The Islamic State Thread

UN 'GENOCIDE' WARNING AS SUPPORT GROWS FOR NEW IRAQI PM

Up to 30,000 people are still facing a "potential genocide" on a mountain in northern Iraq, the UN warned as the country's premier designate gained widespread support from countries hoping political reconciliation would help undercut jihadists.

Thousands of members of minority groups, including Yazidis and Christians, faced a major threat from militants of the Islamic State (IS) jihadist group and a worsening humanitarian situation.

UN refugee agency spokesman Adrian Edwards told reporters there were 20,000-30,000 people on Mount Sinjar, and UN minority rights expert Rita Izsak warned they face "a mass atrocity and potential genocide within days or hours".

A helicopter carrying aid to trapped people crashed during takeoff in the north Tuesday, killing a pilot and injuring Yazidi MP Vian Dakhil, who has worked to bring attention to the plight of besieged members of her community.

New York Times journalist Alissa J. Rubin was also injured in the crash, the paper said.

Overnight Tuesday the US military conducted a sixth airdrop of a total of 108 bundles of food and water for thousands of Iraqis on Mount Sinjar, said a media release of the US Central Command in Florida.

To date, in coordination with the government of Iraq, US military aircraft have delivered nearly 100,000 meals and more than 27,000 gallons of fresh drinking water.

Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel said the United States had sent 130 more military advisors to northern Iraq to assess the scope of the humanitarian crisis there.

A US defence official said the temporary additional personnel would also develop humanitarian assistance options beyond the current airdrop effort in support of the displaced civilians trapped on Mount Sinjar.

The additional personnel comprise Marines and special operations forces.

Britain said it has agreed to transport military supplies for the Kurdish forces from "other contributing states".

Australian Prime Minister Tony Abbott confirmed Wednesday his country would join humanitarian airdrops in Iraq, and did not rule out the possibility of greater military involvement.

Washington is urging premier designate Haider al-Abadi to rapidly form a broad-based government able to unite Iraqis in the fight against the jihadists, who have overrun swathes of the country.

Abadi came from behind in a protracted and acrimonious race to become Iraq's new premier when President Fuad Masum on Monday accepted his nomination and tasked him with forming a government.

He has 30 days to build a team which will face the daunting task of defusing sectarian tensions and, in the words of US President Barack Obama, convincing the Sunni Arab minority that IS "is not the only game in town".

Meanwhile, former premier Nuri al-Maliki's hopes of retaining power were dealt a further blow by Iran, which issued a message congratulating Abadi on his new role.

While Maliki insists the premiership should be his, declaring Abadi's selection a "constitutional violation", his bid to retain power has reached a dead end with the widespread international backing for his rival, especially from Tehran and Washington.

Obama had made it clear he thought no effective and coordinated anti-jihadist counter-offensive could take place while Maliki was still in charge.

In a further blow for Maliki, Iran on Tuesday ended its long-time support for him and swung its allegiance behind Abadi in a congratulatory message.

"We congratulate Haidar al-Abadi on his nomination as prime minister, for him personally and for religious dignitaries, the Iraqi population and its political groups," Ali Shamkhani, secretary and representative of supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei on Iran's Supreme National Security Council, said in Tehran.

Maliki on Tuesday ordered the armed forces to "stay away from the political crisis", assuaging fears that he could seek to leverage military power to stay in office.

In an apparent warning to Maliki, US State Department spokeswoman Marie Harf said Tuesday that Washington "would reject any effort, legally or otherwise, to achieve outcomes through coercion or manipulation of the constitutional or judicial process".

"There's a constitutional process, it is happening, and that is what we support."

"We are urging him to form a new cabinet as swiftly as possible and the US stands ready to support a new and inclusive Iraqi government and particularly its fight against" IS, US Secretary of State John Kerry said in Sydney Tuesday.

He also reiterated Washington's stance that US air strikes begun last week were not a prelude to the reintroduction of American combat forces.

The political transition comes at a time of crisis for Iraq.

After seizing the main northern city of Mosul in early June and sweeping through much of the Sunni heartland, jihadist militants bristling with US-made military equipment they captured from retreating Iraqi troops launched another onslaught this month.

