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Iraq, Syrian, Turkey, Daash, ME news & update; Related articles, videos and photos
Topic Started: Dec 22 12, 1:10 (60,202 Views)
lashgare
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Important video depicting ISIS in their natural habitat:
Spoiler: click to toggle
Edited by lashgare, Aug 29 14, 11:48.
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diako_ber
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lashgare
Aug 27 14, 9:17
Important video depicting ISIS in their natural habitat: http://www.liveleak.com/view?i=829_1408541612
I don't see the video
Edited by diako_ber, Aug 27 14, 10:00.
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lashgare
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diako_ber
Aug 27 14, 10:00
lashgare
Aug 27 14, 9:17
Important video depicting ISIS in their natural habitat: I don't see the video
Go on www.liveleak.com and search for "latest from isis headchopper".
Edited by lashgare, Aug 28 14, 1:32.
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Kurdistano
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Guys for Gods sake. When sharing videos from Liveleak please do it in a spoiler tag. It's always a horror when I look at the thread.
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Halo
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Têkoşer

I agree with Kurdistano, once when I was scrolling through the page suddently this vid of men being beheaded started streaming and my mom entered my room, I was banned from using my PC for over two weeks. :S I have a feeling the same happened to heval Ali
Edited by Halo, Aug 29 14, 6:16.
Quote:
 
Alasha: Asking and discussing is not forbidden, rather prohibited on this forum
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lashgare
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Dalaho
Aug 29 14, 6:16
I agree with Kurdistano, once when I was scrolling through the page suddently this vid of men being beheaded started streaming and my mom entered my room, I was banned from using my PC for over two weeks. :S I have a feeling the same happened to heval Ali
Roflmao..... seriously?
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diako_ber
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Despite what you're saying being true Dalaho, I can't stop laughing about it haha
Edited by diako_ber, Aug 29 14, 1:46.
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ALAN
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This is true Arab culture

https://www.facebook.com/video/embed?video_id=826911504019706
Russian Girenak Joseph, who visited Kirkuk in Kurdistan as a part of his tour throu the 1870 - 1873 AD, who published the results of his trip & his studies later in 1879, in the 4th volume in the Bulletin of the Caucasus department of the Royal Geographical Russian Society estimated Kirkuk's population as many as 12-50,000 people, & he emphasized that except 40 Christian families, the rest of the population were Kurds. As for The Turkmen & Arabs, they have not been already existed at the time.
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jjmuneer
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Merg û Şeref

Why did he cut his fingers?
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lashgare
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ALAN
Aug 29 14, 8:24
Why is this weird jihadist faggot, wearing high heels?
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Zinar
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Kurdo

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Aug 29 14, 8:24
motherfuckers everyone of them are sons of whores i wish them all a painful death.

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Xoybun
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ALAN
Aug 29 14, 8:24
lol
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Xoybun
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Zinar
Aug 29 14, 11:50
ALAN
Aug 29 14, 8:24
motherfuckers everyone of them are sons of whores i wish them all a painful death.
Empathy for Arabs? *shock How can this make you angry lol, it's Arab torturing another Arab, it's better than Hollywood FFS
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lashgare
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Xoybun
Aug 30 14, 12:24
Zinar
Aug 29 14, 11:50
Empathy for Arabs? *shock How can this make you angry lol, it's Arab torturing another Arab, it's better than Hollywood FFS
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vscmxyoXpCE









trolling aside, we don't know who this guy was tbh.

Edited by lashgare, Aug 30 14, 4:03.
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ALAN
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I seen IS killing those Assad soldiers man poor things...
Russian Girenak Joseph, who visited Kirkuk in Kurdistan as a part of his tour throu the 1870 - 1873 AD, who published the results of his trip & his studies later in 1879, in the 4th volume in the Bulletin of the Caucasus department of the Royal Geographical Russian Society estimated Kirkuk's population as many as 12-50,000 people, & he emphasized that except 40 Christian families, the rest of the population were Kurds. As for The Turkmen & Arabs, they have not been already existed at the time.
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Zinar
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Kurdo

ALAN
Aug 30 14, 9:49
I seen IS killing those Assad soldiers man poor things...
You mean the one when they are burning them alive?

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Bablisok
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lmao more isis crap

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lashgare
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salafists are like tevger:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=p9B64QK30zc
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lashgare
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Also why the hell are sunni arabs being dumped in khanaqin?


Quote:
 


Khanaqin, Iraq — An Iraqi mother who had no choice but to deliver her baby at night in a ditch; a little girl in pigtails with a poorly fixed cleft lip; a boy that lost his finger to a fan blade. These are the inhabitants of “Guantánamo” – a precarious camp on the fringes of Khanaqin.

