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Iraq, Syrian, Turkey, Daash, ME news & update; Related articles, videos and photos
Topic Started: Dec 22 12, 1:10 (60,181 Views)
jjmuneer
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ALAN
Mar 11 15, 1:39
Yeah but you got it wrong thinking the "well done" was meant for Daash bro it was for posting the video to the guy who posted it :)
oh my bad. haha
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ALAN
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Iraqis in Tikrit victim most likely is a Daash

https://www.facebook.com/video.php?v=344123892448931
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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ALAN
Mar 12 15, 9:27
Iraqis in Tikrit victim most likely is a Daash

https://www.facebook.com/video.php?v=344123892448931
See what I mean Alan, they are animals whether Shia or Sunni.
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ALAN
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Hashdi Shabi formed a battalion in Mandali commander and militants are all Fayli kurds

http://wishe.net/dreja.aspx?=hewal&jmare=14287&Jor=1
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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https://www.facebook.com/video.php?v=10153066837140490
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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ALAN
Mar 13 15, 1:34
Hashdi Shabi formed a battalion in Mandali commander and militants are all Fayli kurds

http://wishe.net/dreja.aspx?=hewal&jmare=14287&Jor=1
It doesn't say Feyli.
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jjmuneer
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Alan I don't get it, why do you always like to bash Feylis? You complain I bring up feylis, but you always bash us. It don't say feyli anywhere, you just like to assume. Anyway yeh I guess you going to say "don't defend jashes, bla bla bla..." I've given up anyway.

All I can show is this:
Quote:
 
World War Two - 1975
Faylee Kurds have been involved in the Kurdish movement in Iraq and with the emerging Kurdish political party, the Kurdistan Democratic Party (KDP) since it was founding in 1946, both as members and active supporters.
Some of them assumed higher positions and gained fame among Faylee Kurds, such as Dr. Jafar (Jafar Muhammad Karim) (13) Among the rank and file were, for example Shaban Nour Ali and others. There were special party cells and organizations for the Faylee Kurds living in Baghdad and elsewhere. These organizations were clandestine because the party was considered illegal from the start.

Involvement of Faylee Kurds with the KDP increased especially after the return of the renowned Kurdish national leader the late Mustafa Barzani from exile and the subsequent start of the Kurdish armed resistance against the central government in 1961.

In the middle of the nineteen sixties the KDP suffered a split, the late Mustafa Barzani leading the bigger faction and Jalal Talabani the other faction. Faylee Kurds, although joining both factions, were very disturbed and disappointed by this split and the subsequent infighting between the two factions.

Ordinary Faylee Kurds also supported the movement by making financial contributions and supplying safe houses in Baghdad and other Iraqi towns and cities for KDP members and high ranking figures. Faylee Kurdish merchants in Baghdad and elsewhere aided the armed Kurdish movement with supplies and agricultural products and sold agricultural and animal produce from the Kurdish region proper. Many of these merchants were arrested more than once, tortured and imprisoned. (14)

After the signing of the March 11, 1970 agreement between the re-united Kurdish movement, headed by the late General Barzani and the central government, Faylee Kurds joined the KDP on a large scale. It was mostly after that agreement that Faylee Kurds assumed prominent positions within Kurdish organizations.

Among Faylee Kurds who assumed very high positions within the Kurdish movement were Zakia Ismail Haqqi, the first women judge in Iraq, who became the President of the Kurdistan Women Association, Adel Murad who became President of the Kurdistan Student Union, Yadollah Karim who had a leading post of Kurdistan Youth Association and Habib Muhammad Karim, who became acting secretary-general of the KDP, in the middle of nineteen seventies (15). It must sadly be added that the first woman in Iraq to be executed for political reasons was a Faylee Kurd, Leila Qasim, from Khanaqin; she was hanged by the Baath regime in May 1974 along with 4 more young Kurds (16).

When the central government went back on the March 11, 1970 agreement, the armed struggle began again when the Kurdish region was attacked by government troops in March 1974. Many Faylee Kurds joined and took active part in that armed struggle; they included ordinary people, technocrats, students and others. Some became Peshmerga guerillas.

