadist-led offensive that has overrun swathes of five provinces north and west of Baghdad.

According to the UN refugee agency, there are more than 4,500 Syrian refugees in Iraq's Anbar province, many of them at a camp near Al-Qaim.


Source : Sapa-AFP /gm
Date : 14 Jul 2014 13:47
 
DEATH TOLL IN BAGHDAD BROTHEL RAID RISES TO 31: POLICE

(PICTURE)

The death toll from a raid on a Baghdad compound used for prostitution rose to 31 Monday, as pictures obtained by AFP offered clues to the circumstances of the carnage.

"The total number of dead now stands at 31, two of them men," interior ministry spokesman Saad Maan told AFP.

Gunmen stormed two buildings in Baghdad's residential district of Zayouna, known in the area for housing rented flats where a notorious pimp kept a "stable" of up to 60 women.

Photographs taken soon after the killings on Saturday evening showed a man, identified by police sources as the pimp, lying dead in a pool of blood alongside one of his presumed henchmen.

The pair, the only male victims of the raid, appeared to have had their hands tied behind their backs before being executed.

Another picture shows the crouching bodies of five women huddled together in a corner of a bathroom with blood-spattered tiled walls and floor, in what seemed to have been a desperate attempt to hide from their attackers.

Another shows bodies, some wearing bright colours, others dressed in black, lined up in a living room, the floor of which was drenched with blood.

Access to the only street leading to buildings 43 and 44, where the killings took place, is usually overseen by police and soldiers.

Residents say the pimp, who went by the name of Aws, was a powerful figure in the neighbourhood who would bribe security officers and was able to run his business from the same compound for years.

"This is the fate of any prostitution," read an inscription on the front door of one of the raided buildings.

Such punitive raids are not uncommon in Zayouna, but Saturday's was the deadliest in years.

It was not immediately clear who the killers were.

Most residents were afraid to speak, with religious militiamen having become even more prominent in Baghdad since a jihadist-led onslaught launched last month exacerbated sectarian tensions and pushed Iraq to the brink of disintegration.


Source : Sapa-AFP /gm
Date : 14 Jul 2014 15:00
 
IRAQ FORCES BATTLE MILITANTS IN NORTH AND EAST

Iraqi security forces backed by aircraft have repelled an insurgent attack on a northern Shiite Turkmen town, killing 15 militants, a local official said Thursday.

The attack by Islamic State (IS) insurgents and allied Sunni Islamist extremists on the town of Amirli took place Wednesday, said Talib al-Bayati, an official from nearby Suleiman Bek.

"Iraqi forces, with the help of military aircraft, repelled an attack on Amirli on three sides and killed 15 gunmen, according to an initial toll," said Bayati.

Amirli lies to the south of Suleiman Bek, which fell to an IS-led onslaught that swept parts of Iraq's north and west last month.

Also on Wednesday, government forces drove IS gunmen out of three northern districts of the city of Baquba, capital of Diyala province in eastern Iraq, security and medical sources said.

They said two members of the security forces were killed in the fighting and 11 others wounded.

On Thursday, a suicide car bomb against a police checkpoint in Taji killed at least two policemen and a civilian, a police colonel told AFP.

A medical source in the town, only 25 kilometres (15 miles) north of Baghdad, confirmed the death toll.

A roadside bomb also killed three people and wounded 10 outside a Shiite prayer hall in a central Baghdad market, security and medical sources said.

In Iraq's north, the commander of Kurdish peshmerga forces in the city of Kirkuk was wounded along with six bodyguards in clashes with IS gunmen that broke out on Wednesday.

"Peshmerga Brigadier General Shirko Rauf was wounded with six of his bodyguards this afternoon in clashes in western Kirkuk," said a senior security source, declining to be named.

"The clashes have been ongoing since yesterday, and have resulted in the deaths of two peshmerga and the wounding of 53 others.

"Around 20 gunmen belonging to Daash were killed," the source added, referring to the former Arabic acronym for IS.


Source : Sapa-AFP /mm
Date : 17 Jul 2014 14:39
 
UN: SOME 5,500 CIVILIANS KILLED IN IRAQ THIS YEAR

Violence in Iraq has killed more than 5,500 civilians over the first six months of the year, the U.N. said Friday in a new report that documents the massive humanitarian toll of an ongoing Sunni militant offensive in the country.