And then there are the men – most of them too young or too old to fight. Kurdish security forces have provided a semblance of shelter as air strikes hit their towns, areas where the militant group Islamic State has allegedly found a solid foothold.

But some say something darker is going on in this camp for Sunni Arabs fleeing the fighting that has swept KRG in recent months. Ethnic hostility between KRG Kurds and Arabs is nothing new. But with the mostly Sunni Arab fighters of the so-called Islamic State seeking to expand their territory, and threatening Kurdish controlled areas with invasion, hostility towards all Arabs has reached a fever pitch. To many here, the people living in squalid camp conditions far from their homes aren't victims, but accomplices of IS and its agenda to impose its harsh version of Islamic law on the region.
Recommended: How much do you know about US-Iraq relations? Take our quiz.

The camp’s real name is Kurdistan, but managers of other refugee centers in the area refer to it as Guantánamo. Kurdish locals say the nickname is a reference to the “terrorists” who live there, and who have been denied passage into Kurdish-controlled population centers.
Test your knowledge How much do you know about US-Iraq relations? Take our quiz.
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The conditions are miserable. The United Nations and other aid agencies have provided tents and non-food items but little else. Were it not for a Sulaymaniyah-based NGO dedicated to keeping “Guantánamo” supplied, 130 families would starve. In contrast, the camps within the city’s perimeter have clinics, communal kitchens, and even child-friendly spaces.

The camp is home to Arab Sunnis who stayed, in the eyes of local authorities, too long in areas under Islamic State control.

“Those families lived for two months with the Islamic State. They didn’t have a problem with them. Even on Youtube and Facebook we saw them welcoming them,” says Ayden Hassan, a local official. “Because of the bombings by the Iraqi air force, those families left Saadiya and Jalawla." He says the people here are being kept out of town for security reasons, and alleges that most of the men from these families are fighting with IS against Kurdish fighters in the area.

The de facto manager of the Kurdistan camp, Zukhoor Assad, a Shiite Kurd, is appalled. She rejects the idea that the families pose a security threat, and says the only reason they took so long to leave IS-held areas in Diyala Province was because they’re too old, young, or sick to move with ease. "The truth is they are not terrorists – they pose a risk to no one," says Ms. Assad.
Tough conditions

Thousands of Arab Sunnis – who arrived earlier and were not deemed a security threat – are already sheltered in three camps within Khanaqin, a disputed territory. The conditions of Kurdistan camp stand in sharp contrast with those in the semi-autonomous South Kurdistan, where many Christians and other minorities have found shelter.

It also reflects the realities of a war that has widened the fault line between Arabs and Kurds, not only in Iraq but also in Syria. Assad blames the rise of IS on the divisive politics of outgoing Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki and says the Kurds should avoid repeating his mistakes.

“The camp is like a prison. They are not allowed to enter Khanaqin and they are not allowed to [go home],“ she says. “For all its good measures and good advice, Americans will not get us to reconcile unless we are willing to reconcile ourselves.”

Despite the tough conditions, there is no overt resentment from those living in Kurdistan camp. Most are happy to have found a safe haven – however basic – in Kurdish-run areas that are removed from the “arbitrary bombings” of the Iraqi army and the “indiscriminate killings” of Shiite militias.

The women are quick to credit the hospitality of the Kurds.

The men in the camp – most of them from Saadiya and Jalalwa – refer to the conflict back home as one between gunmen and Shiite militias backed by the warplanes of Baghdad. Rarely do they use the term Islamic State, or its pejorative Arabic acronym, Daash.

“I live in a remote village and have never crossed paths with Islamic State fighters in my life,” says an elder dressed in a grey dishdasha. The children crowded around him are less concerned about appearances or ideology, openly referring to the men who entered their villages as “Daash,” then bursting out in innocent laughter.
Support for IS

Another man, Hussein, was candid about his support for the Islamic State, saying they had checked abuses carried out by Shiite militias and government security services. “Of course we are grateful to them. They liberated us from the tyrant al-Maliki,” he says.

Iraqi Prime Minister-designate Haider al-Abadi, from Maliki's Shiite Islamist Dawa Party, will have to work hard to undo the damage done by his predecessor. He must get Sunnis on board in the wider fight against the Islamic State. But those efforts suffered a setback last Friday when gunmen, alleged to be Shiite, killed 73 Sunni worshipers at a mosque in Diyala.

Iraq’s Sunni politicians have pulled out of talks in protest over the attack, which many fear will trigger a fresh cycle of sectarian killings and reprisals. The current spiral of violence in Iraq mirrors the bloodshed of 2007-8, the country’s worst chapter of sectarian strife.

