Archive for August, 2017

Iraq’s Kurds stick to independence vote despite US request to postpone it – Reuters

ERBIL, Iraq (Reuters) - Iraq's Kurds are sticking to a plan to hold an independence referendum on Sept. 25, despite a U.S. request to postpone it, a high-ranking Kurdish official told Reuters on Saturday.

The United States and other Western nations are worried that the vote could ignite a fresh conflict with Baghdad and turn into another regional flashpoint. Turkey, Iran and Syria, which together with Iraq have sizeable Kurdish populations, all oppose an independent Kurdistan.

"The date is standing, Sept. 25, no change," said Hoshyar Zebari, a close adviser to Kurdistan Regional Government President Massoud Barzani, after U.S. Secretary of State Rex Tillerson asked Barzani to postpone the referendum.

Tillerson made the request in a phone call with Barzani on Thursday, Zebari said.

"On the issue of the postponement of the referendum, the President (Barzani) stated that the people of the Kurdistan Region would expect guarantees and alternatives for their future," said a statement issued on Friday by the Kurdistan Regional Government (KRG) presidency, after Tillerson's call.

The U.S. State Department said in June it was concerned that the referendum will distract from "more urgent priorities" such as the defeat of Islamic State militants.

Islamic State's self-proclaimed "caliphate" effectively collapsed last month, when U.S.-backed Iraqi forces completed the takeover of the militants' capital in Iraq, Mosul, after a nine-month campaign in which Kurdish Peshmerga fighters took part.

The hardline Sunni militants remain however in control of territory in western Iraq and eastern Syria. The United States has pledged to maintain its backing to allied forces in both countries until the militants' total defeat.

The Kurds have been seeking an independent state since at least the end of World War One, when colonial powers divided up the Middle East, but their territory ended up split between modern-day Turkey, Iran, Iraq and Syria.

Barzani, whose father led struggles against Baghdad in the 1960s and 1970s, told Reuters in July the Kurds would take responsibility for the expected 'yes' outcome of the referendum, and pursue its implementation through dialogue with Baghdad and regional powers to avoid conflict."We have to rectify the history of mistreatment of our people and those who are saying that independence is not good, our question to them is, 'if it's not good for us, why is it good for you?'," he said in an interview in the KRG capital, Erbil.

Iraq has been led by Shi'ites since the overthrow of Saddam Hussein, a Sunni, by the U.S.-led invasion of 2003.

The country's majority Shi'ite community mainly lives in the south while the Kurds and Sunni Arabs inhabit two corners of the north. The center around Baghdad is mixed.

Kurdish officials have said disputed areas, including the oil-rich Kirkuk region, will be covered by the referendum, to determine whether they would want to remain or not in Kurdistan.

The Kurdish Peshmerga in 2014 prevented Islamic State from capturing Kirkuk, in northern Iraq, after the Iraqi army fled in the face of the militants. They are effectively running the region, also claimed by Turkmen and Arabs.

Hardline Iran-backed Iraqi Shi'ite militias have threatened to expel the Kurds by force from this region and three other disputed areas - Sinjar, Makhmour and Khanaqin.

Reporting by Maher Chmaytelli; Editing by Adrian Croft

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Iraq's Kurds stick to independence vote despite US request to postpone it - Reuters

Inside the air campaign against ISIS in Iraq – The Jerusalem Post

In June, Islamic States fighters in Mosul had been pushed back to a warren of small streets in Mosul. On June 21, with a few square kilometers of territory still under their command, they blew up the iconic al-Nuri mosque from where Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi had proclaimed the caliphate three summers before, in 2014. Overhead there were layers of US-led coalition aircraft and unmanned aerial vehicles, helicopters and other craft, all looking for ISIS fighters and helping the Iraqi Army progress street by street.

The challenge we faced is we were operating in a city of 1.8 million the size of Philadelphia and the enemy was embedded in the civilian population, and we did everything we could do to protect civilians, recalls US Air Force Brig.-Gen. Andrew A. Croft.

Croft is deputy commander for the Air, Combined Joint Forces Land Component Command of Operation Inherent Resolve the US militarys intervention against ISIS. In short, I am the guy who helped run and coordinate the air campaign in Mosul as it came down to the final days, he says in a phone interview from Iraq. The general, who holds an MBA from Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University, was appointed to his current position in April 2017 and will serve through next May.

