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Showing posts with label Wasit; Kut; Basra; Arbil; Kirkuk; Suliemaniyah; CNPC. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Wasit; Kut; Basra; Arbil; Kirkuk; Suliemaniyah; CNPC. Show all posts

Tuesday, July 01, 2014

Sunnis, Kurds shun Iraq parliament: Hizb-ut-Tahrir, the main champions of establishing Khilafa, has rejected the already established 'khilafa'...

Interestingly Maliki also says State of Law is biggest #Iraq parliament bloc as of today. Effectively he's ignoring bigger pan-Shia bloc #PT If you needed confirmation, here it is straight from #Iraq PMO: Maliki says he will not withdraw his PM candidacy ===== 'We’ll take back Spain': Fighters claim ISIS to seize 'occupied lands' Published time: July 04, 2014 13:53 Edited time: July 04, 2014 15:31 Conflict, EU, History, Human rights, Military, Religion, Security, Violence A group of jihadists claiming to be part of ISIS have vowed to invade Spain along with all other “occupied lands” in a video posted on the web. The men say Spain is the land of their forefathers and that they are prepared to die for their nascent Islamic State. The video of two men claiming to be militants from the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIS) has taken the Spanish media by storm. The minute-long footage shows them speaking in Spanish, and saying that ISIS will take over Spain.
“I tell you, Spain is the land of our forefathers, and, Allah willing, we are going to liberate it, with the might of Allah,” says one of the men. He adds that the group won’t stop at Spain and intends to spread its Islamic Caliphate across the world. “I say to the entire world as a warning: We are living under the Islamic banner, the Islamic Caliphate. We are going to die for it until we liberate all the occupied lands, from Jakarta to Andalusia,” he said.
The footage has not yet been independently verified, but it would not be the first video released by the group. Last month, ISIS released a propaganda video entitled: “There Is No Life Without Jihad” in which Australian and British members of the group appealed in English for Muslims across the world to join their cause. “We have brothers from Bangladesh, from Iraq, from Cambodia, Australia and the UK,” says a militant called Abu Muthanna al-Yemeni, who himself comes from Britain, according to a video caption. Militant Islamist fighters parade on military vehicles along the streets of northern Raqqa province, Syria June 30, 2014. (Reuters) Militant Islamist fighters parade on military vehicles along the streets of northern Raqqa province, Syria June 30, 2014. (Reuters) The extremist Sunni Muslim group began to seize control of towns and cities in Iraq at the beginning of June. Since then it has captured large swathes of the region, straddling the Iraqi-Syrian border and continues to advance on the Iraqi capital, Baghdad. The leader of ISIS, Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi, announced the creation of an Islamic State, or caliphate, encompassing the lands that the group has taken under its control. He also called on Muslims throughout the world to join the cause and fight for ISIS. "Muslims everywhere, whoever is capable of performing hijrah (emigration) to the Islamic State, then let him do so, because hijrah to the land of Islam is obligatory," he added. So far Iraqi security forces have done little to slow the advance of the Islamist group, with the government appealing for aid from abroad to repel the onslaught. The US has sent 300 military advisors to Iraq to combat the threat and is deploying another 300 troops, helicopters and drones in the area. Saudi Arabia has also deployed 30,000 troops along its border with Iraq, while Russia has sent fighter jets and pilots to support the Baghdad government against ISIS. === Iraq army retakes Saddam's birthplace By Isra'a al-Rubei'i and Maggie Fick BAGHDAD Fri Jul 4, 2014 11:04am EDT Iraqi security forces personnel flash the victory sign during clashes with the al Qaeda-linked Islamic State in Iraq and the Levant (ISIL) in Jurf al-Sakhar, 60 km (40 miles) from the capital February 15, 2014. REUTERS-Alaa Al-Marjani Shi'ite volunteers secure the area from predominantly Sunni militants from the Islamic State, previously called the Islamic State in Iraq and the Levant (ISIL), in the desert region between Kerbala and Najaf, south of Baghdad, July 3, 2014. Iraqi insurgents are preparing for an assault on Baghdad, with sleeper cells planted inside the capital to rise up at 'Zero Hour' and aid fighters pushing in from the outskirts, according to senior Iraqi and U.S. security officials. REUTERS-Alaa Al-Marjani Credit: Reuters/Alaa Al-Marjani Related News Israel ready to help Jordan fend off Iraq insurgents if asked UK imams urge British Muslims to shun Syria and Iraq Top Iraq cleric says lack of new government 'regrettable failure' Israel ready to help Jordan fend off Iraq insurgents if asked Indian nurses abducted in Iraq released, to fly home: India official Kurdish diplomat cool to independence advocacy by Israel (Reuters) - The Iraqi army retook Saddam Hussein's home village overnight, a symbolic victory in its struggle to seize back swathes of the country from Sunni insurgents. Backed by helicopter gunships and helped by Shi'ite Muslim volunteers, the army recaptured the village of Awja in an hour-long battle on Thursday night, according to state media, police and local inhabitants. Awja lies 8 km (5 miles) south of Tikrit, a city that remains in rebel hands since Islamic State, formerly the Islamic State in Iraq and the Levant (ISIL), launched a lightning assault across northern Iraq last month. The offensive to retake Tikrit began on June 28, but the army has still failed to retake the city which fell after the police and army imploded last month in the face of the militant onslaught that also captured Mosul and other major Sunni areas. The military spokesman of embattled Shi'ite Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki said Awja had been "totally cleansed" and 30 militants killed, according to state television. A police source told Reuters three insurgents had been killed. The birthplace of Saddam, Awja benefited hugely from the largesse of the Sunni dictator before his ousting by the U.S. invasion of 2003 and locals remained fiercely loyal to the man who would select his relatives from the area for top posts. Spokesman Qassim Atta said security forces had seized control of several government buildings, including a water treatment plant, but security sources and residents said militants were still holding Iraqi forces from entering Tikrit. The army said it now held the 50-km (30-mile) stretch of highway running north from the city of Samarra - which is 100 km (60 miles) north of Baghdad - to Awja. But the mainly Sunni communities along this corridor remain hostile towards government forces and army convoys continue to come under guerrilla attack. Military officials in the United States, which has deployed advisers to Iraq, believe the Iraqi army will be able to defend Baghdad but struggle to recapture lost territory, mainly because of logistical weaknesses. Government forces could benefit if cracks in the loose alliance of insurgents in Sunni majority areas widens. In the town of Hawija, site of infighting last month between Islamist fighters and Sunni militia forces, members of local Sunni tribes told Reuters that community members had organised to fight against the militants in control of the town. Members of the Al-Obaidi tribe were angered over the militants' seizure of homes of local sheikhs and officials and had formed an armed group that killed five insurgents on patrol in the town on Friday, residents said. "REGRETTABLE FAILURE" The onslaught by Islamic State, an al Qaeda splinter group that has declared a medieval-style Islamic caliphate erasing the borders of Iraq and Syria, and threatened to march on Baghdad, has left the Shi'ite-led government in disarray. Parliament was unable this week to pick a new government to unite the ethnically divided country, something the most senior Shi'ite cleric on Friday called a "regrettable failure". In a sermon delivered by his aide, Sistani Grand Ayatollah Ali al-Sistani called on politicians to avoid "mistakes of the past that have grave consequences for the future of the Iraqis." Sistani reiterated his call for the government to have "broad national acceptance", a formulation many officials interpret as a call for Maliki - blamed by Sunnis for marginalizing them and worsening ethnic tensions - to go. In the governing system set up after Saddam's fall, the prime minister has traditionally been Shi'ite, the speaker of parliament a Sunni and the largely ceremonial president a Kurd. None of the blocs has settled on a nominee. On June 13, Sistani called for Iraqis to take up arms against the insurgency - an unusually assertive declaration for the 83-year-old cleric, who favors a behind-the-scenes role. In the Friday sermon, he reiterated volunteer fighters should be organised through an official framework. The president of Iraq's autonomous Kurdish region asked its parliament on Thursday to plan a referendum on independence. Although they share Baghdad’s determination to face down the Islamist insurgency, many Kurds see the crisis as a golden opportunity to create their own state. (Additional reporting by Raheem Salman and Alexander Dziadosz in Baghdad and Isabel Coles in Arbil; Writing by Maggie Fick; Editing by Robin Pomeroy) ========== Iraq's Maliki rejects pressure to give up premiership Fri, Jul 04 15:03 PM EDT image 1 of 3 By Isra'a al-Rubei'i and Maggie Fick BAGHDAD (Reuters) - Iraqi Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki refused on Friday to give up his quest for a third term in power, defying a chorus of critics demanding his replacement as the country faces an existential threat from Islamist insurgents. Maliki has come under mounting pressure since militants of the group now calling itself the Islamic State rampaged through swathes of the country last month and declared a mediaeval-style caliphate on land they have captured in Iraq and neighboring Syria.
"I will never give up my candidacy for the post of prime minister," Maliki said in a statement read out on state television by an announcer. "I will remain a soldier, defending the interests of Iraq and its people," he added, in the face of what he called terrorists and their allies.
He was referring to the Islamic State and some of the most prominent armed Sunni groups who have taken control of large parts of majority-Sunni regions of Iraq. Maliki's statement will complicate the struggle to form a new government to unite the ethnically and religiously divided country, something parliament failed to achieve this week. It extends a political deadlock made all the more dangerous by the pressing threat to Iraq's territorial integrity. Accused by his critics of exacerbating the country's sectarian split, Maliki has come under immense pressure to step down from his Sunni and Kurdish political foes, and even from some in his own Shi'ite camp. In pointed comments in a Friday sermon read by an aide, the country's leading Shi'ite cleric said parliament's inability to form a new government at its first session was a "regrettable failure". Grand Ayatollah Ali al-Sistani reiterated his call for the government to have "broad national acceptance", a formulation that many officials interpret as a call for Maliki - accused by Sunnis of marginalizing them and worsening ethnic tensions - to go. Iraq's implosion has been watched with intense concern by the United States, which invaded in 2003 to topple dictator Saddam Hussein and withdraw in 2011 after a war that cost almost 4,500 American and tens of thousands of Iraqi lives. Washington has deployed advisers to Iraq. U.S. military officials believe the Iraqi army will be able to defend Baghdad but struggle to recapture lost territory, mainly because of logistical weaknesses. VILLAGE CAPTURED There was some encouragement for the Iraqi army on the battlefield: late on Thursday it scored a symbolic victory by recapturing Awja - the home village of Saddam Hussein - from Sunni insurgents. Backed by helicopter gunships and helped by Shi'ite Muslim volunteers, the army took the village in an hour-long battle, according to state media, police and local inhabitants. Awja lies 8 km (5 miles) south of Tikrit, a city that was captured by the Islamic State, an al Qaeda offshoot formerly known as the Islamic State in Iraq and the Levant (ISIL), as part of its lightning assault last month. Iraqi's police and army imploded in the face of the militant onslaught, which also captured Mosul and other major Sunni areas. A government offensive to retake Tikrit began on June 28, but the army has still failed to win back the city Maliki's military spokesman said Awja had been "totally cleansed" and 30 militants killed, according to state television. A police source told Reuters three insurgents had been killed. The army said it now held the 50-km (30-mile) stretch of highway running north from the city of Samarra - which is 100 km (60 miles) north of Baghdad - to Awja. But the mainly Sunni communities along this corridor remain hostile towards government forces, and army convoys continue to come under guerrilla attack. Government forces could benefit, however, if cracks in the loose alliance of insurgents in Sunni majority areas widen. In the town of Hawija, site of infighting last month between Islamist fighters and Sunni militia forces, members of local Sunni tribes told Reuters that community members had organised to fight against the militants in control of the town. Members of the Al-Obaidi tribe were angered over the militants' seizure of homes of local sheikhs and officials, and had formed an armed group that killed five insurgents on patrol in the town on Friday, residents said. (Additional reporting Raheem Salman, Ned Parker and Alexander Dziadosz in Baghdad and Isabel Coles in Arbil; Writing by Mark Trevelyan; Editing by Andrew Roche) إستفتاءات وبيانات المرجعية الدينية |[ حكم المتطوعين في القوات العسكرية والأمنية في شهر رمضان المبارك من الصوم والصلاة ]| بسم الله الرحمن الرحيم سماحة سيدنا ومولانا آية الله العظمى والحجة الكبرى السيد علي الحسيني السيستاني المحترم مُد ظله الوارف أرفع أسمى آيات السلام والتحية إلى مقام سماحتكم الرفيع سائلاً من الله تعالى لكم دوام التوفيق والعمر المديد والصحة الشاملة والنصر العزيز على جميع الأعداء وخصوصاً في هذه الظروف العسيرة الشديدة راجياً أدعيتكم لهذا العبد الخادم المطيع بدوام التوفيق وحسن العاقبة وزيادة العلم والعمل الصالح. مسألة: ما هو رأي سماحتكم في هؤلاء المتطوعين الذين استجابوا لنداء سماحتكم بالالتحاق بالقوات العسكرية والأمنية، وقد يتم تحويلهم من مكانٍ إلى آخر حسب متطلبات الظروف ، وقد أقبل شهر رمضان المبارك ، فما هو حكم صومهم ، وما هو حكم صلاتهم ؟ أدام الله ظلكم العالي على رؤوس الجميع ، ومتعنا الله تعالى بوجودكم إنه سميع مجيب. الأربعاء ٢٦ شعبان سنة ١٤٣٥هـ الموافق ٢٥ / ٦ / ٢٠١٤م الجواب: بسمه تعالى حكمهم القصر والإفطار كأيّ مسافر آخر إلا فيما استثني كما في الباقي في مكان واحد ثلاثين يوماً متردداً ، والله العالم.. والسلام عليكم ورحمة الله وبركاته. ٢٧ / ٨ / ١٤٣٥ علي الحسيني السيستاني الختم الشريف نددت هيئة علماء المسلمين التي يتزعمها حارث الضاري ,باستهداف القوات العراقية ,مقر من اطلق عليه الضاري لقب “المرجع الديني الشيعي آية الله محمود الحسني الصرخي” في محافظة كربلاء، ووصفته بالاعتداء السافر. ودعى بيان هيئة الضاري ,اهالي جنوب العراق لمؤازرة الصرخي، والمشاركة في التصدي لما وصفه “لظلم حكومة المالكي”، موضحا أن العراق في حاجة لجهود جميع أبنائه “ليتجاوز المحنة التي هو فيها”. وشدد البيان على أن العالم بأجمعه عليه أن يعلم أن “الثورة عراقية بامتياز، وأنها تستهدف الظلم والظالمين”. وقالت الهيئة إن الهجوم -وبحسب المعطيات المتوفرة- جاء بناء على أوامر من نوري المالكي نفسه “في خطوة فُهم منها رغبته في التصعيد ضد هذه المدرسة الفقهية”. وأشاد الضاري بموقف الصرخي، موضحا أنه معروف بمواقفه ضد الاحتلال الأميركي والهيمنة الإيرانية، “وكان وما يزال يندد بسياسات الحكومات المتعاقبة في ظل الاحتلال التي اعتمدت الظلم والتهميش والإقصاء والفساد المالي العام”,بحسب تعبير البيان . وبحسب الهيئة، فقد كان للصرخي كذلك مواقف مؤيدة للحركات السلفية التي انتشرت تحت مسمى “الربيع العربي”، في حين يؤكد بيان الضاري ان الصرخي قد وصف احداث الموصل والانبار بإنها “ثورة شعب مظلوم، وأنها ثورة حق” http://bashaer.iq/permalink/4920.html ملتقى البشائر Iraq chases Baghdad sleeper cells as 'Zero Hour' looms over capital Thu, Jul 03 10:04 AM EDT image By Ned Parker and Oliver Holmes BAGHDAD (Reuters) - Iraqi insurgents are preparing for an assault on Baghdad, with sleeper cells planted inside the capital to rise up at "Zero Hour" and aid fighters pushing in from the outskirts, according to senior Iraqi and U.S. security officials. Sunni fighters have seized wide swathes of the north and west of the country in a three week lightning advance and say they are bearing down on the capital, a city of 7 million people still scarred by the intense street fighting between its Sunni and Shi'ite neighborhoods during U.S. occupation. The government says it is rounding up members of sleeper cells to help safeguard the capital, and Shi'ite paramilitary groups say they are helping the authorities. Some Sunni residents say the crackdown is being used to intimidate them. Iraqis speak of a "Zero Hour" as the moment a previously-prepared attack plan would start to unfold. A high-level Iraqi security official estimated there were 1,500 sleeper cell members hibernating in western Baghdad and a further 1,000 in areas on the outskirts of the capital. He said their goal was to penetrate the U.S.