Iraq nightclub – Video
Iraq nightclub
bangladeshi model shaina amin scandal For more to know http://assuredadsense.weebly.com See our more video pls go through below link....
By: bollywoodsushmita biswas
See the rest here:
Iraq nightclub - Video
Iraq nightclub
bangladeshi model shaina amin scandal For more to know http://assuredadsense.weebly.com See our more video pls go through below link....
By: bollywoodsushmita biswas
See the rest here:
Iraq nightclub - Video
Quick-fire News Round - Russell Brand vs Nigel Farage, Iraq invasion (again),
Here #39;s our quick-fire news round, in the segment today: Nigel Farage versus Russell Brand on Question Time, 100 Paratroopers deployed to Iraq to combat the ISIS threat, Prisons better at educating...
By: The Mick Milton Show
Read more:
Quick-fire News Round - Russell Brand vs Nigel Farage, Iraq invasion (again), - Video
A man watches US airstrikes aimed at Isis forces from a hill in Sanliurfa province, Turkey, on the Syrian border, 24 October 2014. Photograph: Jodi Hilton/NurPhoto/Corbis
The US and allies staged 23 air strikes on Islamic State (Isis) targets in Syria and Iraq on Thursday, the Combined Joint Task Force said on Friday.
The strikes followed a confirmed total of 29 strikes in Syria and Iraq on Wednesday, New Years Eve.
The task force said a dozen strikes near the Syrian cities of Kobani, Raqqa and Hasakah destroyed Isis vehicles, buildings and fighting positions and also hit a large Isis unit.
Activist groups, meanwhile, reported strikes on and around Raqqa, the de facto Isis capital. An anti-Isis activist group called Raqqa is Silently Being Slaughtered reported at least 13 coalition strikes and said the Furoussiyeh area and the Division 17 military base were among the targets hit.
The UK-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights and the Local Coordination Committees activist collective also confirmed the air raids.
In Iraq, the Combined Joint Task Force said 11 strikes targeted Isis units, buildings, vehicles, equipment, a shipping container and a weapons cache near the cities of Taji, Asad, Fallujah, Baiji, Qaim and Mosul.
Isis fighters have taken control of parts of Syria and Iraq in a bloody campaign to establish an Islamic caliphate.
Strikes against Isis in Iraq began on 8 August and in Syria on 23 September. On 24 December, Isis captured a Jordanian pilot whose F-16 came down during a coalition mission.
Read more:
US launches 23 air strikes against Isis in Syria and Iraq ...
When millions of Shiite Muslim pilgrims descended last month on the shrine with twin gold domes in this holy city, many Iraqis expected sectarian fighting to erupt.
Instead, the largely peaceful gathering of more than 17 million Shiites provided a place of refuge from violence, with some pilgrims speaking hopefully of an end to this nation's sectarian clashes.
The road from Baghdad to Karbala, 50 miles to the south, was busy late last week, with army checkpoints crowded and the roadsides littered with stands catering to pilgrims. Many had traveled across the country some on foot the week before to mark Arbaeen, the end of the 40-day mourning period for Imam Hussein, the 7th century Shiite martyr slain and buried at Karbala.
The bearded image of the imam, a key figure in the historic split between Shiite and Sunni Muslims, is everywhere in Baghdad these days: on signs, flags, billboards and banners posted in residential neighborhoods, outside businesses, police stations, even the morgue.
Those flags also flew last week from roadside stands along the highway south. Nearby buildings pocked with bullet holes were a reminder that a few years ago this area was known as the "Triangle of Death," the scene of fierce battles between the U.S. military and insurgents.
In the Euphrates Valley farming town of Jurf Nasr, 40 miles south of Baghdad, more images of Imam Hussein appeared, as well as billboards honoring hometown heroes killed battling the Islamic State insurgent group. Baghdad has remained relatively peaceful in recent weeks, but here in the belt of towns surrounding the capital, Iraqi forces and Shiite militias are still fighting the Sunni extremists who seized large sections of Iraq during the summer.
Jurf Nasr was once a Sunni town known as Jurf Sakhr, or "rocky bank," a haven for militants. But for the Ashura holiday during the fall, with Islamic State threatening to slaughter Shiite pilgrims as they passed through town toward Karbala, Iraqi security forces and Shiite militias launched a two-day assault that chased Sunni families away and left the town a battered and burned outpost. The government renamed the town Jurf Nasr, "the bank of victory."
On the far side of the Baghdad Belt, Karbala is thriving. There's a new mall, high-rise hotels and signs advertising expensive developments. The shrine is expanding, as is the one in the nearby Shiite holy city of Najaf.
Scores of pilgrims and residents filled the courtyard between the gold domes last week, the women wearing the required head scarves and ankle length gowns, or abayas. Many families slipped off their shoes to sit together on massive rugs, picnicking on falafel and sticky coconut sweets from nearby stands as their children played.
Nahedh Shaheed, 38, said he and his Shiite family were forced to flee to Karbala nine years ago from Baghdad's mixed sect neighborhood of Dora after his brother was shot and killed. They still own a house in the capital, but the area is now mostly Sunni and he is afraid to return.
Link:
Iraq's holy city of Karbala becomes a haven from sectarian fighting
Bryan Mullennix/Getty Images A stack of colorful oil barrels in Portland, Oregon.
Oil supplies in Iraq and Russia surged to the highest level in decades, signaling no respite in early 2015 from the glut that has pushed crude prices to their lowest in five years.
Russian oil production rose 0.3 percent in December to a post-Soviet record of 10.667 million barrels a day, according to preliminary data e-mailed today by CDU-TEK, part of the Energy Ministry. Iraq exported 2.94 million barrels a day in December, the most since the 1980s, said Oil Ministry spokesman Asim Jihad. The countries provided 15 percent of the worlds oil in November, according to the International Energy Agency.
Oil slumped 48 percent in London in 2014, the steepest decline since the 2008 financial crisis, as the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries refused to pare output in response to the highest U.S. oil production in three decades. Russian Energy Minister Alexander Novak, who met with some OPEC members in November, said the nation will maintain output this year and expects prices to stabilize.
With the latest news from Russia and Iraq, the focus on rising supply remains a key negative driver for oil, Ole Sloth Hansen, an analyst at Saxo Bank A/S in Copenhagen, said by e- mail. Brent crude futures, at about $57 a barrel today, may slip below $50 this year, he said.
Russian output is increasing even after the U.S. and the European Union imposed sanctions last year in response to the countrys annexation of Crimea and what they say was support for separatists in eastern Ukraine. Measures included targeting the energy sector by banning exports to Russia of some equipment and technology. The countrys government gets about half of its revenue from oil and gas taxes.
Iraq Deal
Iraq, OPECs second-biggest producer, reached a deal with its semi-autonomous Kurdish region last month over the Kurds oil exports through Turkey, after years of disagreement on the territorys right to independently develop its energy resources.
The agreement looks to have had a positive effect on exports to the north, analysts at consultants JBC Energy GmbH in Vienna said in a report today.
The agreement allows the shipment of as much as 550,000 barrels a day of oil from northern Iraq to the port of Ceyhan on the Mediterranean, along a pipeline to the Turkish border operated by the Kurdistan Regional Government. This includes 300,000 barrels a day from the Kirkuk oilfields in northern Iraq, under the control of Kurdish forces since they moved to repel an offensive by militants from the Islamic State in June.
See the original post here:
Russia, Iraq push oil supply as 2015 begins with glut