He describes the campaign for Mosul, which lasted from October 2016 to July 2017, as the first time in history such a precision-guided war was waged on this scale. We did a lot of coordination with Iraqi security forces on the ground, figuring out where Daesh [ISIS] is, who is Daesh and being able to attack them... they did everything they could do to frustrate our efforts using civilian structures so that was the challenge. What enabled us was the precision weapons are more precise than ever in history.

The coalition, which includes around 68 countries, some two dozen of which are involved on the ground or in the air, had at its disposal weapons ranging from 10 lbs (4.5 kg.) to 2,000 lbs [some 900 kg.], he says. We have unmanned aircraft, cameras and infrared and all networked together, so everyone on ground or air has the same picture, and that allows instantaneous communication with Iraqis. [That] enabled us with high situational awareness, we know where ISIS is, and civilians and ISF [Iraqi security forces] and how to minimize the damage if possible, that is how we overcame the challenge of Mosul.

The attempt to minimize damage and casualties didnt always work. On March 17, a building in the al-Jadidah neighborhood of West Mosul was bombed and dozens of civilians were killed.

Although initial news reports said more than 200 people died, an investigation by the US found that a precision guided bomb had been dropped on two ISIS snipers in a two-story building.

Neither coalition nor [Iraq counterterrorism] forces knew that civilians were sheltered in the bottom floors of the structures.

Since the battle ended on July 10, Iraqi security forces have continued to confront ISIS threats in Mosul. However, operations on the ground have shifted to focus on the next targets, which are thought to include the liberation of Tal Afar, to the northwest of Mosul; Hawija, which is near Kirkuk; and areas of western Iraq in Anbar province near the Syrian border. In many of these places ISIS is basically surrounded, so its threat is diminished.

As the Iraqi Army is refitted and prepares for the next round, the coalitions air strikes have been reduced to between half and twothirds of what they were months ago. For instance the coalition conducted only four strikes on Thursday, against ISIS units, warehouses, buildings, and tunnel entrances. Compare that to May 26, when the coalition carried out 11 strikes and 55 engagements.

That will change when Iraqis initiate the next phase of the campaign, says the general.

Croft notes that on the macro level, life in parts of Mosul is returning to normal. You have evidence of schools and markets [open] and return to normal civilian life. And in West Mosul it is happening from the outside [neighborhoods] in and based on time since the battle happened.

He says that the civilian flow to displaced-persons camps has reversed.

This is very much an Iraqi-led campaign; the coalition is letting the Iraqis do the fighting and the planning, a major contrast from 10 years ago during the US-led surge. The Americans call their strategy by, with and through, which means the Iraqis lead the way. They are the A-team, says Croft.

One major success of the Mosul campaign has been the emergence of a competent Iraqi Air Force.

The general describes their successes using F-16s, Czech L-159s, Russian SU-25s and a large force of attack helicopters. They identify ISIS all over Iraq and they use their aircraft for ground attack and precision strikes, and that goes on every day, says the general. Their F-16 squadron drops laser-guided bombs and our assessment is their pilots are as good as any US squadron dropping them.

The coalition daily strike reports dont include the Iraqi Air Force, so its overall role is not easy to quantify. However, the separation allows for some flexibility on the ground when it comes to sensitive targets the coalition is wary of striking. There may be a case where Iraq intel says there is Daesh in a mosque or school and we cant corroborate the intel and wont strike it, so they can go ahead and do it, says Croft. So their ability to do independent intel gathering and strike ops [is a] benefit if they can do it faster than we can.

According to the coalition, the US and Iraq coordination has resulted in few if any friendly-fire incidents and has been a success story. However, the Iraqi government also includes members of the Hashd al-Shaabi or Popular Mobilization Units, a group of mostly Shia militias, many backed by Iran, that have been a key force fighting ISIS since 2014. According to Croft, the US doesnt coordinate with them, we de-conflict, so our effort is to know where they are so we dont end up in a bad situation, we coordinate with ISF [Iraqi security forces] and obviously sometimes they are part of the ISF. He stresses, We coordinate with ISF but not those separate organizations.

It is a challenge, particularly in places like Anbar or near Tal Afar where the Popular Mobilization Units man much of the front line and have carried out successful offensives in the last six months.

The challenge is to know where everyone is. If you are doing a strike out there [in Anbar]... it is critical knowing where everyone is, especially in places like Anbar with tough communications and [a] wide open [area].