They attacked Christian, Yazidi, Turkmen and Shabak minorities west, north and east of Mosul, sparking a mass exodus that sent the number of people displaced in Iraq this year soaring.

A week of devastating gains saw the IS jihadists take the country's largest dam and advance to within striking distance of the autonomous Kurdish region.

They also attacked the large town of Sinjar, forcing thousands of mainly Yazidi civilians to hide on Mount Sinjar with little food and water.

The United States and other countries have also said they are working to deliver much-needed arms to the Kurds, who are fighting IS militants on several fronts.

US strikes and cross-border Kurdish cooperation yielded early results on several fronts, with Kurdish troops beginning to claw back lost ground.


Source : Sapa-AFP /mr
Date : 13 Aug 2014 06:11
 
Helicopter crashes during Yazidi rescue

http://www.cnn.com/2014/08/12/world/meast/iraq-crisis/index.html?hpt=hp_t2

An Iraqi helicopter bringing aid to the group crashed after making its food and water drop and picking up roughly two dozen Yazidis.

The pilot died in the crash, but others survived, the Kurdistan Regional Government said. Kurdish rescue crews transported them to safety, bringing the injured to hospitals, the government said.

The military cited "technical failure" in the crash of the MI-17. Fuad Hussein, the Kurdish Regional Government's chief of staff, told CNN the crash appeared to have been caused by pilot error.

Survivors included a woman who has come to symbolize the struggles of Yazidis. Vian Dakhil, the only Yazidi in Parliament, made a heart-wrenching appeal to the Iraqi government last week for help in stopping the slaughter of her people.

New York Times journalist Alissa Rubin suffered "a concussion, at least one broken wrist and possibly some broken ribs but was conscious," The Times reported. Freelance photographer Adam Ferguson "said via cellphone text that he suffered a sore jaw and some minor bumps," the newspaper reported.

Three helicopters are being used by the Iraqi military to reach the desperate Yazidi families who fled to the mountains more than a week ago, Hussein said.


more at the link.
 
This has thrown a spanner in the works of Hilary Clinton's election run for the white house...

A new memoir by former Defense Secretary Robert Gates claims that President Obama and then-Secretary of State Hillary Clinton told each other that they both believe opposition to the Iraq surge in 2006 was a purely political move.

Specifically, Clinton reportedly said she opposed the surge to boost her nascent presidential campaign. But Obama did not specifically say his own opposition to the surge was politically motivated.

In his memoir, “Duty: Memoirs of a Secretary at War,” Gates writes:

“Hillary told the president that her opposition to the [2007] surge in Iraq had been political because she was facing him in the Iowa primary. . . . The president conceded vaguely that opposition to the Iraq surge had been political. To hear the two of them making these admissions, and in front of me, was as surprising as it was dismaying.”

http://news.yahoo.com/hillary-clint...s--ex-defense-secretary-claims-232136441.html

.her independent credential running for president is that she was President Obama's secretary of state. The world is now blowing up. So that is a big problem for her. And so she's going to be looking for ways to separate herself from the current foreign policy mess.
 
Should check those numbers again....

OK,I got the number from Human Rights Watch:

Having devoted extensive time and effort to documenting his atrocities, we estimate that in the last twenty-five years of Ba`th Party rule the Iraqi government murdered or "disappeared" some quarter of a million Iraqis, if not more
http://www.hrw.org/news/2004/01/25/war-iraq-not-humanitarian-intervention

Granted they obviously do not include the various wars that were fought.

You forgot the Al-Anfal Campaign.

There is so much crossover regarding that campaign, its difficult to tell fact from fiction, as it was part of the Iraqi- Kurdish wars that had been ongoing from 1961, as well as the last part of the Iran-Iraq war.
 
The world is going nuts, the further we move from the devastation of World War2, the less of the old timers that remain to remind us of the pain from that war.....the more we are bound to repeat it all over again.... so much for civilized humans....

It's not the loss of people who remember the war, it's the fact that people choose to ignore the hard lessons that were learned. Namely, that sometimes war is necessary to bring peace.
 