The Islamic State extremist group and other Sunni insurgents seized control of the city of Fallujah, as well as part of the nearby city of Ramadi in Anbar province in early January. The militants then launched a massive blitz in June that has brought a huge swath of northern and western Iraq under their control.

In its report, the U.N. mission to Iraq said at least 5,576 civilians were killed and another 11,665 wounded in Iraq from Jan. 1 through the end of June. Another 1.2 million people have been driven from their homes by the violence, it said.

The pace of civilian deaths over the first six months marked a sharp increase over the previous year. In all of 2013, the U.N. reported just over 7,800 civilians killed, which was the highest annual death toll in years.

The fighting "has inflicted untold hardship and suffering on the civilian population with large-scaled killings, injuries, and destruction and damage of livelihoods and property," the U.N. said.

The report also documents human rights abuses by both sides of the conflict that may constitute crimes against humanity or war crimes.

The U.N. said the Islamic State group and its allies have committed "systematic and egregious violations" against civilians, including killings, sexual violence, kidnappings, destruction of property and attacks on places of religious worship.

It also documented violations by government forces, including summary executions of prisoners and detainees.

The U.N. urged all sides in the conflict to ensure the protection of civilians, and to respect international law and humanitarian law.

Also Friday, Iraqi President Jalal Talabani's office said the ailing leader would return Saturday from Germany, where he has been receiving medical treatment since 2012. Few details have been released about his condition.

Talabani is finishing up his second consecutive term as president, and is not eligible to run again.


Source : Sapa-AP /ar
Date : 18 Jul 2014 13:05
 
RIGHTS GROUP WARNS IRAQ JIHADISTS WANT TO ERADICATE MINORITIES

The jihadists controlling large swathes of northern and western Iraq seem bent on killing or expelling all religious minorities in the Mosul area, Human Rights Watch warned Saturday.

The New York-based rights watchdog's statement was issued as thousands of Christians were fleeing Mosul to escape an ultimatum by the Islamic State (IS) group that seized the city last month.

The organisation, which enforces an extreme version of Islamic law, and allied Sunni groups conquered Mosul and large swathes of the country last month and subsequently declared a "caliphate" straddling Iraq and Syria.

It recently started marking houses belonging to the thousands-strong Christian community and issued a statement urging them to convert, pay the Islamic "jizya" tax, leave the city or face death by noon on Saturday.

"ISIS should immediately halt its vicious campaign against minorities in and around Mosul," HRW's Middle East director Sarah Leah Whitson said, using the acronym IS was known by before it rebranded last month.

"ISIS seems intent on wiping out all traces of minority groups from areas it now controls in Iraq," she said.

"No matter how hard its leaders and fighters try to justify these heinous acts as religious devotion, they amount to nothing less than a reign of terror."

Other minorities rooted in the same province of Nineveh have suffered even more than the Christians, according to crimes HRW documented against the Yazidis, as well as the Turkmen and Shabak Shiite communities.

HRW said that 83 Shabak men from villages east of Mosul had been rounded up by IS between June 13 and July 10. Seven bodies were found.

It said 75 Turkmens had been kidnapped since June 23.

The rights group also said two were killed and 21 still missing from a confirmed total of 51 abducted from the Yazidi community, whose faith is inspired by the ancient Iranian religion Zoroastrianism and who are labelled as "devil-worshippers" by IS.

HRW said that some of the Sunni groups, including elements of the disbanded former ruling Baath party, that helped IS overrun the region appear to have briefly had a moderating influence.

It urged non-IS Sunni authorities and armed groups to "press the group to stop its targeting of religious minorities and desecration."


Source : Sapa-AFP /kn
Date : 19 Jul 2014 02:08
 
It recently started marking houses belonging to the thousands-strong Christian community and issued a statement urging them to convert, pay the Islamic "jizya" tax, leave the city or face death by noon on Saturday.

well well.
the very same thing happened to one of our very own non-muslim members when he moved into a house in bo-kaap.
woke up one morning to find a huge crucifix painted on the wall of his house.
 
Iraqi Christians Forced to flee

Concern and Support for Iraqi Christians Forced by Militants to Flee Mosul

“I can’t feel my identity as an Iraqi Christian,” she said, her three little daughters hanging at her side.

A Muslim woman sitting next to her in the pew reached out and whispered, “You are the true original people here, and we are sorry for what has been done to you in the name of Islam.”