On August 7, a group affiliated with the PMU called the Sayyid al-Shuhada Brigade claimed coalition artillery struck it near the Iraqi border, killing dozens. Croft clarifies that this PMU unit was hit in Syria and that attack was done by ISIS. They thought it was the coalition, [but] we werent doing anything out there.

The incident reveals the struggle ahead as coalition forces in Iraq and Syria draw closer to other units fighting ISIS, such as Shia militias or the Syrian government forces, in a region with porous borders.

The complexity ahead also reveals the problems the coalition could face in Tal Afar or Anbar where the bulk of forces Iraq has so far employed are part of the PMU, and thus officially do not coordinate with the US directly.

The campaign over the last three years since Operation Inherent Resolve was launched has been a learning experience. Croft describes many successes, such as cherry-picking the best capabilities of the 68 countries involved, and improving the use of precision munitions and unmanned aerial vehicles, all knit together through hi-tech networks and coordinated through joint operations rooms.

Despite all that, ISIS has shown that just a few thousand men embedded among a civilian population can take months to defeat, especially when their adversaries are trying as much as possible to reduce civilian casualties and damage to civilian infrastructure.

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Inside the air campaign against ISIS in Iraq - The Jerusalem Post

Libya | Reuters

MOSCOW Libyan military commander Khalifa Haftar was due to arrive in Moscow on Saturday ahead of a meeting with Russia's foreign minister, RIA news agency reported, citing a Russian negotiator.

UNITED NATIONS United Nations children agency UNICEF warned on Wednesday that more than half a million children in Libya need help and called on warring parties to end the violence and negotiate a political solution to the crisis.

DUBAI/SINGAPORE Saudi Arabia will cut crude oil allocations to its customers worldwide in September by at least 520,000 barrels per day, an industry source said on Tuesday, as the top oil exporter makes good on its pledge to help rein in a global supply glut.

BENGHAZI, Libya/TUNIS Residents of Derna in east Libya say they are facing critical shortages after Khalifa Haftar's Libyan National Army (LNA) tightened its longstanding siege around the city last week.

BENGHAZI, Libya A blast hit worshippers leaving a mosque in the east Libyan city of Benghazi on Friday, apparently targeting a key tribal ally of eastern based commander Khalifa Haftar for a second time, security and medical officials said.

(In this August 2nd story, corrects para 3 to show boat has not been moved from Lampedusa)

ROME Italy began a limited naval mission on Wednesday to help Libya's coastguard curb migrant flows, which have become a source of political friction before national elections expected early next year.

BENGHAZI, Libya A fighter jet from eastern Libyan commander Khalifa Haftar's self-styled Libyan National Army was shot down in Dahr Al-Hamer district in Derna and its two crew detained, an air force spokesman said on Saturday.

BRUSSELS The European Union gave 46 million euros ($54 million) to Italy on Friday to help it protect Libya's northern and southern borders, part of the bloc's efforts to stem arrival of African migrants across the Mediterranean.

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Libya | Reuters

Doctor Without Borders suspends rescue ship off Libya over security concerns – Los Angeles Times

Doctors Without Borders said Saturday that it is temporarily suspending the activity of its rescue ship due to alleged threats from Libya's coast guard, which has become more aggressive in patrolling the coasts where human traffickers launch boats crowded with migrants desperate to reach Europe.

The humanitarian group said the rescue coordination center operated by Italy's coast guard had informed it Friday that the Libyan threats pose a security risk. The group added that Libyan authorities declared their own rescue area, extending into international waters, the same day.

Doctors Without Borders says its medical crew will keep working from a ship operated by another aid group while its vessel, Prudence, is not involved in migrant rescues.

The Italian government agreed last month to dispatch a naval mission to assist the Libyan coast guard with anti-smuggler patrols. Hundreds of thousands of rescued asylum-seekers, many of them fleeing poverty in Africa, have been brought to safety in Italian ports in recent years.

The government also has pressured rescue groups to sign on to rules that would forbid them from entering Libyan waters to save migrants without specific authorization and require them to agree that armed Italian judicial authorities may board their ships.

Italy is requiring groups operating rescue ships to subscribe to the rules or risk not being allowed to dock in Italian ports. Doctors Without Borders has refused to endorse the rules, while some other humanitarian groups have given their approval.