In Kurdish areas of KRG, Arabs who are not Christians are viewed with open suspicion. The minority community is accused of facilitating the advance of the Islamic State, firing at peshmerga forces when they cross Arab villages, and blamed for suicide attacks like the ones that rocked Erbil and Kirkuk last weekend.

“The way Iraqi Arab tribes have assisted ISIS in attacks against Yezidis, Christians and Shiites makes reconciliation very hard to foresee,” wrote Qubad Talabani, deputy Prime Minister of the Kurdish Regional Government, on his twitter account.


PUK has no right to dump these terrorists in our backdoor.

http://www.csmonitor.com/World/Middle-East/2014/0828/Aid-to-Sunni-Arabs-in-Kurdistan-comes-with-a-side-of-suspicion
Edited by lashgare, Aug 31 14, 11:05.
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ALAN
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Zinar
Aug 30 14, 9:52
ALAN
Aug 30 14, 9:49
I seen IS killing those Assad soldiers man poor things...
You mean the one when they are burning them alive?
No they were pilots (nearly 30) i think from Raqqa base or something, they were all handcuffed laid on the ground and sprayed..... these IS are indeed subhumans...
Russian Girenak Joseph, who visited Kirkuk in Kurdistan as a part of his tour throu the 1870 - 1873 AD, who published the results of his trip & his studies later in 1879, in the 4th volume in the Bulletin of the Caucasus department of the Royal Geographical Russian Society estimated Kirkuk's population as many as 12-50,000 people, & he emphasized that except 40 Christian families, the rest of the population were Kurds. As for The Turkmen & Arabs, they have not been already existed at the time.
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ALAN
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Peshmerga and IA need to liberate Mosul from IS then we have to allocate all the arabs in Kurdistan there, end of problem.
Russian Girenak Joseph, who visited Kirkuk in Kurdistan as a part of his tour throu the 1870 - 1873 AD, who published the results of his trip & his studies later in 1879, in the 4th volume in the Bulletin of the Caucasus department of the Royal Geographical Russian Society estimated Kirkuk's population as many as 12-50,000 people, & he emphasized that except 40 Christian families, the rest of the population were Kurds. As for The Turkmen & Arabs, they have not been already existed at the time.
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lashgare
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ALAN
Aug 31 14, 11:01
Peshmerga and IA need to liberate Mosul from IS then we have to allocate all the arabs in Kurdistan there, end of problem.
these sunni arabs/shiah arabs will never leave diyala(which isn't called diyala... it was a part of pusht-i-kuh, our kurdish kingdom) voluntarily. 90% of them came there during arabization period of Iraq. In mandali they used to shoot at arabs... because they'd steal food from farms and cattle. Now mandali has become arabized(but still majority feyli kurdish).... while khanaqin is a little bit better. We need to retake those lands.
Edited by lashgare, Aug 31 14, 11:06.
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lashgare
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Kurdish peshmerga beheaded: http://rudaw.net/english/kurdistan/280820144


Quote:
 
Kurdistan
IS Beheads Peshmerga Captive for Erbil-US Alliance
By RUDAW 29/8/2014
Screenshot of IS video.
Screenshot of IS video.

ERBIL, South Kurdistan—A video posted by the Islamic State (IS) Thursday shows members of the radical Sunni group purportedly beheading a Kurdish Peshmarga fighter in the city of Mosul.

The video, which has been posted on YouTube, says the killing is a warning to the South Kurdistan leaders to end their alliance with the United States, which has launched devastating airstrikes on jihadists, forcing them to pull back from Kurdish areas they had taken earlier this month.

In the footage, 14 other Peshmarga fighters are shown wearing orange prison suits, urging Kurdish leaders and Kurds in general to stand against their pact with the US against the Islamic State.

Three armed IS militants stand behind one alleged Kurdish Peshmerga captive near Mosul’s iconic mosque, one of them brandishing a knife as he threatens that the rest of the Kurdish fighters will die if the KRG-US alliance does not come to an end.

YouTube immediately removed the video from surfacing online, and has deleted several related videos uploaded so far.

One Peshmerga Hassan Mohamed Hashin, reads out instructions from IS militants in the video saying to Kurdish leaders, “You have made a big mistake by joining hands with America,”

The video appears to be another propaganda attempt by the IS, which is interpreted by some as a sign of the group’s recent defeat in areas around Mosul.

On Thursday morning Kurdish forces attacked IS militants near Zumar, capturing several villages, including Mount Batna, a strategic point overlooking Zumar.

Earlier this month, the IS beheaded American journalist James Foley and threatened to kill another American should the US continue its aerial strikes in Iraq.