-made "Green Zone" - a fortified enclave of government buildings on the west bank of the Tigris - as a propaganda victory and then carve out enclaves in west Baghdad and in outlying areas. “There are so many sleeper cells in Baghdad,” the official said. “They will seize an area and won’t let anyone take it back... In western Baghdad, they are ready and prepared.” A man who describes himself as a member of one such cell, originally from Anbar province, the mainly Sunni Western area that has been a heartland of the insurgency, said he has been working in Baghdad as a laborer while secretly coordinating intelligence for his group of Sunni fighters. The attack on the capital will come soon, said the man, who asked to be called Abu Ahmed. “We are ready. It can come any minute,” he told Reuters during a meeting in a public place, glancing nervously around to see if anyone was watching. “We will have some surprises,” he said. He pulled his baseball cap down tight on his face and stopped speaking anytime a stranger approached. A portly man in his mid-30s wearing a striped sports shirt, the man said he fought as part of an insurgent group called the 1920 Revolution Brigades during the U.S. occupation and was jailed by the Iraqi government from 2007-2009. He gave up fighting in 2010, tired from war and relatively optimistic about the future. But last year, he took up arms again out of anger at a crackdown against Sunni protesters by the Shi'ite-led government, joining the Military Council, a loose federation of Sunni armed groups and tribal fighters that has since emerged as a full-fledged insurgent umbrella group. While it was not possible to verify all details of his story, Reuters reporters are confident of his identity. Like many Sunni fighters, Abu Ahmed is not a member of the al Qaeda offshoot once known as the Islamic State in Iraq and the Levant, and is ambivalent about the group which launched the latest uprising by seizing the main northern city Mosul on June 10 and shortened its name this week to the Islamic State. Many Sunni armed groups turned against al Qaeda during the U.S. occupation but are now rallying to ISIL's rebellion against the Shi'ite led government, though some say they deplore ISIL's tactics of killing civilians and branding Shi'ites heretics. Abu Ahmed said his own group, which includes former officers in Sunni dictator Saddam Hussein's disbanded army, supports some aims of ISIL. "There are some good members of ISIL and some bad," he said. Of the good ones: "We have the same cause." SECURITY PLANS The government says it can protect the capital and has spies who are tracking sleeper agents like Abu Ahmed to round them up. "We have ample security plans. The sleeper cells are not only in Baghdad but in all other provinces and they are waiting for any chance to carry out attacks," said Lieutenant-General Qassim Atta, the prime minister's military spokesman. “We keep those cells under careful and daily scrutiny and follow up. We have arrested some of them. We have dispatched intelligence members to follow up those cells closely and we have special plans to counter their activities.” An attempt to take Baghdad, a majority Shi'ite city with heavily fortified areas, would be a huge task for a rebellion that has so far concentrated on controlling Sunni areas. Many Baghdadis, Sunnis as well as Shi'ites, say they would fight an insurgency led by militants who want to establish a caliphate. The Iraqi capital was the principle battlefield in Iraq's worst sectarian bloodletting from 2006-2007, with tens of thousands of people, mostly civilians, killed in fighting between Sunni insurgents, Shi'ite militias and U.S. troops. Then, millions of people fled the capital and millions more fled homes within it, turning previously mixed neighborhoods into fortresses dominated by one sect or the other. Although it has been at least six years since warring Sunni insurgents and Shi'ite militia last held open sway over whole sections of Baghdad, the capital has remained vulnerable to infiltration by ISIL suicide bombers, who strike Shi'ite and government targets almost daily. A senior U.S. intelligence official said Washington had evidence that ISIL was in the process of configuring its forces for a Baghdad assault using a plan that would include coordinated ISIL suicide strikes. However, other U.S. officials believe ISIL could overextend itself were it to try to take all of Baghdad. They say the more likely scenario would be for fighters to seize a Sunni district and cause disruption with bomb attacks. ISIL fighters insist that their plan is to take the capital and topple Baghdad’s political elite. “We will receive orders about Zero Hour,” said Abu Sa'da, an ISIL fighter reached by telephone in Mosul. He said the group had cells in Baghdad and communicated with them by e-mail despite the government's sporadic blocking of Internet in an effort to disrupt the militants. CAT AND MOUSE For now, it is a cat and mouse game in the city. Abu Ahmed said the insurgency had agents in the Iraqi security forces, government ministries and inside the Green Zone. Men like him try to dodge an intensified campaign by the security forces and Shi'ite militias to round up conspirators. There are "more detentions right now especially of ex-military officers and those who had been in American jails," he said. “Their houses are raided by special police and militias, then we never hear about them again. We check the jails, they are not there.” So far, they’ve managed to free 12 of them, at least one with the help of a 20,000 U.S. dollar bribe. He blames harsh treatment by the Iraqi government for forcing them to war, opening his shirt to reveal two dark scars on his chest he says came from interrogations in custody. There was no way to verify his allegations of abuse by the security forces. The prospect of an assault on Baghdad has led Shi'ite paramilitaries, mainly underground since 2008, to mobilize this year to help the authorities fight ISIL. Asaib Ahl Al-Haq, a Shi’ite group Washington believes is funded and armed by Iran, says it has helped round up insurgent agents in Baghdad. The movement says it is taking orders from the government and responding to a fatwa by Shi'ite clergy three weeks ago calling on citizens to help the armed forces. The insurgents' "goal is to control Baghdad and also to forestall the political process in Baghdad. They will try to execute this plot with their sleeper cells,” said Asaib Ahl al-Haq spokesman Ahmed al-Kinani. “We arrest them and hand them over to security forces.” Many Sunnis in Baghdad say such activity has brought back memories of the last decade's civil war, when Shi'ite militias and Sunni insurgents prowled the streets, capturing and killing the innocent under the excuse of rooting out terrorist foes. Now people are disappearing again. A Sunni woman who spoke on condition of anonymity because she feared retribution from Asaib Ahl al-Haq, said her brother was first held by police for 13 days in April. Eight hours after he was released, masked Asaib fighters stormed into their house and took him. "Their faces were covered. They had no number plates on their cars," she said. That was the last time she saw him. (Additional reporting by Mark Hosenball in Washington; Editing by Peter Graff) ================ Has ISIS Killed Its Golden Goose? Posted on 26 June 2014. Tags: CBI, ISIS, Mosul Has ISIS Killed Its Golden Goose? By Mark DeWeaver. While it has long been assumed that ISIS gets most of its money from donors in the Gulf, recently declassified documents suggest otherwise. Researchers at the RAND Corporation found that donations actually accounted for less than 5% of the group’s funding during the period from 2005 to 2010. (See this article.) The city of Mosul, rather than Saudi Arabia or Kuwait, turns out to have been, as one researcher put it, “the area that was keeping the group afloat”—through extortion rackets, kidnapping, and robbery. Following the fall of the city on June 10, it’s hard to see how this can continue to be the case. Out of a population of 1.8 million, the BBC has reported that 500,000 have fled. Presumably the wealthiest residents will not be returning any time soon. It is also unclear how Mosul’s remaining state employees are going to be paid. Obviously it won’t be possible to extort money from businesses without customers or collect ransoms from people who can’t afford to leave town. You can’t get blood from a stone after all. It’s not even clear that ISIS could have stolen as much US$ 420 million from the Mosul branch of the Central Bank of Iraq (or, in some accounts, from a combination of the CBI and private banks). While this figure has been widely reported in the media, some analysts have dismissed it as wildly exaggerated. In any case, looting can be only a short-term source of funds. Once the city’s homes and businesses have been stripped of cash and salable assets, this bonanza will come to an end as well. ISIS apparently had a pretty good thing going in Mosul, where it could help itself to a share of the economy of one of Iraq’s largest cities with all but complete impunity. Once this golden goose has stopped laying, I wonder if they won’t end up concluding that they should have left well enough alone. === Iraq's Maliki hopes for government deal by next week Wed, Jul 02 16:27 PM EDT By Ahmed Rasheed and Alexander Dziadosz BAGHDAD (Reuters) - Iraqi Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki, who is fighting for his political life as a Sunni insurgency fractures the country, said on Wednesday he hoped parliament could form a new government in its next session after the first collapsed in discord. Baghdad can ill afford a long delay. Large swathes of the north and west have fallen under the control of an al Qaeda splinter group that has declared it is setting up a "caliphate" and has vowed to march on the capital. Yet the mounting concern and pressure from the United States, Iran, the United Nations and Iraq's own Shi'ite clerics have done little to end the paralyzing divisions between Iraq's main ethnic and sectarian blocs. Sunnis and Kurds walked out of parliament's first session on Tuesday, complaining that Shi'ites had failed to nominate a prime minister; they see Maliki as the main obstacle to resolving the crisis and hope he will step aside. Under the system put in place after the United States toppled Saddam Hussein in 2003, the premiership is traditionally given to a Shi'ite, while the speaker of the house has been a Sunni and the president, a largely ceremonial role, has been a Kurd. In his weekly televised address, Maliki said he hoped parliament could next Tuesday get past its "state of weakness". "God willing, in the next session we will overcome it with cooperation and agreement and openness," he said. "There is no security without complete political stability." But it is far from clear when leaders in Baghdad might reach a consensus. All the main ethnic blocs are beset by internal divisions, and none has yet decided who to put forward for its designated position. Sunnis and Kurds say they want Shi'ites to choose a premier before they announce their nominees, while the Shi'ites say the Sunnis should first name the speaker. "Each bloc has its own problems now," said Muhannad Hussam, a politician and aide to leading Sunni lawmaker Saleh al-Mutlaq. If the Shi'ite bloc failed to replace Maliki, he said, there was a risk Sunni lawmakers would abandon the political process altogether. "There would be no more Iraq," he said. NEED TO BE PATIENT Longtime Maliki ally Sami Askari said forming a government could take until the end of Ramadan, the Muslim fasting month. But he played down the risk of the state collapsing, saying Maliki's caretaker government would continue to function. "The reality is that we need to be patient," Askari said. "We will have a government in the end -- but not soon." Residents of Baghdad were increasingly frustrated with the familiar sight of officials squabbling while the country burns.
"I'm so angry with all these politicians," said Dhamee Sattar Shafiq, a university statistics professor, shopping in a mixed neighborhood of Sunnis and Shi'ites. "This country is headed for disaster and these men are just working for their own causes."
Down the road, Najaa Hassan, a 54-year-old carpenter, was similarly irritated. "Democracy has brought us many problems that we really don't need," he said. Outside the capital, fighting flared again. Medical sources and witnesses said at least 11 people, including women and children, had been killed when Iraqi helicopters attacked Shirqat, 300 km (190 miles) north of Baghdad. Witnesses said the helicopters were targeting a municipal building where militants were sheltering, and that the air strike also hit three nearby houses. "We have received 11 bodies and 18 wounded from the helicopters' bombardment. Some children are in critical condition," said Hamid al-Jumaili, a doctor in Shirqat's hospital. The prime minister's military spokesman, Lieutenant General Qassim Atta, made no specific mention of the incident but listed Shirqat as one of several locations where the air force had been active during the past 24 hours. The government faces a formidable foe in the Islamic State, which shortened its name from the Islamic State in Iraq and the Levant this week and named its leader "caliph", the historical title of successors of the Prophet Mohammad who ruled the Muslim world. "RED CIRCLE" In his first comments since that declaration, the group's leader Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi on Tuesday called on Muslims across the world to take up arms and flock to the "caliphate", which spans territory that has fallen out of governmental control in Syria and Iraq. The Islamic State has been working with an amalgam of other Sunni groups including Islamist militias, tribal fighters and former army officers and loyalists of Saddam Hussein, many of whom do not share its rigid ideology but are united by a sense of persecution under Maliki's Shi'ite-led government. Maliki on Wednesday offered an amnesty to tribes who had taken up arms against the government, but excluded those who had "killed and shed blood". The United Nations said on Tuesday more than 2,400 Iraqis had been killed in June alone, making the month by far the deadliest since the height of sectarian warfare during the U.S. "surge" offensive in 2007. Maliki's government, bolstered by civilian volunteers and Shi'ite militias, has managed to stop the militant advance short of the capital, but has been unable to take back the cities that government forces abandoned. The army failed last week to take back Tikrit, 160 km (100 miles) north of Baghdad.
Even if Maliki steps aside - something that is still far from certain - few in Baghdad expect that will mean a swift resolution to the crisis. “His departure would not solve the problem, because Sunnis and Shi’ites will stay at odds with each other and the animosity will continue," said Haidar Jumaa Zeboun, a 31-year-old construction worker in the district of Arasat.
Beyond that, there is deep strife within both the Sunni and Shi'ite communities. Police and army in the Shi'ite shrine city of Karbala on Wednesday attempted to arrest a controversial cleric, Mahmoud al-Sarkhi, prompting hours of clashes with his followers, said local police spokesman Colonel Ahmed Al-Hasnawi. (Reporting by Isra' al-Rubei'i, Ahmed Rasheed, Maggie Fick and Alexander Dziadosz in Baghdad; Writing by Alexander Dziadosz; Editing by Kevin Liffey) ========== UPDATE: Kurdistan sidesteps Baghdad legal challenge to exports UPDATE: Kurdistan sidesteps Baghdad legal challenge to exports A worker checks the valve gears of pipes linked to oil tanks at Turkey's Mediterranean port of Ceyhan, which is run by state-owned pipeline company Botas. (UMIT BEKTAS/Reuters) By Patrick Osgood, Ben Van Heuvelen and Ben Lando of Iraq Oil Report Published Saturday, June 28th, 2014 EDITOR'S NOTE: This story has been updated from its original version to include the Oil Ministry's official response to the KRG and the full text of both press releases, as well as a translation of the Iraqi Federal Supreme Court's June 24 decision.ERBIL – Iraq's autonomous Kurdistan Regional Government (KRG) celebrated a June 24 decision of the Federal Supreme Court of Iraq, which declined to issue a temporary ban on independent Kurdish oil exports.The court did not rule on the questi... Akkas field unguarded in Anbar fight Akkas field unguarded in Anbar fight An Iraqi army vehicle secures the Akkas gas field in the western desert of Iraq October 19, 2010. (ALI AL-MASHHADANI/Reuters) By Jamal Naji and Ben Lando of Iraq Oil Report Published Tuesday, July 1st, 2014 Government security forces have stopped guarding the Akkas gas field, in Anbar province, although militants have not yet shown interest in controlling the fledgling facilities. Over the past year, the Korean gas firm Kogas has begun preliminary work there, building a power plant, roads, housing, and offices. At the same time, however, a Sunni protest movement has metastasized into an insurgency led by the Islamic State of Iraq and al-Sham (ISIS), which on Sunday formally declared Anbar provin... ======================== "BP’s share [in Rumaila] increased to 47.6% & CNPC’s to 46.4%, while Iraq’s was reduced to 6%. Iraq had previously 25% share." Tuesday, 16 September 2014 Iraqi oil from propaganda to reality A series of revisions to production targets will result in lower oil output from Iraq than originally planned. On 4 September, Iraq reached an agreement with BP and the Chinese oil company CNPC to lower the planned production target for Rumaila, the country’s largest oil field. The agreement is not a one-off—it is part of a series of revisions to the targets that had been originally agreed on with international oil companies in 2009. The revisions will lead to a sharp fall in Iraqi oil output relative to the original unrealistic plans. The BP/CNPC deal does not come as a surprise. For months international oil companies have been negotiating lower production targets for the fields they run. ExxonMobil agreed with the Iraqi government on a lower production target for the West Qurna-1 field. Lukoil did the same for West Qurna-2. Likewise for Eni and CNPC, the operators of Zubair and Halfaya, respectively. Only Shell is yet to agree with the Iraqi government on a new output target for the Majnoon field. It is lobbying for a reduction from 1.8 million barrels per day (mb/d) to only 1.o mb/d, but the Iraqi government is holding out for 1.2 mb/d. (The table below provides a summary of the original and revised production targets by field.) Such broad revisions to the original agreements indicate a flaw in the way the contracts had been awarded. The process involved oil companies submitting bids specifying: (1) production target (the peak level of output the company would eventually produce from the field); and (2) remuneration for developing the field and reaching the target. Iraq then chose the bids with the highest production targets (since they result in more revenue) and lowest fees (less cost). But as pointed out by James Hamilton, these auctions encouraged oil companies to exaggerate production targets in order to win the contracts. Once awarded, they began negotiating lower targets to move from “propaganda to the reality”. What does the new reality hold for Iraq? The path of future Iraqi oil production will be significantly lower than originally planned. Instead of producing 11.0 mb/d from the six fields listed in the table above by 2020, Iraq has to settle for only 7.2 mb/d. And even this target looks overly optimistic. To achieve it, Iraq has to be more stable and efficient in the next six years than it has been in the last fi The production loss is even bigger if we include the fields of Qayara and Nejma, which were projected to add 230 kb/d by 2020. Sonangol, the Angolan company which had won the contract to develop them, pulled out of the country in February due to deteriorating security situation. The fields are now under the control of the Islamic State of Iraq and al-Sham, and there is little hope for production growth from either of Finally, while BP/CNPC were not alone in negotiating a revised production target, the agreement unusually included raising their shares in Rumaila. BP’s share increased to 47.6% and CNPC’s to 46.4%, while Iraq’s stake was reduced to 6%. Iraq had previously maintained a 25% share in all oil fields, and it is not clear whether this reduction is unique to the BP/CNPC agreement or if it also applies to the other revised deals. Iraq might be moving from propaganda closer to reality, but transparency is still in short supply. ====== Iraq makes landmark payment to IOC Iraq makes landmark payment to IOC Michael Townshend (L), president of BP Iraq, walks with an official of Iraq's South Oil Company at the Rumaila oil field in Basra province on May 24, 2010. (ATEF HASSAN/Reuters) By Ben Lando of Iraq Oil Report Published Wednesday, May 18th, 2011 BP has lifted a 2-million-barrel tanker of oil as payment for its work in the massive Rumaila oil field, the first payout to any of the international oil companies (IOCs) contracted to make Iraq the biggest producer ever. IOCs and investors have paid close attention to the Rumaila project, the most advanced of Iraq’s new oil deals, as a leading indicator of how foreign companies might fare in the country’s oil sector. The payment is a promising achievement for a project that has faced man... ==== Q&A: Falah Mustafa Bakir Q&A: Falah Mustafa Bakir Falah Bakir Mustafa, Head of the Kurdistan region's Department of Foreign Relations. (Photo credit: UK