Some — just a few, and because they were not healthy enough to flee — submitted to demands that they convert to Islam to avoid being killed.

“There are five Christian families who converted to Islam because they were threatened with death,” said Younadim Kanna, a Christian and a member of Iraq’s Parliament. “They did so just to stay alive.”
 
well well.
the very same thing happened to one of our very own non-muslim members when he moved into a house in bo-kaap.
woke up one morning to find a huge crucifix painted on the wall of his house.


Both stories are grim. So unfortunate and sad how persecution continues in the name of religion. Happens by all [religions] I am sure. So become a martyr or convert to a faith that I do not believe in? I think I would rather choose being martyred than conversion. Besides anything else, I doubt I could live with a decision to denounce the God I believe in.
 
JIHADISTS SEIZE IRAQ MONASTERY

Jihadist militants have taken over a monastery in northern Iraq, one of the country's best-known Christian landmarks, and expelled its resident monks, a cleric and residents said Monday.

Islamic State (IS) fighters stormed Mar (Saint) Behnam, a 4th century monastery run by the Syriac Catholic church near the predominantly Christian town of Qaraqosh, on Sunday, the sources said.

"You have no place here anymore, you have to leave immediately," a member of the Syriac clergy quoted the Sunni militants as telling the monastery's residents.

He said the monks pleaded to be allowed to save some of the monastery's relics but the fighters refused and ordered them to leave on foot with nothing but their clothes.

Christian residents from the area told AFP the monks walked several miles along a deserted road and were eventually picked up by Kurdish peshmerga fighters who drove them to Qaraqosh.

The Syriac cleric said five monks were expelled from Mar Behnam. Christian families in the area said there may have been up to nine people living at the monastery.

The incident was the latest move by the Islamic State, which last month declared a "caliphate" straddling large swathes of northern Iraq and Syria, to threaten a Christian presence in the region spanning close to two millennia.

Over the weekend, hundreds of families fled Mosul, a once-cosmopolitan city which is the country's second largest and lies around 15 kilometres (10 miles) northwest of Mar Behnam.

They abandoned homes and belongings after IS fighters running the city issued an ultimatum for Christians to convert, pay a special tax, leave or face the sword.

Families who were forced on the road and leaders of Iraq's Chaldean and other churches said Mosul was now emptied of Christians for the first time in history.

Jihadist fighters want to create a state based on an extreme interpretation of sharia -- or Islamic law -- and have targeted all minorities in the Mosul area.

Other groups such as Shiite Turkmen, Shabak and Yazidis have suffered even more than the Christians, who have largely escaped summary executions since IS swept the region in early June.

Mar Behnam is a major Christian landmark in Iraq and a site where the local community and pilgrims traditionally pray for healings and fertility.

It was built by Assyrian king Sennacherib II as a penance for having his children Behnam and Sarah killed because they had converted to Christianity.


Source : Sapa-AFP /lk
Date : 21 Jul 2014 13:38
 
amazing how silent this thread is compared to the gaza thread.
people being massacred, others getting expelled, but it's all good - no howling continual protests, thousands are not gathering outside parliament.
same thing happening as in gaza, but the attacks aren't coming from jews, thus the silence
 
amazing how silent this thread is compared to the gaza thread.
people being massacred, others getting expelled, but it's all good - no howling continual protests, thousands are not gathering outside parliament.
same thing happening as in gaza, but the attacks aren't coming from jews, thus the silence

Amazing, isn't it? :D
You can just see their heart bleeding for all those suffering and dying in Iraq, Christians, Kurds and Shiites.... :rolleyes:
 
They abandoned homes and belongings after IS fighters running the city issued an ultimatum for Christians to convert, pay a special tax, leave or face the sword.

Families who were forced on the road and leaders of Iraq's Chaldean and other churches said Mosul was now emptied of Christians for the first time in history.

Jihadist fighters want to create a state based on an extreme interpretation of sharia -- or Islamic law -- and have targeted all minorities in the Mosul area.

Other groups such as Shiite Turkmen, Shabak and Yazidis have suffered even more than the Christians, who have largely escaped summary executions since IS swept the region in early June.

Mar Behnam is a major Christian landmark in Iraq and a site where the local community and pilgrims traditionally pray for healings and fertility.

It was built by Assyrian king Sennacherib II as a penance for having his children Behnam and Sarah killed because they had converted to Christianity.

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