YAZIDI SURVIVORS OF IRAQ MOUNTAIN ORDEAL DEMAND MORE AID

Scores of young men and children held a protest demanding more aid Wednesday at the Bajid Kandala camp that is hosting thousands of desperate Iraqi Yazidis who fled a jihadist onslaught on Sinjar.

"We have no bread, and very little water. We need help. We want to get out of here. We are so desperate we want to leave Iraq," said Nasser, a 30-year-old protester.

"There is no UN here, no human rights groups. We have very little food. The lucky ones get a meal a day. Many others go hungry," said Khodhr Hussein, a 44-year-old with dark wrinkled skin and a thick moustache.

"Many people are sleeping in the sun, the camp is not big enough for everybody," he said.

A Kurdish official running the camp told AFP that the local authorities have a partnership with the United Nations' refugee agency (UNHCR).

"The Kurdish autonomous government is running the camp and we are doing all we can. But of course we welcome all the help we can get to cater for the displaced. It is impossible for us to handle such a recent crisis overnight," said Saadullah Abdullah Hamid.

According to Hamid, Bajid Kandala serves as a transit camp for Yazidis evacuated by Kurdish troops from the Sinjar mountain in recent days, fleeing a siege and killings by the jihadist Islamic State.

Every day, he said, families are moved to other camps elsewhere in northern Iraq.

Speaking to AFP, UNHCR spokesman Ned Cole confirmed that the Kurdish authorities are running the camps, with the support of the United Nations.

He admitted it was proving extremely difficult to meet the needs of the fleeing population.

"One of the problems is the emergency is so fast-moving," Cole said. "The UN is relocating emergency supplies to meet the needs. But people are scattered over such a wide area... that it is very hard to keep pace."

But according to Haidar, a 33-year-old father who fled Sinjar three days ago along with his family, more should be done for the fresh evacuees.

"International organisations need to work here. Everyone is hungry," he said, sheltering himself and his family from the scorching desert sun in the shade of a tractor.

Some of the displaced said they had given up on Iraq.

"We were besieged for 10 days in the mountain. The whole world is talking about us but we did not get any real help," said Hussein. "We went from hunger in Sinjar to hunger in this camp."


Source : Sapa-AFP /kd
Date : 13 Aug 2014 14:15
 
PLAN 'UNDER WAY' TO RESCUE REFUGEES ON IRAQ MOUNTAIN: CAMERON

An international plan is under way to rescue civilians trapped by Islamic State (IS) fighters on a mountain in northern Iraq, British Prime Minister David Cameron said Wednesday.

Cameron declined to give details of the operation but said Britain would play a role, just as it had worked alongside the United States in conducting humanitarian aid drops to thousands of Yazidis and other minorities who have fled to Mount Sinjar.

"Clearly there is an absolutely desperate situation in Iraq, particularly on this mountainside," Cameron said after chairing a meeting of the government's emergency Cobra committee.

"I'm proud of the fact that British aeroplanes and British aid have been playing a role and will continue to play a role to help these people.

"But we need a plan to get these people off that mountain and get them to a place of safety.

"I can confirm that detailed plans are now being put in place and are underway and that Britain will play a role in delivering them."

Britain has sent Tornado fighter jets to Cyprus to be ready if needed to provide surveillance support for the aid effort, while two Chinook helicopters are also on standby to help with the humanitarian operation.

London also said Tuesday it would transport weapons from other states to Kurdish forces battling IS militants, although it is not providing the military equipment.

"What they want is ammunition and weapons like they have been using and that's what's being delivered to them, and Britain is playing a role in helping to make sure that happens," Cameron said.

The prime minister, who returned from holiday in Portugal a day early on Wednesday, also dismissed calls for parliament to be recalled from its summer recess to discuss the crisis.

There is growing pressure for Britain to join the US in conducting airstrikes.

"This is a humanitarian operation that Britain is involved in so I don't think it's necessary to recall parliament for that," he said.

"But of course I always keep this issue under review and were things to change then obviously that's something that could be done."

US Secretary of State John Kerry said on Wednesday that Washington was urgently assessing how to move the civilians off the mountain in northern Iraq.