Foreign and Commonwealth Office) As Iraq's central government falters under an onslaught of insurgents, the Kurdistan region appears to be moving swiftly toward independence.Kurdish Peshmerga forces have pushed to the edges of nearly all of the territory that has been disputed between the Kurdistan Regional Government (KRG) and Baghdad over the past 11 years. Kurdish leaders say they are not going to be drawn back.The KRG now has a tighter grip on territory it had already contracted for oil development – such as with ... = Department of State ‏@StateDept · 45m This morning, @JohnKerry met with Dr. Fuad Hussein, Chief of Staff to Presidency of Kurdistan Regional Government. ==== Sunnis, Kurds shun Iraq parliament Tue, Jul 01 17:09 PM EDT image 1 of 5 By Raheem Salman and Oliver Holmes BAGHDAD (Reuters) - Sunnis and Kurds walked out of the first session of Iraq's new parliament on Tuesday after Shi'ites failed to name a prime minister to replace Nuri al-Maliki, dimming any prospect of an early national unity government to save Iraq from collapse. The United States, United Nations, Iran and Iraq's own Shi'ite clergy have pushed hard for politicians to come up with an inclusive government to hold the fragmenting country together as Sunni insurgents bear down on Baghdad. The leader of the al Qaeda offshoot spearheading the insurgency, the Islamic State, has declared a "caliphate" in the lands it has seized in Iraq and Syria. Its leader vowed on Tuesday to avenge what he said were wrongs committed against Muslims worldwide. Despite the urgency, the Iraqi parliament's first session since its election in April collapsed when Sunnis and Kurds refused to return from a recess to the parliamentary chamber after Shi'ites failed to name a prime minister. Parliament is not likely to meet again for at least a week, leaving Iraq in political limbo and Maliki clinging to power as a caretaker, rejected by Sunnis and Kurds. Under a governing system put in place after the removal of Saddam Hussein, the prime minister has always been a member of the Shi'ite majority, the speaker of parliament a Sunni and the largely ceremonial president a Kurd. The Shi'ite bloc known as the National Alliance, in which Maliki's State of Law coalition is the biggest group, has met repeatedly in recent days to bargain over the premiership but has so far been unable either to endorse Maliki for a third term or to name an alternative. Fewer than a third of lawmakers returned from the recess. Sunni parties said they would not put forward their candidate for speaker until the Shi'ites pick a premier. The Kurds have also yet to nominate a president. Osama al-Nujaifi, a leading Sunni politician, former speaker and strong foe of Maliki, warned that "without a political solution, the sound of weapons will be loud, and the country will enter a black tunnel". He said his bloc did not have a candidate for a speaker so far and was waiting to see who the National Alliance would nominate for prime minister. "If there is a new policy with a new prime minister, we will deal with them positively. Otherwise the country will go from bad to worse," Nujaifi said. Shi'ite lawmakers sought to shift blame to the Sunni and Kurdish blocs, saying the premiership was the last position to be named in the constitutionally-defined process. Mehdi al-Hafidh, parliament's oldest member who is tasked by the constitution with chairing the legislature's meetings until a speaker is named, said the next session would be held in a week, if agreement was possible after discussions. FIGHTING RAGES Baghdad can ill-afford further delays. Government troops have been battling for three weeks against fighters led by the group formerly known as the Islamic State in Iraq and the Levant (ISIL). This week it shortened its name to the Islamic State and declared its leader "caliph" - historic title of successors of the Prophet Mohammad who ruled the whole Muslim world. Speaking for the first time since then, the group's leader Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi vowed revenge for what he said were wrongs committed against Muslims, calling on fighters to avenge them "Your brothers, on every piece of this earth, are waiting for your rescue," Baghdadi purportedly said in an audio message that was posted online, naming a string of countries from Central African Republic to Burma where he said violations were being committed against Muslims. "By Allah, we will take revenge, by Allah we will take revenge, even if after a while," he said in the Ramadan message. Baghdadi also called on Muslims to immigrate to the "Islamic State", saying it was a duty. Fighting has raged in recent days near former dictator Saddam Hussein's home city, Tikrit, north of Baghdad. ISIL also controls suburbs just west of the capital and clashes have erupted to the south, leaving the city of 7 million confronting threats from three sides. The United Nations said on Tuesday more than 2,400 Iraqis had been killed in June alone, making the month by far the deadliest since the height of sectarian warfare during the U.S. "surge" offensive in 2007. In a reminder of that conflict, mortars fell near a Shi'ite holy shrine in Samarra which was bombed in 2006, unleashing the sectarian bloodshed that killed tens of thousands over the next two years. Samarra, north of Baghdad, is now held by Baghdad's troops with ISIL in the surrounding countryside. Violence also struck the capital, where police found two bodies with their hands tied behind their back and bullet wounds in the head and chest in the mainly Shi'ite neighborhood of Shula, police and medical sources said. A bomb went off in Baghdad's western Jihad district, killing two passersby and wounding six more, police and medics said. The insurgents' advance has triggered pledges of support for Baghdad from both Washington and Tehran. On Tuesday, Iran's deputy foreign minister said his country had not received any request for weapons from Baghdad but was ready to supply them if asked. Iraq also flew Russian-made Sukhoi Su-25 jets delivered on Saturday for the first time, state television reported, although there was no independent confirmation. Saudi Arabia pledge $500 million in humanitarian aid for Iraqis to be disbursed through U.N. agencies, a Saudi Press Agency statement said. SHOUTING MATCH Parliament opened its first session with an orchestra playing the national anthem and the recitation of a Quranic verse emphasizing unity. Hafidh called on lawmakers to confront the crisis. "The security setback that has beset Iraq must be brought to a stop, and security and stability have to be regained all over Iraq, so that it can head down the path in the right way toward the future," he said. Lawmakers stood at the arrival of Maliki, who waved to his long-time foe Nujaifi and shook hands with Saleh al-Mutlaq, another leading Sunni politician. But anger among the three main ethnic and sectarian groups soon flared when a Kurdish lawmaker accused the government of withholding salaries for the Kurds' autonomous region. Kadhim al-Sayadi, a lawmaker in Maliki's list, shouted back that Kurds were taking down Iraqi flags.
"The Iraqi flag is an honor above your head. Why do you take it down?" he shouted. "The day will come when we will crush your heads."
The dramatic advance by ISIL, which has dominated swathes of territory in an arc from Aleppo in Syria to near the western edge of Baghdad in Iraq, has stunned Iraq and the West. The group and allied militants seized border posts, oilfields and northern Iraq's main northern city Mosul in a lightning offensive in June. Other Iraqi Sunni armed groups which resent what they see as persecution under Maliki are backing the insurgency. Kurds have taken advantage of the advance to seize territory, including the city of Kirkuk, which they see as their historic capital and which sits above huge oil deposits. Results of April's elections initially suggested parliament would easily confirm Maliki in power for a third term. But with lawmakers taking their seats after the collapse of the army in the north, politicians face a more fundamental task of staving off a breakup of the state. Maliki's foes blame him for the rapid advance of the Sunni insurgents. Although Maliki's State of Law coalition won the most seats, it still needs allies to govern. Sunnis and Kurds demand that he go, arguing he favors his own sect, inflaming the resentment that fuels the insurgency. The United States has not publicly called for Maliki to leave power but has demanded a more inclusive government in Baghdad as the price for more aggressive help. DEADLINE PASSES Washington has so far pledged 300 mainly special forces advisers and said on Monday it was sending a further 300 troops to help secure the embassy and Baghdad airport. Maliki's government, with the help of Shi'ite sectarian militias, has managed to stop the militants short of the capital but has been unable to take back cities its forces abandoned. The army attempted last week to take back Tikrit but could not recapture the city, 160 km (100 miles) north of Baghdad, where ISIL fighters had machine-gunned scores of soldiers in shallow graves after capturing it on June 12. Residents said fighting raged on the city's southern outskirts on Monday. On Friday, in an unusual political intervention, Grand Ayatollah Ali al-Sistani, Iraq's most senior Shi'ite cleric, called on political blocs to name the prime minister, president and speaker before parliament met on Tuesday. Now that deadline has passed, a prominent Shi'ite lawmaker told Reuters he expected Sistani to keep up the pressure. Maliki's close friends say he does not want to relinquish power, although senior members of his State of Law coalition have told Reuters an alternative premier from within his party was being discussed. Rival Shi'ite groups also have candidates. Many worry that a drawn-out process will waste precious time in confronting the militants, who have vowed to advance on Baghdad. A Shi'ite lawmaker, speaking on condition of anonymity, said: "Things are bad. The political process is not commensurate with the speed of military developments." (Additional reporting by Isra' al-Rubei'i, Ahmed Rasheed, Ned Parker and Alexander Dziadosz in Baghdad and Gabriela Baczynska in Moscow and Yara Bayoumy in Dubai; Writing by Alexander Dziadosz; Editing by Peter Graff, Paul Taylor and Anna Willard) ‫#‏هام‬:نص فتوى السيد السيستاني(دام ظله) بخصوص الصيام لمن هم في ساحات الجهاد (الرجاء نشرها لتصل الى أخوانكم المقصودين منها). صوم المجاهدين في فتوى السيد السيستاني دام ظله إلى أبنائنا المجاهدين في ساحات الجهاد، تحية إكبار طيّبة وبعد: مراعاة لوضعكم ومعاناتكم في مواجهة صعوبة الصوم مع شدّة الحرارة وثقل السلاح، تم إرسال الإستفتاء التالي لمكتب المرجعية الدينية العليا في النجف الأشرف المتمثلة بسماحة المرجع الديني الأعلى السيد السيستاني دام ظله: نص الإستفتاء: سماحة المرجع الديني الأعلى الإمام السيد السيستاني دامت بركاتكم السلام عليكم ورحمة الله وبركاته بالنسبة لإخواننا المجاهدين في الجيش العراقي الباسل تمرّ عليهم في أيام رمضان المبارك مع الصوم الواجب شدّة من الحرِّ والتعب الذي يبلغ إلى الحرج أو الضعف الشديد ـ على الأقل ـ في مواجهة العدو فبعضهم على سفر ولم تتحقق عندهم نيّة الإقامة في مكان ما وهم من سقط عنهم وجوب الصوم لقوله تعالى: فمن كان منكم مريضا أو على سفر فعدة من أيام أُخر... وبعضهم في الحضر يقاتلون في مُدنهم ومناطقهم وهم ممن يُصلّون صلاة كاملة تامّة. والسؤال هو: ما هو حكم صوم المجاهدين في الجيش العراقي مع فرض الإحتياج لوجودهم في صفوف جيشنا الباسل إذا ما كانوا في الحضر ويُصيبهم الحرج أو الضعف الشديد بسبب العطش الشديد وثقل السلاح والحديد، فهل يسقط عنهم الصوم مع وجود الحاجة لهم في ساحات الجهاد؟ هذا ونسأل الله سبحانه أن يمنّ على عراقنا العزيز بالسلامة والأمن وأن يُفرّج عن إخوتنا المجاهدين وينصرهم بنصره الذي وعد المؤمنين به، وأن يُطيل في عُمر مرجعنا الأعلى الإمام السيد السيستاني دام ظله إنه نعم المجيب. والسلام عليكم وعلى عباد الله الصالحين ورحمة الله وبركاته جمع من طلبة الحوزة العلمية ـ مشهد المقدّسة نــــص الجـــواب: باسمه تعالى لا يختلفون عن غيرهم فإن كانوا على سفر فلا يصح منهم الصوم. وإذا اشتد عليهم العطش والضعف بحيث لم يتمكنوا من الإستمرار في أداء الواجب جــــــاز لـهــم الإفطــار بمقــدار الضــرورة ويقضــونه بعــد ذلــك. ودمتم موفقين www.sistani.org مكتب السيد السيستاني (دام ظله) - قسم الاستفتاءات الرجاء نشر الإستفتاء ليصل إلى إخواننا المؤمنين في ساحات القتال ليعلموا حكمهم في جواز تناول المفطر ـ طعام أو شراب ـ بما تقتضيه الحاجة والضرورة. والله المسدد للصواب. ملتقى البشائر ..http://bashaer.iq/permalink/4770.html # Important: Sistani fatwa (bloody shadow) regarding fasting in arenas of Jihad (please post them to your intended them). Fasting in Sistani's opinion as the canopy to our Mujahideen in the arenas of Jihad, a tribute and after: taking into account your situation and your suffering in the face of difficult fasting with the heat and the weight of the weapon, the referendum has been sent to the Office of Supreme religious reference in Najaf of the Supreme religious authority by allowing Mr. Sistani as the marquee: the text of the referendum: the Supreme religious authority Imam eminence Sistani as your blessings peace, mercy and blessings of God for our brothers in the Iraqi army with their valiant in the days of Ramadan with Fasting must be free of fatigue which amounts to embarrassed or at least very weak in the face of the enemy, some travel and not have the intention to stay somewhere they fell their obligation of fasting for meaning: whoever of you is sick or on a journey, several of the latest ... And some in urban fighting in their cities and regions, who will complete the full prayer. The question is: what is the ruling on the fasting of the Mujahideen in Iraq with army imposing a requirement for being in the ranks of the valiant army if they were urban and be embarrassed or very weak because of the extreme thirst and heavy arms, iron, do their fasting falls with a need for them in the arenas of Jihad? This we ask God Almighty to bless the iraqna Aziz of safety and security and to release our brothers and help them by the believers, and to prolong the lifetime of our reference top Imam Sistani long canopy that yes the respondent. Peace be upon you and Allah's righteous and God's mercy and blessings collection of Hawza scene holy text of the answer: his name exalted are no different from others that were on travel is not valid them fast. If they increased thirst and so weak that they could not continue on duty c BL for the breakfast or by necessary and otherwise discolors subsequently. And may you always be conciliators www.sistani.org Sistani's Office (as shadow)-referendum referendums section please post to our faithful in the battlefields to teach in that consumes something to eat or drink as needed and necessary. God paid for the right. Bashayer. Forum.http://bashaer.iq/permalink/4770.html =============================================== The New Iraqi Parliament Opens Posted by Reidar Visser on Tuesday, 1 July 2014 20:39 So the new Iraqi parliament met today after having promised Iraqi voters, the Shiite religious authorities, and the international community that they would do so. Unsurprisingly, they did little else than meet. Following the inaugural formalities, Mahdi al-Hafez, the “speaker of age”(the oldest MP who chairs the first session), introduced the only point of substance on the agenda: The election of a parliament speaker and his two deputies. At that point, a Kurdish MP found the time had come to complain about the refusal of Baghdad to compromise on the KRG share of the budget. This rather blunt violation of the official agenda prompted heckling and even blunter derogatory verbal counter attacks. Speaker Hafez, who represents the small and secular Iraqi coalition with both Sunni and Shiite members, proposed a half-hour break to calm tensions and explore the opportunities for electing a speaker. When the session resumed, many of the 255 deputies that had been present at the outset failed to show up. It was suggested that there was no longer a quorum (165 MPs); indeed some reports suggested the number of deputies present had fallen as low as 70-100. What apparently had happened was that Kurds and Sunni Arabs deliberately boycotted – the Kurds probably to some extent offended by the verbal altercation about its attempt to put budget issues on the agenda, but also with suggestions that both protested what they saw as a failure by the Shia alliance to come up with a replacement candidate for Nuri al-Maliki as premier. What was clear, at any rate, was that there was no speaker candidate. Accordingly, there wasn’t much to do except agree the next session, and it fell to the mainly Shiite Islamist MPs that remained in the session to work this out together with Hafez, the temporary speaker. To Hafez’s credit, he did not go along with suggestions by Ibrahim al-Jaafari that this could wait until after Ramadan. Instead, another meeting next Tuesday, 8 July, was fixed. A couple of comments on the constitutional and legal aspects of this. Firstly, there has been much talk about the ability of the Iraqi supreme court to speed up the government formation process, based on its intervention back in 2010. Sadly, though, the ability of the court to do much in practice is probably limited. In 2010, its ruling against parliament was focused on its open-ended and everlasting (jalsa maftuha) session. Iraqi politicians have found an easy solution to this by simply ending today’s session without results and then calling a new one. The truth is, the supreme court cannot force Iraqi parliamentarians to remain within the parliament building until they find a solution, papal conclave-style. What actually happened in 2010 was not that the court suddenly became extremely powerful, but that its ruling coincided with the first real signs of progress on the political front after the Sadrists agreed to a second Maliki term. Second, it should be stressed that constitutionally speaking, the only thing the Iraqi parliament needs to agree on at its first meeting is the speaker. The practice of agreeing on all three top positions – i.e. speaker, president and premier – is not rooted in the constitution. Rather, it is a tradition that has come into use on two previous occasions in 2010 and 2006. Sunnis and Kurds who are using this precedent to force the Shiite alliance to come up with a replacement of Maliki should be aware of this aspect, since for the first time the Shiites in the new parliament hold the numbers (170 plus) to proceed with elections of a speaker to suit their own interests even if the main Sunni and Kurdish parties continue to boycott. (It should be noted, though, that the debate about quorum or no quorum is immaterial to the speakership vote, which explicitly demands an absolute majority to be valid in any case per the Iraqi constitution.) This point is also important because there seems to be a gross disconnect between the actual Iraqi political process and the media description of it. Consider, once more, the move to squeeze out Maliki, which is seen as a foregone conclusion in all Western and most Arab media. Compare it with the composition of the last key Shia alliance meeting on the subject on Monday, where those present consisted of 6 potential Maliki loyalists (Maliki himself plus Khudayr al-Khuzaie, Hadi al-Ameri, Hashem al-Hashemi, Faleh al-Fayyad and Ibrahim al-Jaafari) whereas only 2 (Ammar al-Hakim and Karar al-Khafaji) are known to be wholeheartedly against a third term. With a situation like that, a more realistic interpretation is that the tug-of-war inside the Shiite alliance may take rather longer than some on the outside seem ready to admit. ===========================================================