It can be said that so far the period between March 1970 and March 1974 was probably the “golden age” of Faylee Kurds’ participation in the Iraqi Kurdish movement when that movement was united under the leadership of the late Mustafa Barzani. The promotion of Faylee Kurds to these high positions was an expression of both his confidence in them and his recognition of their role in the movement as a whole. Some observers say this may have also been his response to the Iraqi regime’s deportation of Faylee Kurds at the beginning of the nineteen seventies on the pretext that they were not Iraqis but of Iranian origin and the of lack of, or weak, response from the Kurdish movement. At the time of the deportation of Faylee Kurds many of the leading figures in the Kurdish movement preferred inaction and acquiescence on the issue “in order not to upset relations with the Baath regime”. It must, however, be added that the late Mustafa Barzani again confirmed his position vis-à-vis Faylee Kurds by nominating Habib Muhammad Karim, a Faylee Kurd, to the post of Iraqi Vice President, a post given to the Kurds in accordance with the March 11, 1970 agreement between the Kurdish Movement and the central government (17).

Between 1976 and 2003
The armed movement collapsed in 1975 for internal and external factors, which will not be mentioned at this occasion. After the collapse, the Kurdish movement suffered internal divisions and bitter and sometime bloody conflict.

New political organizations emerged and old ones changed. Faylee Kurds joined these two main parties in increasing numbers. Here again Faylee Kurds played a prominent and sometimes a central part in the establishment of these organizations. The patriotic Union of Kurdistan (PUK) was established in 1976; among its founding members were Jalal Talabani along with two Faylee Kurds, Adel Murad and Abd al-Razzaq Aziz Mirza (usually known as Razzaq Faylee) and others. The KDP started a new organization, which was partly a revival of the old KDP, called the Provisional Leadership with a Faylee Kurd in charge of its foreign relations office in London.

After the 1991 popular uprising in Kurdistan Iraq Faylee Kurds began to come to the liberated areas in increasing though limited numbers and within the ranks of most Kurdish and Iraqi opposition parties. Some even worked within the new Kurdish administration in the liberated areas in various capacities. Among them can be mentioned Habib Muhammad Karim, Yadollah Karim, Jalil Faylee, Adel Murad, Razzaq Faylee and others. (18)

At the Present
Faylee Kurds have joined the two main Kurdish political parties, the KDP (Kurdistan Democratic Party), headed by the Kurdish leader Masoud Barzani and the PUK (Patriotic Union of Kurdistan) headed by the Kurdish leader Jalal Talabani.
Faylee Kurds have also joined other secular and religious Iraqi political parties and organizations, within which some of them have sensitive posts.

A number Faylee Kurds have been or are currently ministers or deputy ministers in the regional government in Hewlêr (such as Yadollah Karim, KDP, and Haider Sheikh Ali, Communist Party) and the government in Suleimania (such as Abdul Razzaq Myrza and Sadoun Faylee, PUK). Others are commanders of Peshmerga (Kurdish guerrilla) units. And still others work in other capacities. (19)

Due to the economic, social, security and political unfavorable conditions prevailing in Iran during the Iran-Iraq war (1980-1988) and the many restrictions imposed on them and on their movement in Iran (because they were officially considered Iraq citizens and commonly called Arabs (Arabaha, in Persian) by the population, tens of thousands of deportee Faylee Kurds chose to leave Iran by every and any possible way and method, however risky and dangerous. Many of them became victims of unscrupulous smugglers and corrupt officials. (20)
Faylee Kurds are at present spread over many parts of the world. Many of them still live in Iraq, especially in Baghdad and some in Iran after the latest mass deportation at the beginning of the nineteen eighties; others have chosen a life in exile, in Europe (Sweden, Denmark, Germany, England, Holland and France) North America and Australia.

Since Faylee Kurds see themselves as part of the Kurdish people in Iraq and the Kurdish nation at large, they have not had and do not have any intention or desire to establish political organizations for Faylee Kurds as such, preferring instead to join existing Kurdish and other Iraqi political parties. However, they have established non-political-party organizations, such as, for example, cultural, sports and academic associations and societies in order to keep the ties among themselves and take up their common problems and aspirations. (21)

Some Faylee Kurds feel that Kurdish parties can and should do more to address their specific grievances and problems and take up, in the appropriate forums, the apparent and obvious injustices committed against them by the Iraqi state for decades. They feel they are forgotten most of the time, especially when it counts. Some leaders of these parties counter this complaint by saying that the best way to do this is for the Faylee Kurds themselves to take up their case, their grievances and their demands and pursue their aspirations because no one else can or will do that as good as themselves (22).