Critics of the new policies say they could put lives at risk by delaying rescues in Libyan waters. They also contend that if the Libyan coast guard blocks smugglers' boats, migrants will be returned to inhumane conditions, including beatings and forced labor, in Libyan detention centers.

"If humanitarian ships are pushed out of the Mediterranean, there will be fewer ships ready to aid persons before they drown," Doctors Without Borders Italy President Loris De Filippi said in a statement. "And whoever doesn't drown will be intercepted and brought back to Libya, which we know to be a place of absent legality, arbitrary detention and extreme violence."

A Spanish humanitarian group, Proactiva Open Arms, said the Libyan coast guard ordered its rescue ship to move north and fired warning shots last week when the vessel was involved in search-and-rescue work outside of Libyan territory.

Humanitarian groups have had ships monitoring the Mediterranean Sea outside of Libya's territorial waters to help rescue migrants from smugglers' boats in distress. The Italian coast guard coordinates the rescues, including those conducted by naval vessels from other European countries.

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Doctor Without Borders suspends rescue ship off Libya over security concerns - Los Angeles Times

News Roundup – Sat, Aug 12, 2017 – The Libya Observer

The deputy Minister of Education, Adel Jumaa, stated that the date for the announcement of results of the first round of exams for primary education pupils will be next Monday at 1:00 pm. Juma added in a statement published on the official website of the ministry on Friday that students can obtain results online by following the linkas soon as it is activated and placed on the Ministry's official website The Libyan Ministry of Education or on Facebook. The person can obtain their results by entering their registration number in the box allocated, then follow instructions on screen.

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Oil field workers at the Sharara base have warned that the level of oil production at the field is declining gradually due to a lack of security and repeated armed robberies on workers during the past week. Workers said in a statement on Friday, that production at the field was at a steady 290 thousand barrels per day but that number is steadily declining and the oil field workers have called on officials from the company's management and the National Oil Corporation to intervene quickly to extend security in and around the Sharara field so that work can continue at full capacity.

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The head of the Administrative Control Authority have requested from the Ministry of Economy and Industry of the UN proposed government, to implement procedures concerning the importation of livestock to ensure that the goods reach the citizens of Libya at the right price. The request by the control authority comes in light of high prices of livestock and meat especially during the period of Eid al-Adha.

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The Illegal Immigration Agency deported 127 illegal immigrants from Nigeria on Thursday. The immigrants were deported to their country from Matiga International Airport after the Libyan Navy seized them as they began to migrate to Europe. The head of the Deportation Office confirmed that the deportation is part of a voluntary flights system where the agency periodically operates flights in cooperation with the International Organization for Migration.

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Libyan traveler Busiri Khamis arrived in the city of Qatrun at the end of the first phase of his peace journey which started from the village of Targhi in the very far south after traveling more than seventy km on foot. Busairi will continue his journey to Sabha through Um Alaranib, Taraghan and Ghudwa, covering an amazing 432 kilometres.

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The Educational Facilities Authority announced the start of maintenance projects in more than 1000 schools in all educational districts in Libya. The Director General of the Department, Samir Coco, explained that they are in communication with a number of local companies to start maintenance work in accordance with established regulations, stressing that these projects will be completed before the start of the new school year. Coco also pointed out that priority will be given to the most dilapidated schools within municipalities under their scope.

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Social networking sites reported that citizens found three illegal immigrants on the side of the road near Nesma, 150 kilometers south-west of Tripoli. One of them was in critical condition and was taken by ambulance to Bani Walid Hospital. The hospital refused to admit him so the person was transferred by ambulance to Gharyan hospital which also refused to admit him. The person was returned to Nesma and died from his wounds, while the other two suffered fractures and minor wounds. The injured men apparently fell from one of the many smugglers trucks.

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The Committee formed by the Municipal Council of Sirte and charged with searching for bodies inside the city as a result of the war against ISIS; have extracted more than 25 unidentified bodies in different areas in Sirte. The committee chairman, Khalifa Ghaith, said that they have handed over the bodies to the crime team in Misrata and added that the committee are continuing their work through cooperation with the Libyan Red Crescent in the city by extracting any remaining bodies.

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Libya's national football team has been ranked 83rd in the world rankings, which is an improvement of four places when compared with the last results. FIFA posted on their official website, showing the Libyan team ahead of its previous ranking of 87th.

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News Roundup - Sat, Aug 12, 2017 - The Libya Observer