Tuesday, November 08, 2011

MIND BOGGLING

Independent oil and gas explorer Gulf Keystone Petroleum revised the reserve estimate at its Shaikan oil discovery in Iraq upward to 10.5 billion barrels. "This upgrade of the Shaikan mean oil resources from 7.5 (billion) to 10.5 billion of barrels of gross oil-in-place is a result of the increase... FULL ARTICLE AT UNITED PRESS INTERNATIONAL



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bonobo77
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Shaikan alone now boasts 1.5 barrels of oil (P50) for each and every human being on this planet. That’s $150 in the pocket of every one of the globe’s 7 billion inhabitants.

Our additional 3 billion barrels of ‘$100’ oil have added just 9.4p per share, or roughly £80m to our market cap. In other words, the market is valuing each one of those P50 barrels of oil at 4.3 cents.

Assuming 35% RF / 54.4% WI / Tax, etc. those additional 3 billion P50 barrels should, in theory, add 159p to our SP and increase our Market Cap by £1.36bn ($2.19bn) … not £80m!

GKP’s total mean (P50) OIP has moved to 14.41 billion barrels. This gives us a NAV of 689p, or a 381% increase on current SP.

According to the BP Statistical Review of World Energy, Iraq has the world's fifth largest oil reserves with about 143 billion barrels of oil, or about 8.5 per cent of the world's share. GKP’s total P50 OIP is now approaching a figure that equates to 1% of all the oil in the world.

China's total oil reserves amount to 18.2 billion barrels. Its total oil production stands at 4 million barrels per day. Don’t tell me Sinopec aren’t crunching the numbers on GKP. Our acquisition would be of great national significance to the Chinese.

From Exxon’s 2010 results - their reserves base sat at 24.8bn oil equivalent barrels. To put it in perspective, we now have a 90% chance of extracting ONE THIRD of Exxon’s total reserves, from just Shaikan, and that’s BEFORE we convert any of our gas into ‘oil equivalent barrels’. Exxon are capitalized at $380bn.

============

DGA, Ryder Scott, OIP and Petrophysics

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Votes for this Posting Voted 40 times.
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BBBS I have told you before, don’t let slip the family secrets lol! The oil industry is incestuous ((Having committed incest.
Improperly intimate or interconnected: ))and consultant petrophysicists are but one example.

You jest((A playful or amusing act; a prank)) about Rick’s use of a water saturation cut off but of course the other cut off applied in the calculation of net pay is porosity. I guess there are two key questions:

1. What truly is the low porosity value that should be used to eliminate some reservoir rock from the net pay count?
2. Has Rick eliminated any reservoir rock as being net pay on the basis of water saturation even though its porosity exceeds the porosity criteria for net pay?

My understanding is that GKP has produced on at least one occasion significant quantities of oil from a fractured interval that does not meet the current net pay criteria. I am not sure if they been able to show from the well test analysis that the production coming from the fractures was being adequately supported by the “non-pay” matrix. If so this could cause a rethink of the net pay criteria and lead to an upward revision of net pay.(Even without matrix support to the fractures there would be a small increase in net pay associated with oil in the fracture network.)

The interesting thing is that there was no specific reference to reconsideration of net pay criteria in today’s RNS despite the mean OIP increasing by a whopping 40% to 10.5 Bn bbl. Is there room for further increases in net pay by testing one or two additional intervals that don’t meet the existing pay criteria? The net pay story has yet to be completed and there could be a chapter with further good news yet to come.

Regards and GLA,

Gramacho

========================

The BIG picture....


A few observations...
GKP.L
90
No doubt BBBS will update us all with a few more of his infinite pearls of wisdom later but I just have a few comments on my more superficial view of today’s RNS:-

1) The new P10 of 8 billion barrels is HIGHER than the old P50 of 7.5 billion. So, we haven’t just seen a step up through the ‘p’ levels... but a 6% increase as well (in line with the 5%-10% increase in size of the Shaikan structure suggested by the 3D sesimics perhaps).

2) The increase in the P10 level from 4.9 billion to 8 billion is 63%, and the P50 from 7.5 billion to 10.5 billion is 40%.....

it is 8 BILLION (P90) - i.e with a 90% probability. Not P10 (only 10%).


But YET AGAIN we see the SP failing to respond by anything even remotely similar. At 145p as I write, it is still only 9.5% up and 5p above the placing price... a placing which took place nearly 2 months ago! I am sure those 'placees' will be looking for a bit more than that!

Hmmm ... I wonder if we will see an increase in the SOL figures again today, just as we did when the last massive OIP upgrade occurred in April. Because something definitely seems to be holding it back!

3) BBBS noted a few days ago that Shamaran had shown in their November presentation that GKP’s Shaikan discovery could hold 14 billion OIP, and this was the first reference to this. Today we see figures up to 13.4 billion referred to - once again, well spotted BBBS! I think they all KNOW long before us what is going to come next. Oh, and Shaikan-7 has moved officially from being ‘contingent’ to now having a definite plan, which again our wonderful 'prophet' BBBS observed was very likely.

4) SH-4 still apparently drilling near to 3400m – we must be literally centimetres away from reaching it, as this has been the case for several weeks now. Are we going deeper than originally planned I wonder - just like Bekhme-1 which changed its TD from 3000m to about 5000m in the course of just a few months?

And today’s RNS already refers to an EXTENSIVE testing programme to follow on SH-4 - so it sounds like GKP has VERY high hopes for this well, without even yet reaching TD!

Finally, John Gerstenlauer sounds pretty optimistic, doesn’t he...

"ONCE AGAIN, the Company's management and Board of Directors are DELIGHTED to validate our WORLD-CLASS DISCOVERY at Shaikan in the Kurdistan Region of Iraq. This THIRD SUCCESSIVE UPGRADE of the Shaikan gross oil-in-place range by Dynamic Global Advisors is a NEW STEP towards completing our understanding of this EXEPTIONAL asset. The process of assessing Shaikan started on 6 August 2009, when we announced our first significant discovery in Kurdistan. This assessment is FAR FROM BEING CONCLUDED as we have just spudded Shaikan-5 and prepare to drill Shaikan-6 in early 2012.These additional appraisal wells will provide us with valuable information about the flanks of the massive Shaikan structure, while the Shaikan-7 well will target the Permian, the deepest undrilled horizon of the structure. The Shaikan appraisal programme is being completed in parallel with the ongoing work on the Shaikan Field Development Plan."

One quick question though, JG – do you think that just one 440 THOUSAND bpd pipeline for Shaikan is going to be enough, or is this really just the start? Some of the probably smaller oil fields in Southern Iraq are targeting production levels of up to 2.8 MILLION bpd in a few years time! Not that I expect GKP will be around long enough to see the full fruits of this amazing discovery - but it makes you think, doesn't it!


GKP.L
77
I had to pinch myself as I thought I must be DREAMING!

This RNS is indicative of exactly why we INVEST..... for the LONG-TERM.

The P10 figures have gone from 1.9 billion to 4.9 billion and now to 8 billion in the last year. Meanwhile the P50 has moved from 4.2 billion to 7.5 billion to 10.5 billion!

Now that is what I call PROGRESS - and it is ONLY for SHAIKAN.

Whatever the SP does today is IMO therefore almost irrelevant - the eyes of every NOC and IOC are now firmly focused on GKP... with bewilderment - perhaps even complete SHOCK and AWE!

No SP predictions from me today - we simply need to see 'the BIG picture'!



-
Erbil remedies....
GKP.L
56
IMHO, theperpetualoptimist’s post this morning at 08:13 deserved rather more attention than it received, especially as it highlighted the question of 'Timing'.

We had not had any major OIP upgrades since April's massive increase. Sheikh Adi's 1.9 billion OIP (P50) is still classed only as a 'preliminary' estimate. But GKP has been testing both Shaikan and Sheikh Adi for about 3 months, so must have known for some time how much the OIP levels were expected to rise.

Yet, until today, no more major OIP announcements! Why?

My feeling for some time has been that Iraqi/Kurdish disagreements over the Oil Law etc. have been been at least inhibiting the release of important information as a sort of bargaining tool.

But today, with news on the Oil Law seemingly having taken a turn for the better recently after the much publicised conflicts, GKP (presumably with the KRG’s blessing) has chosen to announce a massive OIP upgrade. I wonder if Sheikh Adi OIP figures are coming in the next few days too!

The key point is that it looks as though the shackles are slowly being released by the KRG just as the major Oil and Gas conference in Erbil is about to start.

To me, that Conference now seems somehow pivotal - Tony Hayward and Mehmet Sepil will be speaking. So will Todd Kozel and John Gerstenlauer. And I think that every one of the oil companies operating in Kurdistan is on the list as some kind of sponsor.

The KRG is also heavily represented (as you would expect) but there are also certain members of the ICG. And with Vallares/Genel due to re-list on 21 November (no doubt to a media frenzy and fanfare), everything points towards the Erbil conference being a vital opportunity for the KRG to tell the world what they have, and for GKP to show how important its oil discoveries will be in terms of Kurdistan's (and Iraq's) future prosperity.

Erbil could therefore be the scene of a glittering array of fireworks IMO!

