The capture of Tal Abyad, or Gire Spi in Kurdish, last week by Kurdish
forces caused thousands of residents to flee the strategic border town.
The exodus has given the world its first chance to really appreciate the
scary effects ISIS has on civilians in the areas under its rule.
Journalists rarely make contact with people living in ISIS territories.
They must depend mainly on those who fled ISIS and brought back the
stories of its harsh rule by Sharia law and the way the radicals
indoctrinate children.
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photo: Eddy van Wessel
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Monday, June 22, 2015
Sunday, June 21, 2015
Kurdish FGM campaign seen as global model
The media campaign that helped lead to the 2011 ban on female genital
mutilation (FGM) in the Kurdistan Region is being looked to as an
example elsewhere in the region, according to the anti-FGM activist
behind the plan.
Thomas von der Osten-Sacken, general manager of the German-Iraqi NGO Wadi, told Rudaw the Kurdish FGM campaign is now being copied in neighboring Iran.
“People look now at Kurdistan as an example. Our Kurdish material is being copied into Farsi. The awareness material is translated and gets used officially. The Stop-FGM-Iran homepage is online,” he said.
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Thomas von der Osten-Sacken, general manager of the German-Iraqi NGO Wadi, told Rudaw the Kurdish FGM campaign is now being copied in neighboring Iran.
“People look now at Kurdistan as an example. Our Kurdish material is being copied into Farsi. The awareness material is translated and gets used officially. The Stop-FGM-Iran homepage is online,” he said.
Read the whole story here
Labels:
Farsi,
FGM,
Iran,
Kurdish,
Kurdistan Region
Wednesday, June 17, 2015
KRG needs policy for Kurds who return from ISIS
Of the 500 Kurds that are known to have joined the
self-proclaimed Islamic State, or ISIS, 50 have returned to Iraqi
Kurdistan at some stage and for various reasons.
Upon returning, they were questioned by the Kurdish security police. Some remain in jail, some were released and being watched, according to the Ministry of Religion in the Kurdistan region’s capital of Erbil has said.
Elsewhere in the world, returnees from ISIS are the subject of heated discussion. In most European countries, jail awaits them if they are found guilty of membership of a terrorist organisation.
Read more here
Upon returning, they were questioned by the Kurdish security police. Some remain in jail, some were released and being watched, according to the Ministry of Religion in the Kurdistan region’s capital of Erbil has said.
Elsewhere in the world, returnees from ISIS are the subject of heated discussion. In most European countries, jail awaits them if they are found guilty of membership of a terrorist organisation.
Read more here
Labels:
Iraqi Kurdistan,
ISIS,
KRG,
Religion,
returnees
Saturday, June 13, 2015
Life in Mosul: terror and taxes in ISIS ‘prison city’
A year after it conquered Mosul, the radical Islamic State still retains
an iron grip on the lives of the hundreds of thousands of civilians in
Iraq’s second city.
The information that leaks out of the city paints a harrowing picture of executions, enforced taxation, informers, lack of services, and ever-stricter applications of the group’s hard-line interpretation of Islamic law.
For example, local people say the ultra-conservative group continues to tighten its regulations on women´s clothing and men’s beards.
Read the story here
The information that leaks out of the city paints a harrowing picture of executions, enforced taxation, informers, lack of services, and ever-stricter applications of the group’s hard-line interpretation of Islamic law.
For example, local people say the ultra-conservative group continues to tighten its regulations on women´s clothing and men’s beards.
Read the story here
Wednesday, June 10, 2015
Captured weapons keep ISIS in the fight
An interesting game of weapons exchange is being played out
across these days. Weapons are stolen, taken from the dead, confiscated
from the wounded, and even, in the oddest example, delivered by
international allies.
On its brutal advances into Mosul, Tikrit, Kirkuk and Ramadi, the Islamic State group, or ISIS, has been able to seize loads of military equipment when the Iraqi army fled, leaving their gear behind.
Read the story here
On its brutal advances into Mosul, Tikrit, Kirkuk and Ramadi, the Islamic State group, or ISIS, has been able to seize loads of military equipment when the Iraqi army fled, leaving their gear behind.
Read the story here
Friday, June 5, 2015
Zoroastrian faith returns to Kurdistan in response to ISIS violence
After over a millennium, the Zoroastrian faith is returning to its
original habitat. The Ministry of Religion in the Iraqi Kurdistan
capital Erbil has registered the religion, locally known as Zardashti,
and suggested to the Kurdish government the ancient faith should be
given its own directorate general and its believers be allowed to build
new temples.
“Now it’s time,” says Nouri Sharif, one of the initiators of the movement that established a Zoroastrian organization in Europe in 2006 and in March announced in Erbil its official return to Kurdistan. In April, a Supreme Council of Zoroastrians in Kurdistan was founded.
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“Now it’s time,” says Nouri Sharif, one of the initiators of the movement that established a Zoroastrian organization in Europe in 2006 and in March announced in Erbil its official return to Kurdistan. In April, a Supreme Council of Zoroastrians in Kurdistan was founded.
Read the story here
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