It must be added that, on the one hand and regrettably, there are still among some leading figures in these parties and among some members of the Kurdish intelligentsia there is still limited and sometimes confused knowledge about the identity of Faylee Kurds and/or of their specific problems and the injustices committed against them. This has in turn led to some sort of indifference and lack of attention on their part towards these Kurds and their problems. This may be blamed in part on the Faylee Kurds themselves, though they have tried to bring or attract attention to their case.

Nevertheless, this would not justify that attitude. On the other hand, a number of Iraqi Arab writers and religious-cum-political leaders have publicized the plight of Faylee Kurds and strongly and relentlessly defended their rights.

There are Faylee Kurds who argue that they are still being ignored because they have no voice in either the Iraqi Governing Council or the government. However, others firmly believe that they must be represented and their representation should, if any, be within the Kurdish group in the Council and/or the government not as representative of Faylee Kurds per se but as part of the representatives of the Kurdish inhabitants of Iraq and as an affirmation and recognition that they are Kurds and Iraqis, as the late Barzani did in the seventies when Faylee Kurds reached high positions in the party and the other organizations of the movement not as representatives of Faylee Kurds as such but as an expression of his insistence both within the ranks of the Kurdish movement itself and as a stand vis-à-vis the central government that these people are both an integral part of Kurdish people as well as Iraqis.
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jjmuneer
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erê hiya kûrd bedbaxt bûmnes, hê wel xweman jen êkaymn. mê emil yek kes kisa nakem bês tû azanin kîan
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Zagros
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US to provide $70 million of assistance to Syrian opposition

WASHINGTON DC-- The United States aims to provide nearly $70 million of additional non-lethal aid to the Syrian opposition, Deputy Secretary of State said on Friday.

“The U.S. Department of State is working with Congress to provide nearly $70 million in new non-lethal assistance,” Deputy Secretary of State Tony Blinken said at an event marking the fourth year of the Syrian war.

The event was attended by members of the Syrian opposition and Syrian-American participants, according to a statement released by State Department.

Since the start of the Syrian revolution in 2011, the US has provided more than $300 million to Syrian opposition groups and the new proposed amount will increase total assistance to nearly $400 million.

The new aid package will be used to governance, improving operational capabilities of the opposition, cyber security training, capacity building and training journalists and activists as well as recording human rights violations in Syria.

http://rudaw.net/english/middleeast/syria/130320152
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ALAN
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jjmuneer
Mar 13 15, 8:24
ALAN
Mar 13 15, 1:34
Hashdi Shabi formed a battalion in Mandali commander and militants are all Fayli kurds

http://wishe.net/dreja.aspx?=hewal&jmare=14287&Jor=1
It doesn't say Feyli.
Quote:
 
زیاتر لە 80% كوردی شیعەن و فەرماندەكەیانیش كەسێكی كوردە.

It says "80% are shia kurds" which means Faylis.
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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jj: I don't bash Faylis but those who take shia/sunni before Kurdistan are lost to me and thus don't want their areas included in KRG either we already have enuff Iran's lapdogs in KRG (Hero's PUK).

There are those who joined daash who will never ever be allowed back to KRG either. But we don't have areas outside of KRG Bahdini or any other dialect or religion beside the shia kurds (Faylis) who would do such Jashy things ie joining an outsider force for the sake of religion etc... Anyone that joins Daash or Shia militias are lost to me and thus I personally do not consider them kurds.

I've named and shamed those from KRG who joined daash so then that makes me anti Sorani?
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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https://www.facebook.com/video.php?v=10152735174772951
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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ALAN
Mar 15 15, 4:00
jj: I don't bash Faylis but those who take shia/sunni before Kurdistan are lost to me and thus don't want their areas included in KRG either we already have enuff Iran's lapdogs in KRG (Hero's PUK).

There are those who joined daash who will never ever be allowed back to KRG either. But we don't have areas outside of KRG Bahdini or any other dialect or religion beside the shia kurds (Faylis) who would do such Jashy things ie joining an outsider force for the sake of religion etc... Anyone that joins Daash or Shia militias are lost to me and thus I personally do not consider them kurds.