Incidentally, I note that our friend, Dr. Shahristani, is "appearing" in London on 22 November as Iraq's representative at the 'Iraq: Untapped Opportunities' conference.

http://www.iraq-businessnews.com/tag/shahristani/

Maybe, he too will be taking the opportunity then to sell the idea that the whole of Iraq (including Kurdistan) is now open for business, and no doubt claim some of the credit for his part in this transformational process. It will be very interesting to see if he does!

Anyway, thank you TPO for reminding us of some of the possible ‘remedies’ to GKP’s vastly under-valued SP that we may get to hear about soon... from Erbil.

AIMHO and please DYOR

GLA, scaramouche


===================

Author Dalesmann View Profile | Add to favourites | Ignore
Date posted today 13:11
Subject Reserves 2
Votes for this Posting Voted 59 times.
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This is an update of a recent post but this time I have included all the major producers . The ‘3’ indicates a member of OPEC .

The news from yesterday moves us up the scale. I stress that the Gulf Keystone figure is only for Shaikan.

The figures date from 2009 and are only oil and condensates. But they are no worse for that. If anything many of these figures will have declined!

GRH has pointed out that at Shaikan the tank is full! No I’m not talking about the full to spill scenario, rather it has NOT had its resources reduced by continual production. Many of the large producers have had their reserves called into question and these huge fields have been diminished by continual pumping but that’s another matter.

We were at position 34 on this list.

Yesterdays news moves Shaikan to position 32!


1 Saudi Arabian Oil Company (Saudi Arabia) 3……259,900
2 National Iranian Oil Company (Iran) 3……… 138,400
3 Iraq National Oil Company (Iraq) 3……………… 115,000
4 Kuwait Petroleum Corporation (Kuwait) 3…………101,500
5 Petroleos de Venezuela.S.A. (Venezuela) 3………99,377
6 Abu Dhabi National Oil Company (UAE) 3………92,200
7 National Oil Company (Libya) 3 ……………………41,464
8 Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (Nigeria) 3….36,220
9 OAO Rosneft (Russia)………………………………17,513
10 OAO Lukoil (Russia) ……………………………… 15,715
11 Qatar General Petroleum Corporation (Qatar)3 …15,207
12 Sonatrach (Algeria) …3……………………………12,200
13 PetroChina Co. Ltd. (China) …………………11,706
14 Petroleos Mexicanos (Mexico)……………………11,048
15 Petroleo Brasilerio S.A. (Brazil)……………………9,613
16 Sonangol (Angola)3………………………………….9,035
17 ExxonMobil Corporation (United States) ……7,744
18 Chevron Corporation (United States)………………7,087
19 ConocoPhillips (United States)……………………6,320
21 Total (France)………………………………………5,778
22 Petroleum Development Oman LLC (Oman) 5,500
23 BP Corporation (United Kingdom)………………5,492
24 Petronas (Malaysia) ………………………………5,360
25 Petroleos de Ecuador (Ecuador)3……………….4,517
26 Dubai Petroleum Company (United Arab Emirates) 3 4,000
27 ENI (Italy)……………………………………………3,925
28 Royal Dutch/Shell (Netherlands)……………… 3,776
29 Egyptian General Petroleum Corp. (Egypt) ........3,700
30 Statoil (Norway)……………………………………2,389
31 Occidental Petroleum Corporation (United States)… 2,228

32 GKP prospective reserves at Shaikan…………1,542

33 China National Offshore Oil Corp. (China)………1,490
34 Canadian Natural Resources (Canada)…………1,358
35 Anadarko Petroleum Corporation (United States)…1,014
36 Devon Energy Corporation (United States)…………998
37 Repsol YPF (Spain)……………………………………952
38 EnCana Corp. (Canada)………………………………927
39 Pertamina (Indonesia) 3………………………………903
40 XTO Energy (United States)…………………………308

That is quite remarkable! If our total entitlement of 2711mbo of OIL became 2P reserves we would move to 30th above Statoil.

Lets look again at what that means in terms of reserves replacement and just use Shaikan as it is closest to having 2P reserves announced; starting with the Chinese.

13 PetroChina Co. Ltd. (China) …………………………………………11,706
Shaikan would replenish 13.7% of their reserves. They have billions available to spend. At $5.11/bbl this equates to $7864m for Shaikan alone or $9.21 /share (£6)

Moving on to the Americans

17 ExxonMobil Corporation (United States) ……….7,744

Shaikan would now replenish 19.9% but on a full to spill p10 basis of 13.2b/bls at Shaikan this moves up to 1938mbls and this would replenish 25% of Exxons reserves.

Just think about that for a moment Shaikan could replenish 25% of the largest listed company in the world’s total reserves.

Returning to what has already been announced.

18 Chevron Corporation (United States)………7,087
Shaikan could currently replace 21.75%

19 ConocoPhillips (United States)…………..6,320
Shaikan could currently replace 24.4%

23 BP Corporation (United Kingdom)…………5,492
Shaikan could currently replace 28%

28 Royal Dutch/Shell (Netherlands)………3,776
Shaikan could currently replace. 40.8% of all of Shell’s reserves.

Mind Blowing!

PTO costed the acquisition of Shaikan in an excellent post a little while ago. These companies MUST BE running their slide rule over GKP!

If we look at those players already in Kurdistan

33 China National Offshore Oil Corp. (China)………1,490
(close enough to Sinopec which doesn’t register on the list.)
Shaikan represents 103% of this NOC’s reserves

37 Repsol YPF (Spain……………….952
Shaikan represents 162% of this NOCs reserves

49 Hess Corp. (United States) …………………………..885
Shaikan Represents a staggering 175% of this IOC reserves

50 Marathon Oil Corp. (United States) ………………….650
Shaikan Represents an even more staggering 237% of this IOCs reserves!!!!

On a day when the SP refuses to even nod in the direction of value it is good to put our company into context and realise that our day will come.

I’ve just had a long conversation with GRH, his point and it is a really powerful one is this:

“These companies CAN’T,

they just CANNOT IGNORE GKP!

Their shareholders would never forgive them if they missed out!”

Kind regards

Dalesman

======================



Chinese still buying->GKP comparison
renardargente
4
A quote from an HK analyst;

“Nobody can buy at a discount, and everybody has to pay a premium to buy now,” Kwan said. “If you don’t want to pay a premium, you can go make your own discovery, but the process is going to take a long time.”

within the following article on CNPC's(Sinopec of course, not CNPC.
) purchase of 30% of GALP Energia's Lula / Cernambi fields at Tupi area offshore Brasil.;

http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2011-11-11/sinopec-agrees-to-pay-3-54-billion-for-30-stake-in-galp-s-brazilian-unit.html

GALP has a 10% interest in Tupi etc. and CNPC therefore bought 3% of the Tupi concession for $3.5 Bn giving a concession value pricing of around $100 Bn. Tupi complex contains around 8.3 Bn bbls of recoverable light oil equivalent and thus $12 per bbl to participants. Lifting costs are estimated as approx. $40 per bbl. I don't have the precise Tupi concession terms but a discussion is given in;

http://www.law-now.com/cmck/pdfs/nonsecured/Brazilian.pdf

For the sake of argument let's assume similar fiscal terms to the Kurdi PSCs and balance the GKP ASIP tax against a $40 / bbl lifting cost for Tupi. If we also take a punt on what Shaikan/SA eventually holds as also being 8 Bn bbls recoverable ( approx 20 Bn bbls OIP ) then an equivalent value figure for GKP ( approx 50% WI vs 3% CNPC ) without Ber Bahr is 15x the GALP deal or around $50 Bn. Leave beind 40% for a future buyer's wedge or GKP ASIP tax or whatever and this gives a range of $50 Bn - $30 Bn. This equates to an SP of 15x - 10x tomorrow's SP. Plus Ber Bahr to come.

The SP figures quoted here from 2009 may not look so stupid in the near future if a real cash deal is used as a comparison.

I understand that some gross errors in arithmetic may have been made and there are some major assumptions. But..... we are talking orders of magnitude for CNPC's deal compared to the figures currently assumed for GKP value.

Would appreciate a constructive deconstruction (!!!) of these figures . However, the Chinese ARE on the prowl and Tupi area is hugely more difficult to produce than onshore Kurdistan.

=====================

The magical phrase
Pittsburghguy
48
The news of late seems to get better by the hour and should easily propel the stock to new highs. Passage of the O & G law will be the ultimate accelerant. Move of other majors and the first offical bid will likely make us all vey happy. And we know that Gulf Keystone is in a race against the clock. Still my selfish holiday wish (excluding those matters that trump material and finacial matters) is the magical phrase, preferably around mid December and after all of the above news -" Gulf Keystone, in an effort to maximize shareholder value, has engage Goldman Sachs as advisors". Of course, the announcement to be followed by a methodical and thoroughly prepared " book", a request fo inclusion in the bid process, a 30 day window for expresssions of interest and indications of value, a week or so ananlyze the responses and an inviitation to three of so bidders to formalize and increase their offers, and so on and so on. A 5 month process during which the rules or should I say facts continue to change as the many drill bits turn. You want drama, you want to get in trouble with your boss, your family and friends, you want to develop a new addiction that has you walking around distracted at all times - then wish for that magical phrase.

===============

Monday, August 15, 2011

86 Dead in 7 Iraqi Cities in 20 Bombings as sellout Al-Maliki to extend US Presence in Iraq

Two bombs kill at least 37 in Iraq

15 Aug 2011 07:55

Source: reuters // Reuters

Iraqi policemen inspect the site of a bomb attack in central Kirkuk, 250 km (155 miles) north of Baghdad August 15, 2011. At least one person was killed and 14 wounded in a bomb attack in Kirkuk, police sources said on Monday. REUTERS/Ako Rasheed

BAGHDAD, Aug 15 (Reuters) - Two bombs tore through a public square in the southern Iraqi city of Kut on Monday, killing at least 37 people in the worst in a string of bombings and suicide attacks across the country, officials said.

A roadside bomb exploded in Kut, a mainly Shi'ite Muslim city 150 km (95 miles) southeast of Baghdad, followed by a car bomb when security forces arrived on the scene, security officials said.

Dhiyauddin Jalil, a director of Wasit provincial health department, said at least 37 people were killed, and more than 68 were wounded in the blasts.

"Hospitals are still receiving casualties, but the situation is under control," Khamis al-Saad, Iraq's deputy health minister, told Reuters.

Violence in Iraq has fallen sharply since the heights of sectarian slaughter in 2006-07. But Sunni Muslim insurgents and Shi'ite militants are increasingly targeting local security forces and government offices as the last American troops prepare to withdraw by the end of year.

Dozens more were killed on Monday in other bombings and attacks in other cities.

At least eight people were killed and 14 wounded when a suicide car bomber attacked a municipality building in the province of Diyala, two police sources said on Monday.

The attack happened in Khan Bani Saad, about 30 km (20 miles) northeast of Baghdad.

Two suicide bombers attacked an Iraqi counter-terrorism unit in Tikrit, 150 km (95 miles) north of Baghdad, killing at least two policemen and wounding six in a failed attempt to free al Qaeda prisoners, a police official said.

One attacker detonated his suicide vest hoping to kill a high-ranking counter-terrorism officer and the other was shot dead during the attack, said Captain Jassim al-Jibouri, an officer with the Tikrit counter terrorism unit.

In the southern holy Shi'ite city of Najaf, at least three people were killed and 19 more wounded when two car bombs exploded, authorities said. Police captain Hadi al-Najafi in Najaf said the bombs targeted a police building.

Kut had been relatively quiet since August last year when a suicide bomber killed 30 policemen and destroyed a police station as the U.S. military ended combat operations in Iraq.

More than eight years after the U.S. invasion that toppled Saddam Hussein, U.S. soldiers are scheduled to leave by the end of the year. But Iraqi and U.S. officials are discussing whether some stay on as trainers after 2011. (Reporting by Kahlid al-Ansary and Ahmed Rasheed; Writing by Patrick Markey; Editing by Mark Heinrich)

=============
As wave of violence hits Iraq, 10 die in Diyala
AP

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Hosni Mubarak AP – FILE - In this Sunday, May 9, 2010 file photo, then Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak looks on during …

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– 23 mins ago

BAGHDAD – An Iraqi spokesman says 10 people have been killed in the restive Diyala province as a wave of violence struck across Iraq.

The blasts in Diyala raised the nationwide death toll to 52 in attacks that ranged from the northern city of Kirkuk to the southern cities of Najaf of Kut.

A spokesman for the Diyala province health directorate, Faris al-Azawi, said at least seven explosions went off in cities across Diyala on Monday morning. More than 50 people were also wounded in the Diyala blasts.

THIS IS A BREAKING NEWS UPDATE. Check back soon for further information. AP's earlier story is below.

BAGHDAD (AP) — Bomb blasts ripped through at least five Iraqi cities Monday morning, killing 42 people — most of them in the southern city of Kut — in a wave of violence that shattered what had been a relatively peaceful holy month of Ramadan.

The violence struck from the northern city of Kirkuk to the capital of Baghdad to the southern cities of Najaf and Kut, and emphasized the persistent ability of insurgents to wreak havoc at a time when Iraqi officials are weighing whether they are able to protect the country without the assistance of American troops.

The blasts were coordinated to go off in the morning and included a combination of parked car bombs, roadside bombs and a suicide bomber driving a vehicle that rammed into a police station.

The worst violence came in the southern city of Kut, 100 miles (160 kilometers) southeast of Baghdad, where twin explosions went off as construction workers were gathered in a market selling generators and other appliances.

Police spokesman Lt. Col. Dhurgam Mohammed Hassan said the first bomb went off in a freezer used to keep drinks cold. Then as rescuers and onlookers gathered, a parked car bomb exploded.

The top medical official in the province where Kut is located, Diaa al-Aboudi, said 34 people died in the explosion. Al-Aboudi put the number of the wounded from the twin blasts at 64.

At roughly the same time, a suicide car bomber plowed his vehicle into a checkpoint outside a police building just outside the holy city of Najaf, said Luay al-Yassiri, head of the Najaf province security committee.

Police opened fire on the vehicle when the driver refused to stop at the checkpoint, and then the vehicle exploded. Al-Yassiri said four people were killed and 32 injured; among the dead were two policemen and two civilians.


In the northern city of Tikrit, two men wearing explosives belts drove into a heavily guarded government compound wearing military uniforms which helped them avoid notice by the guards, said Mohammed al-Asi, the provincial spokesman.

The men parked their vehicle and then walked to a building housing the anti-terrorism police. When the men approached the building, the guards ordered them to stop and then opened fire. One bomber was immediately killed but the other managed to get inside the building before blowing himself up and killed three people, al-Asi said. Ten people were also injured in the attack.


It was another embarrassing security breach for security officials at the compound. Earlier this year, insurgents managed to penetrate the compound's security and attack a mosque where many prominent officials were at prayer.

In the northern city of Kirkuk, a car bomb exploded next to a police patrol Monday morning, injuring four police officers. Then about thirty minutes later one person was killed when a motorcycle with a bomb planted inside it exploded. Late Sunday, four bombs also blew up near a Syrian Orthodox Church in Kirkuk. No one was injured in the attack but the walls of the church were damaged.

In Baghdad, a parked car bomb exploded near a convoy carrying officials from the Ministry of Higher Education, said police and health officials. Eight people were wounded, the officials said, speaking on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to talk to the media. The minister was not inside the convoy.

Violence has dropped considerably in Iraq from the heyday of the war when such bloody bombings were an almost daily occurrence. But the persistence of the violence in Iraq, albeit at a lower level, underscores the ability of insurgents to undermine the country's security.

The Kut blasts were the first major act of violence since Iraq's political leaders earlier this month announced that they would begin negotiations with the United States over whether to keep a small number of American forces in the country past Dec. 31. The last such single large bombing came on July 5, when 37 people died during an explosion in Taji, north of Baghdad.

