Archive for the ‘Iraq’ Category

Amid Terror Attacks, Iraq Faces Water Crisis

TELSKUF, IraqViewed from afar, the two-mile-long Mosul Dam is an impressive sight on the flat, sunbaked northern plains.

Move closer, though, and its appearance has a menacing air. The bullet-riddled causeway and abandoned guard posts tell of the dam's seizure by Islamic State terrorists in early August, and the bomb craters and flattened armored vehicles are evidence of its recapture by Kurdish fighters 12 days later. (Related: "Refugee Flood Heightens Long-Standing Tensions Between Turks and Kurds.")

The sorry state of Iraq's biggest dam, about 31 miles (50 kilometers) northwest of Mosul city on the Tigris River, shows how water has become another weapon in the terror group's arsenal. But its steadily retreating reservoir tells another story, one of how Iraq's water shortage is growing more urgent by the day.

Built in the early 1980s to supply water, irrigate fields, control floods, and generate electricity, the dam offers an apt metaphor for the war-torn country's shaky foundation. Its dry spillways are plastered with cement to fill cracks, while the permeable gypsum base has required injections of grout to prevent its collapse since it opened.

Iraq was grappling with water woes long before the Islamic State jihadist group surged through its northwestern provinces and routed much of its army over the summer. But the sudden loss of prime agricultural land and the swift appropriation of scarce water resources have intensified the crisis.

This army of extremist Iraqis and foreign fighters, which now rules considerable territory in Syria and Iraq, has demonstrated a willingness to use water to defeat its foes. Iraqis in endangered areas whose livelihood depends on a reliable supply are panicked.

NG STAFF SOURCES: INSTITUTE FOR THE STUDY OF WAR; FAO; CIA

More Precious Than Gold

Ahmed Jemili, whose melon and mango farm in Kirkuk governorate stands about 7 miles (11 kilometers) from the front line, feels this fear keenly. Years of drought and cheap food imports have driven most neighboring farms out of business, and the grizzled Kurd's small landholding now lies isolated amid distant oil wells and a hastily constructed roadside encampment for refugees.

"For us, water is more precious than gold, and Daesh are just hoarding it," Jemili said, using an Arabic acronym for the Islamic State of Iraq and Syria, as the group initially branded itself.

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Amid Terror Attacks, Iraq Faces Water Crisis

Iraq Shi'ite Ashoura ritual escapes attacks

Shi'ite Muslims perform with fire during commemorations Ashura in Najaf, November 3, 2014. REUTERS/ Alaa Al-Marjani

By Haider Kadhim

KERBALA Iraq (Reuters) - A gathering of millions of Shi'ite Muslims at shrines and mosques across Iraq for the Ashoura religious commemoration passed without any major attacks on Tuesday, under tight security imposed for fear of Islamic State bombers.

Crowds of hundreds of thousands of people in the holy city of Kerbala had largely dispersed in safety after nightfall, following a day of worship and prayer to mark the 7th century battle that divided the Muslim world into Sunnis and Shi'ites.

But seven pilgrims returning home from Kerbala were killed in separate roadside bomb attacks in the town of Latifiya, 40 km (25 miles) south of Baghdad, police and medical sources said.

Dozens of pilgrims were killed in Baghdad alone in the run-up to this year's event, despite an increase in security since suspected al Qaeda suicide bombers and mortar attacks killed 171 people during Ashoura in Kerbala and Baghdad in 2004.

But no mass killings were reported in Iraq as Shi'ites across the Muslim world commemorated the slaying of Prophet Mohammad's grandson Hussein at the battle of Kerbala in AD 680.

Gunmen shot dead at least five people in Saudi Arabia's Eastern Province, state news agency SPA reported, in what local residents said was an attack on Shi'ite Muslim worshippers on Monday night, testing already strained relations between Sunnis and Shi'ites across the Middle East.

Islamic State, seen as more ruthless than al Qaeda, says Shi'ites are infidels who deserve to be killed. The group, which seized large parts of northern Iraq this year, regularly claims responsibility for suicide bombings against Shi'ites, who are a minority in Islam but form the majority in Iraq.

In Kerbala, huge masses of pilgrims gathered outside the Shrine of Imam Hussein where the grandson of the Prophet is buried, chanting: "Hussein, Hussein, Hussein." During the ritual, Shi'ites beat their heads and chests and gash their heads with swords to show their grief at Hussein's suffering.

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Iraq Shi'ite Ashoura ritual escapes attacks

Washington to send military advisers to Iraq – Video


Washington to send military advisers to Iraq
US military officers say they #39;re now drafting plans to send troops to the volatile Anbar province in the west. They say the mission is aimed at helping arm tribesmen to fight the ISIL Takfiri...

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Washington to send military advisers to Iraq - Video

ISIS new video – ISIL kills 85 tribesmen, women in west Iraq – Video


ISIS new video - ISIL kills 85 tribesmen, women in west Iraq
Thanks for watching!_ ___Like and subscribe to see was more than!__ ISIS new video - ISIL kills 85 tribesmen, women in west Iraq ISIL Takfiri militants have executed 85 more people from the...

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ISIS new video - ISIL kills 85 tribesmen, women in west Iraq - Video

Origins of ISIS (Islamic State of Iraq and Syria) – Video


Origins of ISIS (Islamic State of Iraq and Syria)
Origins of ISIS (Islamic State of Iraq and Syria) In the aftermath of the invasion of Iraq in 2003, Saddam Hussein, the man who ruled the country with an iron fist, was captured. And then...

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Origins of ISIS (Islamic State of Iraq and Syria) - Video