I've named and shamed those from KRG who joined daash so then that makes me anti Sorani?
Alan but don't you find it strange, we can find these Kurds who join Daash and have videos of them. Not of these Feylis in these militias. I'm not saying it to bother you, but I'm saying it because in all honesty I've never heard of this.
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ALAN
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The news are sad but true those kurds who join daash pose bcos they hate KRG but shia Kurds have no reason to pose for pics etc what for? Several KURDISH news have confirmed it including PUK and Gorran.
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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Ghost
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Mass grave of Turkmen fighters killed by Daash found near Kirkuk F**k YES! DIE YOU UGLY TURKMENS!

Posted Image

Members of the The Iraqi Turkmen Front, which has taken up arms against Daash , seen in this AFP file photo from June 2014.


BASHIR, South of Kirkuk- A mass grave containing the remains of 16 Turkmen believed killed by Daash (Daash ) militants has been found in the Bashir district, 35 kilometers south of Kirkuk.

Ali Bayati, a journalist in the aread, told Rudaw that the grave was found on Saturday.

“The mass grave dates back to the Daash attacks on the area” Bayati said, adding that remains are believed to be those of Turkmen tribal fighters.

Bashir is home to a large population of Turkmen, who mostly Shiites, the sect vehemently opposed by the Sunni extremist Daash .
YAN KURDISTAN, YAN NAMAN
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Worldwar2boy
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I hope the Turks now realize war is not a game and certainly not for weak cowards like them.
The Turks/Turkmens believe they are superheroes, but the truth is they have never won a war. All they're good at is genocide and ganging up on others, as long as the odds are 40+ Turks vs 1. Many times, even those odds won't help them (look up Operation Murat, 40-50 THOUSAND Turkish soldiers were annihilated by 400 poorly armed Kurdish PKK freedom fighters, haha).

biji kurd u kurdistan !!
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Ali Alqosh
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ALAN
Mar 15 15, 4:00
jj: I don't bash Faylis but those who take shia/sunni before Kurdistan are lost to me and thus don't want their areas included in KRG either we already have enuff Iran's lapdogs in KRG (Hero's PUK).

There are those who joined daash who will never ever be allowed back to KRG either. But we don't have areas outside of KRG Bahdini or any other dialect or religion beside the shia kurds (Faylis) who would do such Jashy things ie joining an outsider force for the sake of religion etc... Anyone that joins Daash or Shia militias are lost to me and thus I personally do not consider them kurds.

I've named and shamed those from KRG who joined daash so then that makes me anti Sorani?
Honestly I don't get the point. When Barzani let in saddams tank to Hewler and called him a friend of kurds?! No respect for Halepce!?!! At least he could have avoided calling him our friend, as if any seref was left after that. When Barzani called Erdogan our friend? When he let Sengal fell? A city we had since 2003? There is a reason so many hate barzani, I am not one of them thou. Are you willing to call your presdient a cas? I am not.

If they are cases then so is barzani. I've alreade explained whypeople can't always join the force/s they prefer the most. The feylis both in Iran and Iraq has no kurdish parties active in their areas. They have no armed protectors. That is why I wish for the feylis to create their own paramillitary that is there for protection and under the KRG. Beibg undducated and desperate is not being a cas. Then in that case delete 60 percent of Bakur from your heart and mind.

By the way Halepce is filled with islamist scum cases who have joined dais. Aren't they cases?
Edited by Ali Alqosh, Mar 16 15, 3:33.
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jjmuneer
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http://www.ibtimes.co.uk/isis-child-executioner-toulouse-schoolchildren-shock-after-recognising-classmate-1491913

Quote:
 
Daash child executioner: Toulouse schoolchildren in shock after recognising classmate


Schoolchildren in southern France are in shock after seeing a former classmate executing a hostage in a video released by the Daash (Daash ).

The Islamist group posted online gruesome propaganda video showing a boy in military fatigues shooting an Israeli-Arab teenager in the head. The boy had been accused of working for Israel's spy agency Mossad.

In the video the child, aged 11 or 12, is flanked by a bearded man, who is believed to be his stepfather.

Students at Nicolas Vauquelin de Toulouse college, Toulouse, reportedly recognised the killer as a former classmate who left France last year.

"Concerning the formal identification of this person, I cannot tell you anything," schools inspector Jacques Caillaut told AFP. "Children from the Vauquelin College have recognised one of their (former) classmates, but we must remain cautious."