All American forces are to leave the country by the end of this year but both Iraqi and U.S. officials have expressed concern about the ability of Iraqi forces to protect the country.

There was no immediate claim of responsibility for Monday's attacks.

===

Wave of bomb attacks in Iraqi cities kill at least 57
An Iraqi policeman inspects the site of a bomb attack in central Kirkuk, 250km north of Baghdad, today. Photograph: Ako Rasheed/ReutersAn Iraqi policeman inspects the site of a bomb attack in central Kirkuk, 250km north of Baghdad, today. Photograph: Ako Rasheed/Reuters
Related

Baghdad bombs kill 40 | 02/11/2010
Three killed in Iraq protests | 16/02/2011
Iraqi policemen killed by suicide bomb | 15/08/2011

Bombs detonated in more than a dozen Iraqi cities today, killing scores of people in a wave of violence that shattered what had been a relatively peaceful holy month of Ramadan.

The violence, in which at least 57 people died, struck from the northern city of Kirkuk to Baghdad to the southern Shia cities of Najaf, Kut and Karbala.

The blasts were co-ordinated to go off in the morning and included a combination of parked car bombs, roadside bombs and a suicide bomber driving a vehicle that rammed into a police station.

A roadside bomb and a car bomb killed at least 37 people and wounded 64 in Iraq's Kut city, police said.

The bomb exploded in a public square in the city, 150km southeast of Baghdad, and a car bomb detonated when security forces arrived on the scene. (2)

In Diyala province, seven bombs went off in the capital of Baquba and towns nearby. Five soldiers were killed in Baquba while six people were killed in other attacks around the province.(2+7=9)

Just outside the holy city of Najaf, a suicide car bomber rammed his vehicle into a checkpoint outside a police building.(9+1=10)

Police opened fire when the driver refused to stop and then the vehicle exploded. Four people were killed and 32 injured; among the dead were two policemen and two civilians.

Outside Karbala, a parked car bomb targeting a police station killed three policemen and injured 14 others.(10+1=11)

In the northern city of Tikrit two men wearing explosives belts drove into a heavily guarded government compound wearing military uniforms. provincial spokesman.

They walked to a building housing the anti-terrorism police. When the men approached the building, the guards ordered them to stop and then opened fire. One bomber was immediately killed but the other managed to get inside the building before blowing himself up and killing three people.(11+1=12)
==========


FACTBOX-Security developments in Iraq, August 15

15 Aug 2011 12:53

Source: reuters // Reuters

Following are security developments in Iraq as of 1245 GMT on Monday.

* Indicates a new or updated item.

* BAGHDAD - A parked car bomb targeting a police patrol killed one passer-by and wounded nine people, including three policemen, in Baghdad's southern Ilaam district, an Interior Ministry source said.

* SAADIYA - Gunmen in a car shot dead Kurdish politician Abbas Hassan in front of the Patriotic Union of Kurdistan party headquarters in the town of Saadiya, , 100 km (70 miles) northeast of Baghdad, a local police source said.

* BAGHDAD - A roadside bomb wounded five people, including three soldiers, when it went off near an Iraqi army patrol in Baghdad's west-central Utaifiya district, an Interior Ministry source said.

KUT - At least 37 people were killed and more than 68 others wounded when a roadside bomb followed by a car bomb exploded in central Kut, 150 km (95 miles) southeast of Baghdad, local police and health officials said.

KHAN BANI SAAD - At least eight people were killed and 14 wounded when a suicide car bomber attacked a municipality building in the town of Khan Bani Saad, about 30 km (20 miles) northeast of Baghdad, police sources said.

TIKRIT - At least two policemen were killed and six others wounded when two suicide bombers attacked an Iraqi counter-terrorism unit in Tikrit, 150 km (95 miles) north of Baghdad, in a failed attempt to free al Qaeda prisoners, a police official said.

NAJAF - At least six people were killed and up to 79 others wounded when two car bombs exploded near a police building in Najaf, 160 km (100 miles) south of Baghdad, health and security officials in Najaf said.

HINDIYA - A car bomb killed four people and wounded 41 others when it exploded near a police station in Hindiya, near Kerbala, 80 km (50 miles) southwest of Baghdad, Jamal Mahdi, spokesman for the health department in Kerbala, said.

AL-WAJEHIYA - A parked car bomb near a government building killed one person and wounded 13 others when it went off in the town of al-Wajehiya, northeast of Baquba, 65 km (40 miles) northeast of Baghdad, police sources said.

KIRKUK - A parked car bomb and a motorcycle bomb killed one person and wounded 12 others in central Kirkuk, 250 km (155 miles) north of Baghdad, hospital and police sources in Kirkuk said.

ISKANDARIYA - A car bomb targeting a police patrol wounded four people, including two policemen, in Iskandariya, 40 km (25 miles) south of Baghdad, a local police source said.

TAJI - A parked car bomb targeting an Iraqi army patrol killed one person and wounded five, including four soldiers, in the town of Taji, 20 km (12 miles) north of Baghdad, an Interior Ministry source said.

BAGHDAD - A bomb placed inside a mobile phone shop killed one person and wounded five others in Baghdad's southeastern Zaafaraniya district, an Interior Ministry source said.

BAQUBA - A parked motorcycle bomb targeting the convoy of Abdulla al-Hiyali, a local provincial official, wounded six people, including two of his family members, when it exploded in Baquba, 65 km (40 miles) northeast of Baghdad, police sources said.

BAGHDAD - A roadside bomb wounded three passers-by in Baghdad's western Ghazaliya district, an Interior Ministry source said.

BAGHDAD - A parked car bomb wounded five people when it exploded near a Higher Ministry official convoy in Baghdad's west-central Mansour district, an Interior Ministry source said.

BALAD - A bomb placed near a municipal council building wounded six people when it exploded in Balad, 80 km (50 miles) north of Baghdad, local police said.

MOSUL - Two bombs placed near electricity poles killed one passer-by and wounded three others when they went off in eastern Mosul, 390 km (240 miles) north of Baghdad, a police source in Mosul said.

MOSUL - A bomb placed inside a bag wounded a policeman when it went off in eastern Mosul, a police source said.

KANAAN - Gunmen using silenced weapons wounded Ali al-Karkhi, a local government-backed Sahwa militia leader, and one of his guards late on Sunday in Kanaan, 70 km (45 miles) northeast of Baghdad, police sources said. (Compiled by Baghdad bureau)

===

7 pulled from Iraqi mosque, killed execution-style
Updated 38m ago

Comments5

BAGHDAD (AP) — Iraqi officials say gunmen wearing military uniforms pulled seven people from a Sunni mosque south of Baghdad and then shot and killed them, execution-style.

Violence continued in Iraq with the execution killings of seven people pulled from a mosque. Earlier, people inspected bomb damage.

By Hadi Mizban, AP

Violence continued in Iraq with the execution killings of seven people pulled from a mosque. Earlier, people inspected bomb damage.

Enlarge

By Hadi Mizban, AP

Violence continued in Iraq with the execution killings of seven people pulled from a mosque. Earlier, people inspected bomb damage.
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The killings happened late Monday, on a day that saw a wave of violence sweep across Iraq, from the northern city of Mosul to the Shiite heartland. They raised the day's death toll to 70.

Officials with the Ministry of Interior and the town hospital say the gunmen walked into the Sunni mosque in Youssifiyah during evening prayers, took the seven men outside and shot them.

The men were all members of an anti-al-Qaeda militia. Youssifiyah is about 12 miles south of Baghdad.

The officials spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to speak to the media.

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108 killed, injured, in final result of Kut’s Monday blast
8/17/2011 10:16 AM

WASSIT / Aswat al-Iraq: The final result of the booby-trapped car blast in southern Iraq’s city of Kut, the center of Wassit Province on Monday night, has reached 108 people, killed or injured, Wassit Health Department’s media source reported on Wednesday.



“The final result of the booby-trapped car explosion in central Kut on Monday night, has reached 40 persons killed and 68 others injured,” Falah Qassem told Aswat al-Iraq news agency, adding that 10 of the injured persons had left hospitals after their treatment.



Noteworthy is that a double-blast of an explosive charge and a booby-trapped car close to the goldsmith shops market in central Kut on Monday night, had killed 34 people and injured 64 others.



Kut, the center of Wassit Provnce, is 180 km to the southeast of Baghdad.

Wednesday, February 16, 2011

متظاهرون في واسط يحاولون اقتحام مبنى مجلس المحافظة والشرطة تطلق النار لتفريقهم

متظاهرون في واسط يحاولون اقتحام مبنى مجلس المحافظة والشرطة تطلق النار لتفريقهم



بتاريخ : الأربعاء 16-02-2011 01:53 م

الكوفة نيوز-حاول المئات من المتظاهرين من أهالي محافظة واسط ،اليوم الأربعاء، اقتحام مبنى مجلس المحافظة احتجاجا على تردي الخدمات، فيما ردت قوات الشرطة المحلية بإطلاق النار لتفريقهم.وذكرت مصادر مطلعة "أن نحو ألفين من المتظاهرين خرجوا، صباح اليوم بتظاهرة في مدينة الكوت مركز محافظة

واسط، للمطالبة بتحسين الخدمات وتوفير فرص العمل والقضاء على البطالة".
واكدت المصادر "أن المتظاهرين اتجهوا نحو مجلس المحافظة لاقتحامه، فيما ردت الشرطة المحلية بإطلاق النار على المتظاهرين ما ولد ردود فعل غاضبة".
وأوضت المصادر "أن المتظاهرين حطموا الباب الرئيس الخارجي لمبنى المحافظة وأضرموا النيران في المكان".


On: Wednesday 02/16/2011 13:53

Kufa News - Try hundreds of demonstrators from the people of Wasit province, on Wednesday, storming the building of the provincial council in protest against the deterioration of services, as were the local police forces opened fire to disperse them. Informed sources said that "about two thousand demonstrators turned out, this morning a demonstration in the city of Kut province

Wasit, to demand better services and to provide employment opportunities and the elimination of unemployment. "
The sources confirmed that "the demonstrators moved towards the provincial government to break into, while the local police responded by firing on the demonstrators, was born angry reactions."
And Oodt sources "that the demonstrators smashed the front door of a building outside the province and set fire to the place."


===




مقتل ثلاثة واصابة عشرات في احتجاجات بالعراق
Wed Feb 16, 2011 12:14pm GMT

اطبع هذا الموضوع[-] نص [+]
1 / 1تكبير للحجم الكاملالكوت (العراق) (رويترز) - قالت مصادر بالشرطة ومصادر طبية ان ثلاثة أشخاص قتلوا وأصيب عشرات في مدينة الكوت بجنوب العراق يوم الاربعاء في اشتباكات بين قوات الامن ومحتجين يطالبون بتحسين الخدمات الاساسية.
وذكرت المصادر ان المحتجين الذين يطالبون باقالة المسؤولين الفاسدين وتحسين الخدمات الاساسية رشقوا قوات الامن بقوالب الطوب والحجارة وسيطروا على مبان حكومية بالمدينة.

وقال مصدر بالشرطة في الكوت ان أحداث العنف أسفرت عن مقتل ثلاثة من المحتجين واصابة حوالي 30 شخصا بينهم 15 من الشرطة

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اعلان حضر التجوال في عموم الكوت
16/02/2011 03:52 م

واسط/ أصوات العراق: أعلن قائد شرطة واسط، الاربعاء، إن غرفة عمليات المحافظة قررت فرض حضر التجوال للاشخاص والمركبات في عموم مدينة الكوت على خلفية التظاهرات التي شهدتها.
وأوضح اللواء حسين عبد الهادي لوكالة (أصوات العراق) ان "غرفة عمليات واسط قررت فرض حضر التجوال للاشخاص والمركبات ابتداء من الساعة الرابعة من عصر اليوم والى اشعار اخر"، مبينا أن "قرار الحضر جاء لاعادة ضبط امن المحافظة اثر قيام متظاهرين باعمال عنف اسفرت عن حدوث اضرار في مبنى المحافظة ومجلسها ومنزل المحافظ".
وكان مئات من اهالي مدينة الكوت قد تظاهروا اليوم أمام مبنى مجلس محافظة واسط للمطالبة بتحسين الخدمات ومحاسبة المسؤولين، فيما اقتحم البعض منهم مبنى المجلس وأقدم آخرون على تحطيم زجاج النوافذ بالحجارة مما دعا الشرطة إلى اطلاق اعيرة النار في الهواء.
وعقب ذلك أحرق متظاهرون غاضبون كابينة لحرس حماية مجلس محافظة واسط في مدينة الكوت ومنعوا قوات الشرطة والاطفائية من الاقتراب لاخماد الحريق، ثم أحرق المتظاهرون مكتب ومنزل المحافظ الذي يقع على مقربة من مبنى ديوان المحافظة، بحسب مصدر مطلع.
وتقع مدينة الكوت، مركز محافظة واسط، على مسافة 180 كم جنوب شرق العاصمة بغداد.
غ و(خ-1)- م هـ ا

==

حرق مبنى محافظة واسط



دبي- الشرقية 16 فبراير: التهمت النيران مبنى محافظة واسط بالكامل بعد ان اقتحمه مئات المتظاهرين الغاضبين على اثر اطلاق قوات الامن التي كانت تحمي المبنى النار ضد المتظاهرين مما ادى الى سقوط عدد من الضحايا بينهم وذكرت مصادر في المحافظة ان المتظاهرين دخلوا بناية المحافظة واحرقوا مبنى الاستعلامات وادارة العقود مطالبين الحكومة المركزية بان يكون المحافظ من ابناء مدينة الكوت ليكون اكثر قربا من معاناة ابنائها.



واضافت المصادر ان عشرات المتظاهرين أصيبوا جراء إطلاق النار الكثيف واستعمال القنابل المسيلة للدموع والصوتية من قبل شرطة حماية واسط مضيفة ان قوات من الجيش طوقت مبنى المحافظة ومجلسها وتجري مباحثات من اجل اخراج المتظاهرين الذين اقتحموا البنايتين. وتذكر الشرقية بالرابط الموجود على الموقع الالكتروني للقناة والذي يتيح للمواطنين تحميل أي مقطع يخص الشأن العام أويتناول مشكلة عامة كما نشاهد في هذه الصور التي تم تحميلها للموقع باستخدام كاميرا شخصية


متظاهرون عراقيون يحرقون مبنى محافظة واسط بعد اقتحامه وهروب المحافظ منه




بغداد: اصيب عدد غير محدد من المتظاهرين العراقيين بجروح برصاص اطلقته الشرطة لتفريق تظاهرة انطلقت في مدينة الكوت، مركز محافظة واسط في جنوب العراق، فيما أفادت مصادر في المدينة بهروب المحافظ وكبار المسؤولين المحليين من المبنى بعد اقتحامه من قبل المتظاهرين الغاضبين واحراقه بعد إزالة الحواجز الكونكريتية المحيطة به.
وقال مصدر محلي، طلب عدم الكشف عن اسمه، "اطلقت شرطة حماية محافظة واسط وقوة من مكافحة الشغب النار والقنابل الصوتية والمسيلة للدموع كما فتحت خراطيم المياه لتفريق متظاهرين اقتحموا مبنى المحافظة، ما أسفر عن إصابة عدد منهم بجروح مختلفة".
وأضاف المصدر "اقتحم المتظاهرون والذين يربو عددهم على الفي متظاهر مبنى المحافظة وسيطروا على جميع مكاتبها، كما أحرقوا أربع سيارات تابعة للحكومة المحليه، فيما هرب المحافظ لطيف حمد الطرفه وأغلب مسؤولي المحافظة الى جهة مجهولة".
وردت الشرطة المحلية على المتظاهرين بإطلاق النار بكثافة ما اشعل نيران الغضب في اوساط المتظاهرين الذين اقدموا على حرق مبنى المحافظة بعد ازالة الحواجز الكونكريتية المحيطة به.
وكان زعيم التيار الصدري مقتدى الصدر دعا، الاثنين أتباعه إلى التظاهر ضد الاحتلال واحتجاجا على نقص الخدمات، مشدداً على أهمية أن تكون التظاهرات سلميةً وبمشاركة القوى الأخرى.
وتشهد بغداد ومدن عراقية اخرى منذ نحو أسبوعين تظاهرات شعبية محاكاة للتظاهرات التي شهدتها تونس ومصر والتي أسفرت عن سقوط نظامي الحكم فيهما

===


ثورة الغضب العراقية : هروب اعضاء مجلس محافظة واسط وحرق مبنى المحافظة بعد اقتحامها
الكاتب وطن
الأربعاء, 16 فبراير 2011 17:29


خارج السرب



أعلن النائب عن كتلة الاحرار "كتلة التيارالصدري"، المنضوية في التحالف الوطني، الشيعي، كاظم الصيادي هروب محافظ واسط واعضاء مجلس المحافظة الى خارج المحافظ، بينما افادت مصادر محلية عن مصرع شخص وجرح 27 آخرين برصاص الشرطة.