Source : Sapa-AFP /kd
Date : 13 Aug 2014 16:40
 
[video=youtube;TxX_THjtXOw]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TxX_THjtXOw[/video]
 
Children fleeing Islamic State drinking parents blood to stay alive

'Parents Giving Thirsty Children Blood To Drink'
As 30,000 people remain trapped by Islamic State fighters on an Iraqi mountain, those who've escaped reveal "horrifying stories".

Parents cutting themselves so that thirsty children can drink their blood. Others dying from dehydration and being buried under rocks. These are some of the horrifying stories emerging from those who were trapped on a mountain by Islamic State (IS) fighters in Iraq.

Some 6,000 to 8,000 refugees have managed to escape to a makeshift camp in Dohuk province - but up to 30,000 still remain on Mount Sinjar in what a British aid worker has told Sky news is a "heartbreaking humanitarian crisis".

Sky's Sherine Tadros is at the Dohuk camp, which has no electricity and just three or four toilets.

"They've told us harrowing stories," she said. "One man has just told us how he saw four children die of thirst. There was nowhere to bury them on the mountain so they just put rocks on their bodies.

"Another man was saying the children were so thirsty, their parents started cutting their own hands and giving them blood to drink.

"And then they make the perilous journey to these areas - sometimes 12 hours. And when they get here the conditions are pretty dire. There is no electricity, no aid agencies - this is just a makeshift camp."

Refugees in the camp - some of whom have gunshot wounds - are surviving on food and water being brought to them by locals.

The international community is starting to take action - but the situation is now unprecedented, according to an aid worker on the ground.

"There is still a big humanitarian crisis going on - what I saw was heartbreaking," British Kurd Taban Shoresh told Sky News.

"We need to do something to rescue those people - 30,000 people trapped on a mountain by IS in fear of extermination. There is no way out - the only way to get to them is by helicopter.


"They've got absolutely nothing, and I can't stress this enough. No food, no water. They're dehydrated. They've got no clothes, their shoes have been worn off. It is extremely hot and exposed to the sun.

"This is the first time in history where 30,000 people have been trapped on a mountain in fear of being killed - all the leaders need to come together and figure out the best way to rescue these people. We can't watch 30,000 people die."

Each helicopter sent with aid or to lift the most vulnerable prompts a "scramble".

"They are fighting to get on the helicopters and survive - it's their only way out," added Ms Shoresh.

The local mayor has donated 230 tents, Tadros said - but it is sparse shelter for the thousands lucky enough to escape Sinjar.

UNICEF is delivering water, protein biscuits and hygiene kits to refugees but, with one million people now displaced in Iraq, the organisation is struggling to cope.

Colin MacInnes, in Iraq, told Sky News: "We are doing all we can but it is not enough at this time."

http://news.sky.com/story/1317709/parents-giving-thirsty-children-blood-to-drink
 
very very depressing.. every armed drone in the US arsenal should be allocated to the annihilation of ISIS
 
meh

gaza gaza gaza
evil israel
evil zionists
gaza gaza gaza
boycott woolworths

march
protest
gaza gaza gaza
flash mobs
boycott evil israel
 
meh

gaza gaza gaza
evil israel
evil zionists
gaza gaza gaza
boycott woolworths

march
protest
gaza gaza gaza
flash mobs
boycott evil israel

the ironic part is, ISIS on its own a strong enough justification for Zionism
If only the Yazidis had a state to protect them... Israel should offer them refuge, no quicker way to stamp on the inaccurate apartheid label
 
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has the ANC or EFF sent a delegation to negotiate with ISIS yet?
 
.. every armed drone in the US arsenal should be allocated to the annihilation of ISIS

Ant then anti-american protests will start and US be blamed fo the extinction of glow worms in Borneo.
 
Ant then anti-american protests will start and US be blamed fo the extinction of glow worms in Borneo.

yeah but does it really matter?
those protests don't really do any significant damage, those people still stop at mcdonalds on the way home

some good news
Sky News Newsdesk ‏@SkyNewsBreak 3m
U.S. official confirms team including military personnel lands on #Iraq's mount sinjar to assess how to rescue stranded Iraqi refugees
 
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yeah but does it really matter?
those protests don't really do any significant damage, those people still stop at mcdonalds on the way home

some good news

Actually they already have done. It's largely thanks to pressure from them U.S troops were pulled out
 
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