The act brought international condemnation and promises of retaliation from Washington against the extremist group that rules large swathes of land in Syria and Iraq.
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lashgare
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ISIS are pedos, confirmed:

http://rudaw.net/english/middleeast/iraq/300820141

Quote:
 
ERBIL, South Kurdistan — Christians who fled the town of Qaraqosh are reporting that the Islamic State (IS) kidnapped several women and a 3-year-old girl after they forced families from their homes last week.

The IS attack on the Assyrian town and the kidnappings, the first to be reported in a Christian area now under IS control, purged the town of most of its remaining residents. Fearing an IS advance, most had fled Qaraqosh, 30 miles southeast of Mosul, to Erbil in early August but some vulnerable residents were forced to stay behind.

According to refugees, IS militants took the women and toddler when they expelled the remaining residents — among them the elderly, people with disabilities, children and their female caretakers. A few dozen others, including a doctor, were ordered to stay behind.

One resident, Kafah, a woman in her forties who was looking after her elderly parents, told Rudaw that three men forced them out of their home and took them to a local health clinic with around 75 other residents. All of their possessions, including their money, documents and mobile phones, were confiscated.

“Women were told to take off all their gold jewelry, even their earrings,” said Kafah, who asked that her last name not be used.

They were then shuttled into a bus, where the disabled were forced to leave their wheelchairs behind.

“While I was helping my mother into the bus, I saw a bearded IS guy carry off a girl, about 3 years old, called Christina,” Kafah said. “Her mother started to scream and cry.”

Christina’s mother later spoke to Ishtar TV in Erbil about her ordeal, recalling how she followed the man who took her child. While the girl was crying, Christina was handed to an older man, whom the mother said was “one of those IS people, who was apparently their leader.”

She begged him, “Poor girl, what has she done wrong? For the sake of Allah, for the sake of Muhammad, what do you worship? Give her to me; I’m nursing and she’ll die if she’s not with me.”

The man “drew his machine gun and said, ‘Go quickly to the bus. If you come close to this little girl you will be slaughtered. We will slaughter you.’”

Along with the girl about seven or eight young women were also taken, according to Kafah.

One of the hostages managed to phone a family member and reported that they were taken to Mosul, including the toddler.

The kidnappings are the first account of mass abduction of Christian women and girls since IS seized Mosul in June, and follows the kidnappings of hundreds of female Yezidis when IS seized the Yezidi town of Shingal and surrounding areas earlier this month.

Some of the Yezidis girls and women have been able to make contact with their families and the press, reporting they were being held hostage and were sexually abused. They have not been heard from since.

Given that journalists and other investigators cannot travel in Nineveh province, most of which is IS controlled, it is difficult to confirm reports about the fate of the Yezidis and Assyrian hostages.

Most Qaraqosh residents fled the IS advance into the minority-dominated Nineveh Plains in early August, residents said. IS has targeted Yezidis, Christians, Shabbak and other Iraqi religious minorities. Thousands of Christians fled Mosul and surrounding areas after IS ordered Christians to convert to Islam or die.

Passengers on the bus were forced the cross the Zab river on foot, a long and harrowing journey for the refugees with disabilities. Family members and one IS militant carried those who couldn’t walk across the river, a journey made more difficult by the summer heat.

The victims said they had no water, food or medicine and the area was deserted because all of the villagers had fled for fear of IS.

One of the refugees hid his phone and alerted family members in Erbil, where most ended up taking refuge after crossing the river and being released by IS. Some survived the ordeal with just blisters and dehydration, though one elderly man was hospitalized in intensive care for three days.

Refugees who found refuge in Erbil’s Christian enclave of Ainkawa have called on church authorities there to organize rescue missions for the girls, but have been told that the church is powerless.

Kurdish and US forces, with the support of US air strikes, rescued tens of thousands of Yezidis stranded on Shingal Mountain earlier this month and have been hitting IS strongholds in Nineveh province. The US is supplying Peshmerga with weapons and continuing aerial bombings, but the joint operations have not included additional rescue missions for civilians trapped in IS-controlled towns.
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jjmuneer
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Merg û Şeref

lashgare
Aug 31 14, 11:05
ALAN
Aug 31 14, 11:01
Peshmerga and IA need to liberate Mosul from IS then we have to allocate all the arabs in Kurdistan there, end of problem.
these sunni arabs/shiah arabs will never leave diyala(which isn't called diyala... it was a part of pusht-i-kuh, our kurdish kingdom) voluntarily. 90% of them came there during arabization period of Iraq. In mandali they used to shoot at arabs... because they'd steal food from farms and cattle. Now mandali has become arabized(but still majority feyli kurdish).... while khanaqin is a little bit better. We need to retake those lands.
Places like Badra are already being Arabized, and people had the nerve to say shia militias from their were "feylis".
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