وقال الصيادي، في مؤتمر صحافي عقده في مبنى مجلس النواب الاربعاء، ان "محافظ واسط لطيف حمد الطرفة واعضاء مجلس المحافظة هربوا الى خارج المحافظة على خلفية تظاهرة سلمية انطلقت في المحافظة الاربعاء".

في غضون ذلك قالت مصادر بالشرطة ومصادر طبية إن ثلاثة أشخاص قتلوا وأصيب عشرات في مدينة الكوت بجنوب العراق الأربعاء في اشتباكات بين قوات الأمن ومحتجين يطالبون بتحسين الخدمات الأساسية.

وذكرت المصادر إن المحتجين الذين يطالبون بإقالة المسؤولين الفاسدين وتحسين الخدمات الأساسية رشقوا قوات الأمن بقوالب الحجارة وسيطروا على مبان حكومية بالمدينة.

وقال مصدر بالشرطة في الكوت إن أحداث العنف أسفرت عن مقتل ثلاثة من المحتجين وإصابة حوالي 30 شخصا بينهم 15 من الشرطة.

وأعلن مصدرمن هيئة رئاسة مجلس النواب العراقي أن هيئة رئاسة البرلمان طلبت من عدد من البرلمانيين وممثلي محافظة واسط بالبرلمان التوجه الى محافظة واسط، والاستماع الى مطالب المتظاهرين هناك.

واحرق المتظاهرون مبنى المحافظة بعدما تصدى حراس مبنى المحافظة لهم بالرصاص والقنابل المسيله للدموع مما ادى الى سقوط العديد من الضحايا في صفوف المتظاهرين .

واضاف الصيادي "المحافظة تشهد حاليا انتشارا امنيا كثيفا والامر لا يستحق كل هذا، لكون التظاهرة سلمية وكون المتظاهرين يطالبون بامور مشروعة منها تحسين الخدمات ومفردات البطاقة التموينية التي اصبحت معجزة للحكومة".

ودعا الاجهزة الامنية في واسط الى احترام حق التظاهرالسلمي للتعبير عن مطالب المواطنين.

وكان مئات المتظاهرين اقتحموا مبنى مجلس محافظة واسط واحرقوا مبنى المحافظة واكشاك الحماية والبوابة الرئيسة.

وحمل المتظاهرون الغاضبون شعارات ورددوا هتافات تندد بتردي الاوضاع الامنية وعدم توفير الخدمات الاساسية وتفاقم البطالة وانتشار الفساد المالي والاداري في الوزارات والمؤسسات الحكومية.

وقال مصدر محلي، طلب عدم الكشف عن اسمه، "اطلقت شرطة حماية محافظة واسط وقوة من مكافحة الشغب النار والقنابل الصوتية والمسيلة للدموع كما فتحت خراطيم المياه لتفريق متظاهرين اقتحموا مبنى المحافظة، ما أسفر عن إصابة عدد منهم بجروح مختلفة".

وأضاف المصدر "اقتحم المتظاهرون والذين يربو عددهم على الفي متظاهر مبنى المحافظة وسيطروا على جميع مكاتبها، كما أحرقوا أربع سيارات تابعة للحكومة المحليه، فيما هرب المحافظ لطيف حمد الطرفه وأغلب مسؤولي المحافظة الى جهة مجهولة".

وردت الشرطة المحلية على المتظاهرين بإطلاق النار بكثافة ما اشعل نيران الغضب في اوساط المتظاهرين الذين اقدموا على حرق مبنى المحافظة بعد ازالة الحواجز الكونكريتية المحيطة به.

وكان زعيم التيار الصدري مقتدى الصدر دعا، امس الاول أتباعه إلى التظاهر ضد الاحتلال واحتجاجا على نقص الخدمات، مشدداً على أهمية أن تكون التظاهرات سلميةً وبمشاركة القوى الأخرى.

وتشهد بغداد ومدن عراقية اخرى منذ نحو أسبوعين تظاهرات شعبية محاكاة للتظاهرات التي شهدتها تونس ومصر والتي اسفرت عن سقوط نظامي الحكم فيهما.

ووصف قيادي في المجلس الإسلامي الأعلى الأربعاء التظاهرات التي تشهدها المحافظات العراقية مطلبية ودستورية غير مسيسة تعبرعن مطالب المواطنين، داعيا إلى دعمها وعدم التصدي لها بالقوة، كما طالب بإصلاح النظام القضائي في البلاد.

ثورة عراقية خالصة

وقال صدر الدين القبانجي في كلمة خلال مؤتمر لعلماء دين شيعة وسنة للتقريب بين المذهبين عقد لمناسبة المولد لنبوي إن "الشعب العراقي ضاق ذرعا من نقص الخدمات التي وصل إلى حد لا يطاق، عازيا السبب إلى الفساد المالي والإداري وعدم الإخلاص في تأدية الواجب".

ودعا القبانجي إلى دعم تلك التظاهرات والاستماع إليها، معربا عن أسفه للاتهامات التي توجه للمتظاهرين الضعفاء بأنهم يتحركون بأجندات خارجية أو سياسية.

واعتبر القيادي في المجلس الاعلى أن الشباب الذين سقطوا في التظاهرات للمطالبة بحقوقهم شهداء، داعيا الحكومة إلى الاعتذار من الشعب ومن هؤلاء الشهداء، منتقدا المسؤولين الذين يتحدثون لوسائل الإعلام عن حريات مكفولة بينما ممارساتهم شيء اخر.

يشار الى ان بغداد ومدن عراقية اخرى تشهد منذ نحو أسبوعين تظاهرات تطالب بالخدمات والامن والقضاء على البطاله والفساد محاكاة للتظاهرات التي شهدتها تونس ومصر ما اسفر عن سقوط نظامي الحكم فيهما.


Read more: ثورة الغضب العراقية : هروب اعضاء مجلس محافظة واسط وحرق مبنى المحافظة بعد اقتحامها | خارج السرب http://www.watan.com/خارج-السرب/ثورة-الغضب-العراقية-هروب-اعضاء-مجلس-محافظة-واسط-وحرق-مبنى-المحافظة-بعد-اقتحامها.html#ixzz1E9LUmx9E
==

Middle East

Iraqis attack government offices

Three people killed in clashes with security forces as protesters break into public offices and set buildings on fire.
Last Modified: 16 Feb 2011 16:17 GMT
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About 2,000 protesters marched in Kut to demand better services before storming the council building [Reuters]

Three people have been killed and dozens wounded in clashes between security forces and protesters in a southern Iraqi province, after around 2,000 people attacked government offices in protest over poor services.

Protesters took threw rocks and took over a provincial council building in Kut in Wasit province, about 160km southeast of Baghdad, on Wednesday. Three government buildings were set on fire, including the governor's official residence.
A police source in Kut said three protesters were killed in clashes and about 30 wounded, including 15 policemen. A hospital source said one of the dead was a 16-year-old boy who suffered a bullet to the chest.

Punishment pledged

Officials said policemen and soldiers fired their weapons into the air in a bid to dissuade protesters, while private security guards employed by Wasit council opened fire directly into the crowd.

"Those were private guards, only they fired at the protesters. They were outside the law," police Brigadier General Hussein Jassim told AFP. "Our forces only fired into the air."

Major Mohammed Saleh, the senior police intelligence officer in Kut, said: "Measures will be taken against the private guards but after the situation has calmed down."

Demonstrators are demanding Latif Hamad al-Tarfa, the provincial governor, resign over poor basic services such as electricity and water.

They held up placards that said, "To all citizens: Electricity is only for officials", a reference to Iraq's dramatic shortfall in power provision.

"We demand that our rights be met, that we have better services and that the authorities fight corruption," Ali Mohsen, a 54-year-old professor at Wasit university, said.

"We demand that the governor resign ... all we need is services."

An official told Al Jazeera that protesters were enraged by comments by al-Tarfa belittling demonstrators at a much smaller protest a week ago.






Two killed, 47 hurt in Iraq protest violenceThu Feb 17, 2011 8:17pm GMT
Print | Single Page[-] Text [+]
1 of 1Full SizeBy Khalid al-Ansary
BAGHDAD (Reuters) - Two people were killed and 47 wounded during a protest in the northern Iraqi city of Sulaimaniya Thursday, sources said, as Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki called for demonstrations to be kept peaceful.

Protests also hit the southern city of Kut, the oil hub of Basra, the northern oil city of Kirkuk and other towns -- the latest in a series of demonstrations against local governments and demanding an end to food and power shortages.

Unlike anti-government uprisings in other parts of the Middle East, the Iraqi protesters usually have not demanded the overthrow of their government -- an elected one formed less than two months ago. But some have voiced direct anger at Maliki.

"The demonstrations are protected and here I say that the security forces are not allowed to use any force against any demonstrations," Maliki said at a news conference in Baghdad.

"I say to the protesters, this is your right, (but) without violence," he said. "Don't allow troublemakers to incite problems and burn offices because this is sabotage and corruption."


In Sulaimaniya, witnesses said clashes occurred when about 1,000 protesters looking to oust the local government and demanding better basic services threw stones at the headquarters of the Kurdistan Democratic Party, headed by Masoud Barzani, president of Iraq's semi-autonomous northern Kurdish region.

"This is Tahrir Square. Do you remember Mubarak?" protesters chanted, referring to the Egyptian uprising.

Witnesses said security guards at the party headquarters fired shots in response to the stone-throwing. A police source and a medical source said two people died and 47 others were wounded. It was not clear how the deaths and injuries occurred.

In Arbil, the capital of Iraqi Kurdistan, fire damaged the offices of a KDP rival, the Goran political party, according to a party official.

DAY TWO IN KUT

In the southern city of Kut, a second day of unrest brought some 700 people to the local government building, where clashes Wednesday killed three people and wounded 59 during one of the largest and most violent of the recent protests.

Protesters erected tents and said they would camp out.

"We will maintain our sit-in in this square until our demands are met," said Mohammed Halloul, 50.

Calling for the resignation of the provincial governor, demonstrators brought mattresses, blankets, water and other supplies to spend the night. A donkey with "the governor" spray-painted on its side appeared in the square.

Many protests have decried the lack of reliable electricity. Maliki said the government was making headway.

"It is a matter of time, which doesn't exceed between 12 and 15 months, and the electricity crisis will end, totally," he said. "Therefore I call upon citizens to cooperate and understand this issue.

"Most of the demands people are making are legitimate."

In Basra, a hub for foreign oil companies working to increase production from Iraq's rich oil fields, about 250 residents held a peaceful rally demanding jobs.
In Kirkuk, about 100 vendors protested a government decision to remove them from a bridge where they sold their wares.

In the southern town of Nassir, a small group of protesters set fires in a government building, a witness said.

(Reporting by Jaafar al-Taie in Kut, Aref Mohammed in Basra, Mustafa Mahmoud in Kirkuk, Shamal Aqrawi in Arbil and Suadad al-Salhy in Baghdad; writing by Jim Loney; editing by Andrew Roche)

===

Parliament stops work to listen to Iraqis' gripes
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Residents protest to demand for better basic services in Baghdad February 19, 2011.
Credit: Reuters/Ali al-Mashhdani
By Suadad al-Salhy

BAGHDAD, Iraq | Mon Feb 21, 2011 10:39am EST

BAGHDAD, Iraq (Reuters) - Iraq's parliament has suspended work for a week and sent lawmakers to their home areas to help soothe rising anger over corruption, food shortages and poor services, the speaker of parliament said on Monday.

Iraq has been hit in recent weeks by a growing wave of protests inspired by anti-government uprisings across the Arab world. While Iraqi demonstrators mostly have not called for the ouster of the elected federal government, installed just two months ago, they have demanded that local officials step down.

Three people were killed and dozens wounded in Sulaimaniya, in Iraq's semi-autonomous northern Kurdish region, in the last three days as hundreds of protesters took to the streets.

Demonstrations have taken place in Basra, Falluja, Kirkuk and other cities.

The new government was formed in December, nine months after an inconclusive national election. Iraq is struggling to establish democratic institutions nearly eight years after a U.S.-led invasion toppled dictator Saddam Hussein.

"We asked all members to head to all Iraqi provinces ... They will be working for more than a week," speaker Osama al-Nujaifi told a news conference.

The lawmakers will be in their provinces "until they receive all complaints and see the weaknesses and problems ... to look for solutions in partnership with non-governmental organisations, local governments (and other parties)."

The suspension of parliamentary sessions is the latest in a series of moves by politicians, unnerved by uprisings across the Arab world, to curb rising anger.

The government has offered Iraqis free electricity, bought sugar to support food rations and diverted $900 million from the purchase of combat jets to the ration program. Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki also said he would cut his pay by half.Nujaifi said the $82.6 billion national budget passed on Sunday contains ambitious plans to help Iraqis, including reduced salaries and benefits for the prime minister, president and speaker, their deputies, and ministers.

"I'd say that this budget will create a new situation for the Iraqi people, to achieve the legitimate demands of the people for a dignified life," Nujaifi said.

He also said parliament would reopen corruption cases from past years and asked Iraqis to give lawmakers time.

"The government just started, about two months ago ... we have to give it a chance," he said. "The Iraqi people are smart, courageous people, but they have to be conscious of the need to support the government's proposal for reform."

(Editing by Jim Loney and Mark Trevelyan)

===

قوات الامن تمنع المتظاهرين من التجمع في واسط



واسط – الشرقية 25 فبراير : تجمع العشرات من المواطنين المتظاهرين في ساحة مجلس محافظة واسط في مدينة الكوت وسط اجراءات امنية مشددة للمطالبة بتحسين الواقع الخدمي والمعاشي .

وقد فرضت الاجهزة الامنية طوقا امنيا على مبنى المحافظة والمجلس ومنعت وصول المركبات اليه لحماية المتظاهرين الذين يمثلون مختلف الفئات الشعبية .

وقال احد المتظاهرين ان التظاهرة سلمية وعلى هذا الاساس شاركوا فيها ولن يسمحوا لاي شخص بالتجاوز على الممتلكات العامة او على العناصر الامنية .