The child, said to be called "Ryan" was in his final year of primary school education at École Élémentaire Publique Vergers in Toulouse, until 11 March 2014, when he was reported absent by the school.

"He was a child like all others, he was integrated, played in the local football club and attended birthday parties," his former teachers told Libération newspaper.

Caillaut said psychological assistance was being provided to the boy's former classmates who have seen the video. They are now in first year of the French equivalent of high school.

"Students are asking their parents questions such as 'Why he didn't turn the gun against the others? Could have he run away afterwards?'," he said.

French media has identified the man standing besides the boy as Sabri Essid, 31. Essid is believed to be the boy's stepfather. According to Le Parisien Essid left France for Syria with all his family in spring last year.

Essid is the stepbrother of Mohammed Merah, who killed seven people after targeting a Jewish school in Toulouse in 2012.

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deso2409
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hahaha they know that they are getting f***ked, so they better start packing. scums!

Rumours IS Will Leave Mosul Without a Fight
Daash Caliph claims prophet visited him in a dream, and asking him to leave Mosul without violence.
Posted Image
MOSUL

Rumours are spreading throughout the city of Mosul in KRG that Daash (IS) Caliph Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi intends to leave Mosul before any clashes take place.

A source inside Mosul told Iraqi local media that following Friday prayers, a rumour spread about the future of the city.

According to the rumour, al-Baghdadi saw the prophet Mohammed in a dream in which the prophet asked him to leave Mosul without fighting forces against IS so as to not suffer any loses.

Mosul residents have apparently greeted the rumour optimistically, and now wait for zero hour in an operation to liberate their city.

Some residents, however, do not believe the rumour. They believe that it is propaganda trying to show al-Baghdadi as a true Muslim, and persuade people to be more patient with the struggles they face.
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kurdishpatriot
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secular sheikh

Lol if that rumour is true about abu bakr al baghdadi having a dream about prophet muhammed then he really is on drugs haha , oh islamists are so stupid!
#PROMOTEWOMENRIGHTS
"shengal bo ezdi ya", Ezidi namerin, HATA ARAB NAMAYEN NEK SHENGAL!
"A society can never be free without women's liberation" - Abdullah Ocalan
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Şirnex
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jjmuner, yesterday i talked with a a shia kurd who was born in baghdad. he said he isnt against KRG but he and his famaly are friendly towards iran, iraq and shia militias. he is more something like a patriotic iraqi. are many kurdish shia like him?
Edited by Şirnex, Mar 17 15, 12:39.
talabani = jash
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jjmuneer
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Şirnex
Mar 17 15, 12:39
jjmuner, yesterday i talked with a a shia kurd who was born in baghdad. he said he isnt against KRG but he and his famaly are friendly towards iran, iraq and shia militias. he is more something like a patriotic iraqi. are many kurdish shia like him?
Spoke to him face to face or internet? Does in know Kurdish?

Some feylis don't like the KRG because of betrayal for not recognizing feyli martyrs.
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kurdishpatriot
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secular sheikh

have to say iraqis know how to brainwash people like my father and others etc.
#PROMOTEWOMENRIGHTS
"shengal bo ezdi ya", Ezidi namerin, HATA ARAB NAMAYEN NEK SHENGAL!
"A society can never be free without women's liberation" - Abdullah Ocalan
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Şirnex
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jjmuneer
Mar 17 15, 1:14
Şirnex
Mar 17 15, 12:39
jjmuner, yesterday i talked with a a shia kurd who was born in baghdad. he said he isnt against KRG but he and his famaly are friendly towards iran, iraq and shia militias. he is more something like a patriotic iraqi. are many kurdish shia like him?
Spoke to him face to face or internet? Does in know Kurdish?

Some feylis don't like the KRG because of betrayal for not recognizing feyli martyrs.
face to face, he his a nice guy, a friend of my cousin. not against a kurdish state or KRG, but more like patriotic iraqi.
Edited by Şirnex, Mar 17 15, 3:48.
talabani = jash
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jjmuneer
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Şirnex
Mar 17 15, 3:46
jjmuneer
Mar 17 15, 1:14

Quoting limited to 2 levels deep
face to face, he his a nice guy, a friend of my cousin. not against a kurdish state or KRG, but more like patriotic iraqi.
Check if he knows Kurdis. Majority of feylis in Baghdad know Kurdish, but only speak in their homes. Rest sadly were arabized or brainwashed.


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