واوضح ان معظم مطالب المتظاهرين تتعلق باقالة المحافظ وتوفير مفردات البطاقة التموينية والطاقة الكهربائية والاسراع بتنفيذ المشاريع العمرانية اضافة الى تقديم المفسدين الحكوميين الى القضاء.

===

Fire Devours Trade Shopping Market in Kut
6/3/2011 12:02 PM

WASSIT / Aswat al-Iraq: In the second accident in three days, fire devoured a number of marketing shops, according to civil defense department source said today.

The department attributed the cause to electrical failure.

The source informed Aswat al-Iraq that the damages affected a number of shops in addition to carpentry factories, but it was extinguished in time.

"No human casualties were reported, because the fire was in the early morning hours", the source added.

Fire breaks out occasionally in the province due electricity failure, the last was on Wednesday in a building where Rafidain Bank office is located with housing flats, which resulted in killing one woman and two of her children, as well as burning to other people, who were promptly hospitalized.

Kut city, the center of Wassit province, lies 180 km southeast of the capital, Baghdad.


RM (TI)/SR

U.S. Minesweeper damaged in Kut blast
6/1/2011 12:54 PM
WASSIT / Aswat al-Iraq: A U.S. minesweeper has been damaged by an explosive charge that blew up against an American Army patrol in southern Iraq’s Nu’maniya township in Wassit Province on Wednesday, a Wassit police source said.

“A U.S. Army’s minesweeper was set on fire and damaged, when an explosive charge blew up against an American Army patrol that was passing through Nu’maniya township, 40 km to the north of Kut on Wednesday,” the police source told Aswat al-Iraq news agency.

There have not yet been any reports on any casualties, the source noted.

He said the U.S. forces had beaten a number of police officers, who were at the venue of the blast when it took place, giving no further details.

Kut, the center of Wassit Province, is 180 km to the south of Baghdad.

SKH (TS)/SR

U.S. Army patrol attacked in Kut, south Iraq
5/30/2011 12:14 PM

WASSIT / Aswat al-Iraq: An explosive charge blew off against a U.S. Army patrol in southern Iraq’s Kut city on Monday, but losses were not known, a Wassit security source said.



“An explosive charge blew off in southern Iraq’s Kut’s main street against an American Army patrol early on Monday,” the security source told Aswat al-Iraq news agency.



He said the U.S. forces have imposed a cordon around the venue of the blast, preventing people to approach the place, whilst Iraqi police forces closed all the roads leading to the area.



On its part, Aswat al-Iraq tried to reach the American side, but failed.



Kut had witnessed several attacks on U.S. Army patrols during the current month of May, one of them causing damage to an U.S. Army vehicle and another wounding a civilian woman and her daughter that were close to the venue of one of the attacks.



Kut, the center of Wassit Province, is 180 km to the southeast of Baghdad.



SKH (IT)



U.S. patrol attacked in south Iraq’s Kut city
5/17/2011 11:09 AM

WASSIT / Aswat al-Iraq: An explosive charge blew off against a U.S. military patrol in Kut city, the center of southern Iraq’s Wassit Province on Tuesday, a Wassit police source said.



“An explosive charge blew off against an American military patrol in central Kut on Tuesday, but human and material losses were not known,” the police source told Aswat al-Iraq news agency.



He said the American forces opened random fire after the blast and imposed a security cordon around the venue of the explosion.



An explosive charge had blown off against an American Army patrol close to Kut’s central garage last Sunday, causing damage to vegetable and fruit shops, along with civilian cars.



Kut, the center of Wassit Province, is 180 km to the southeast of Baghdad.



SKH (ST)



Curfew imposed on Kut city after attack on U.S. patrol
5/16/2011 9:54 AM

WASSIT / Aswat al-Iraq: Southern Iraq’s Wassit Province’s Operations Chamber had imposed a night curfew on all vehicles and pedestrians in the city of Kut, the center of the Province, after an attack on a U.S. Army patrol on Sunday, a Wassit police source said.



“Wassit’s Operations Chamber had imposed a curfew on vehicles and persons in Kut, beginning from mid night and till 05:00 am on Monday,” the police source told Aswat al-Iraq news agency.



He said the decision was taken to restore security to the city, and to avoid further armed attacks.



The decision took place after an explosive charge blast that targeted a U.S. Army patrol close the main city garage in Kut city on Sunday, causing several injuries among civilians and damaging many fruit, vegetable shops and cars in the area.



SKH (PT)







Explosion in Kut against U.S. patrol
5/16/2011 9:42 AM

WASSIT / Aswat al-Iraq: A strong explosion that shook the city of Kut, the center of southern Iraq’s Wassit Province, on Sunday, was caused by an explosive charge blast targeted against a U.S. Army patrol, a Wassit police source said.



“An explosive charge, targeted against an American Army patrol, close to Kut’s Central Garage on Sunday, had caused damage to the main street, fruit and vegetable shops and civilian cars in the area,” the security source told Aswat al-Iraq news agency.



An eyewitness said that one of the U.S. patrol’s cars was damaged due to the explosion, adding that the U.S. and Iraqi police had imposed a cordon around the venue of the blast, preventing media and civilians to get close to it.



The eyewitness told Aswat al-Iraq news agency that he saw ambulance cars driving a number of injured persons to al-Zahraa Hospital in Kut, whilst a medical source said that the blast did not cause any human casualties.



Kut, the center of Wassit Province, is 180 km to the southeast of Baghdad.



SKH (ST)



URGENT / Big explosion hits Kut
5/15/2011 8:56 PM
WASSIT / Aswat al-Iraq: A big explosion today hit the city of Kut, Wassit province, security sources informed Aswat al-Iraq.

The explosion took place in front of the city's main parking garage, the sources added.

No details were given on any casualties or the nature of the explosion .

Strict security measures were taken in the area.

RM (TP)/SR

Civilian killed in southern Kut
5/2/2011 9:51 PM
WASSIT / Aswat al-Iraq: Unknown gunmen killed a civilian in southern Kut on Monday, according to a security source.
“Unknown gunmen attacked a civilian in al-Falahiya neighborhood, southern Kut, using light weapons, killing him instantly,” the source told Aswat al-Iraq news agency.
“Police started an investigation into the incident,” he added.
Kut, the capital of Wassit, is 180 km southeast of Baghdad.

SH (TP)


Demonstrators in Kut demand services improvement
4/30/2011 1:49 PM






WASSIT / Aswat al-Iraq: Hundreds of demonstrators took to the streets of Kut, the center of southern Iraq’s Wassit Province on Saturday, gathering in front of the Province’s council building, demanding the improvement of services and accounting the corrupt elements in the Province.



“Hundreds of Kut citizens have gathered in a peaceful demonstration, in front of Kut Province’s Council building on Saturday, in protest to the deteriorated public services, accounting of corruptors, and demanding an end to the Iraqi Dujaila Company’s link with the Jordanian side,” demonstrator, Hussein Hamid told Aswat al-Iraq news agency.



Another demonstrator, Imad Zamel, said; “we are part of the families, residing on a land, allocated for the construction of Kut Sports City, who have been deported to a village away from the city, without compensating us.”



“The village, residents of whom had exceeded 400 families, were not covered with pure water and electricity services, whilst their majority were kept in tents, suffering from difficult circumstances,” Zemel told Aswat al-Iraq.



A third demonstrator, Abed Salman, said: “we are about 250 employees in the Iraqi-Jordanian Company, operating according to self-finance system.”



He said that the Company had stopped activity since many years, thing that made us demand the Iraqi Agriculture Ministry to shift our demands to the Ministry of Industry & Minerals, which had rejected our demands.”



“Ending the Iraqi Dujeila Company’s link with the Jordanian side is necessary to transfer its employees from the Ministry of Agriculture or the Ministry of Industry & Minerals, is important, because we are keeping families and children, and we don’t have another source of living,” Salman said.



On his part, Wassit’s Governor, Mahdi al-Zubeidy, received the demands of the demonstrators, promising to implement them, according to his authorities and raise the other demands to the higher authorities to study and implement them.



A Wassit Province’s Police official had said early in the day that Kut city had witnessed extensive security measures around government institutions, in prelude to the demonstration, expected to demand the departure of the U.S. forces from Iraq.



Kut, the center of Wassit Province, is 180 km to the southeast of Baghdad.



SKH (FT)




Security measures in Kut to face a broad demonstration.
4/30/2011 10:08 AM






WASSIT / Aswat al-Iraq: Southern Iraq’s city of Kut had witnessed extensive security measures on Saturday, in preparation to face a demonstration, demanding the withdrawal of the American forces from Iraq, a Wassit police source said.



“Kut had witnessed today (Saturday) extensive security measures by Army and police forces in the main streets and a round government offices, in prelude to a demonstration, scheduled to take place later in the day, demanding the U.S. forces to leave the country on their scheduled time,” the source told Aswat al-Iraq news agency.



A huge demonstration is expected to take place in Kut on Saturday, demanding the departure of the U.S. forces from Iraq on their scheduled time at the end of this year, and in protest to the deterioration of public services and the, shortage of the government Rationing List and unemployment.



Wassit had witnessed broad demonstrations on Wednesday, on Feb.16 last, during which the offices of the Province’s building, its Council, the Governor’s office and his residence, in protest to the deteriorated services, shortage of the Rationing List, delay of the Governor’s resignation and necessity to account corruptors, that caused 54 injuries and one person killed.



Kut, the center of Wassit Province, is 180 km to the south of Baghdad.

--

Hospital in Kut admits 7 wounded Chinese oil company workers
6/13/2011 2:14 PM
WASSIT / Aswat al-Iraq: A hospital in southern Iraq’s city of Kut has received 7 injured workers from the Chinese Oasis Company for Oil Extraction for treatment who were injured in a road accident, al-Zahraa Hospital source said on Monday.

“Al-Zahraa Public Hospital in Kut has received early on Monday 7 injured workers of the Chinese Oasis Company for Oil Extraction in al-Ahdab Oil Field, 25 km to the west of Kut, to receive treatment. Some of the injured are in serious condition, and have been sent to Baghdad Hospital” the hospital source said.

The source reported that the cause of the injuries remains unknown, but he quoted the Oil Field’s administration as having stated that “the injuries were caused by an accident inside the Field,” giving no further details.

The Chinese Oasis Oil Company had started works to implement al-Ahdab Oil Field in April, 2009, at an investment cost of US$3 billion (b), to produce crude oil averaging 115,000 barrels per day (bpd. In addition, they use the gas extracted from the oil field and part of the crude oil to supply northern Kut’s al-Zubeidiya Electricity Station.

Al-Ahdab Oil Field in al-Ahrar village, 25 km to the west of Kut, is one of the Iraqi oil fields that were not invested in, which is hoped to produce 200,000 barrels of oil per day (bpd). The oil field was discovered in 1979.

Kut, the center of Wassit Province, is 180 km to the southeast of Baghdad.

SKH (TI)/SR

--

Source: preventing a demonstration in al-Kut to demand the exit of U.S. forces and improve services
10/06/2011 14:40

Wasit / Aswat al-Iraq: A member of the Preparatory Committee for the demonstration was scheduled to be launched on Friday in the city of Kut, that security measures prevented them from setting up demonstration, which was hoped to organize to demand the exit of U.S. forces in a timely manner and improve services.
Jawad al-Saray told (Voices of Iraq) that "the procedures secretary taken by the province prevented a demonstration was scheduled to start after the prayer of noon today (Friday) in front of the governorate building in Kut to demand the exit of U.S. forces and activate the services of electricity and flooring and clothing the streets which are now in case no satisfaction of the sons of the city. "
The city of Kut today (Friday), tight security, was the spread of intensive detachments of the army and police in the streets and around the institutions and government departments and buildings to maintain and Council, in preparation for the start of a popular demonstration demanding clear of U.S. troops from the country on schedule and Tefial services.
He added: "The police prevented us from demonstrating the pretext of non-Asthsna approval of the Supreme Security Committee in the province to launch the demonstration."
He pointed out that "the police told the organizers of the demonstration that the Ministry of Interior recently issued a decision not to allow for the start of any event only after obtaining the approval of the Minister of the Interior exclusively."
For his part, said a security source in Wasit province, said that no one had to apply to organize a demonstration on Friday, across the province,
The source told (Voices of Iraq) that "any political or religious or civil society organizations did not apply to the province or to the police command to set up demonstrations or rallies in the province."
He explained: "We will not oppose the establishment of peaceful demonstrations across the province, provided that the organizers pledge not to provoke riots and anarchy and set a date and place of departure of demonstrators gathered in order to provide the necessary security force to protect them."
The town of Kut, Wasit province, 180 km southeast of the capital Baghdad.
--

Iraq's Kut province votes to ban US troops
Wed Jun 8, 2011 3:50PM
Wisam al-Bayati, Press TV, Kut Province
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The provincial council of Kut city, the center of southern Iraq's Wassit province has voted for the withdrawal of US forces from the city.


The main reason behind the vote, the council members say is that the US forces have committed many crimes in the city like arresting civilians without an arrest warrant from Iraqi justice system.

Welcoming the vote, the Kut Mayor, said that the US has made nothing since signing the withdrawal agreement with Iraq. Kut Mayor also said that for the time being the Iraqi forces have made considerable progress turning them qualified to handle the security of the country.


Living under occupation for the last 8 years, Iraqis in Kut say the vote was the best news they have got in recent years.

Since the US administration has signed the withdrawal agreement with its Iraqi counterpart, the US maintained its presence in the Iraqi cities and towns, which as observers say, is considered a clear violation to the conditions of the withdrawal agreement.

--

U.S. Army patrol attacked by explosive charge in Wassit
6/14/2011 9:37 AM

WASSIT / Aswat al-Iraq: A U.S.
Army patrol has been attacked by an explosive charge in the city of Kut, the center of southern Iraq’s Wassit Province on Monday, according to an Iraqi police source.



“An explosive charge, planted by unknown gunmen at the northern entrance of the city of Kut, has blown up against a U.S.
Army patrol, but losses were not known,” the police source told Aswat al-Iraq news agency.



He said the American forces have imposed a security cordon around the venue of the attack, whilst U.S. planes flew over the city.



Kut, the center of Wassit Province, is 180 km to the southeast of Baghdad.

--

Iron factory in Wassit
6/13/2011 7:17 PM

WASSIT / Aswat al-Iraq: The head of Wassit's Investment Commission today laid down the cornerstone for an iron and steel factory at a cost of 24 million dollars.

This is the first factory to be established in the province for the last 40 years, the province's media director stated.

Majid al-Attabi told Aswat al-Iraq that the factory will be established in Aziziyah area, 90 km north of Kut, by an Iraqi investor.

The first factory was erected 40 years ago for textile industries, which was governmental.

The factory will provide 150 work opportunities in addition to 15 percent of foreign workers with engineering specializations.

Wassit's Investment Commission gave permission, since its establishment in 2007, 10 permits in different sectors.

Kut, the center of Wassit province, lies 180 km south east of the capital, Baghdad.

==

69 companies blacklisted in Wassit Province
6/27/2011 2:26 PM

WASSIT / Aswat al-Iraq: Wassit's Provincial Council has announced on Monday that 69 local companies for general contracts have been blacklisted, due to their failure to implement the projects they had signed in the Province, Wassit’s Governor said.

“Our Province has blacklisted 69 local companies for general contracts, together with their managers, and suspended their work, due to their failure in implementing service contracts’ projects they had signed in the Province,” Wassit’s Governor Mahdi al-Zubaidy told Aswat al-Iraq news agency.

He said that work “had continued in 136 projects for the development of the Province, for which over 80 billion (b) dinars were allocated for from the Province’s budget.”

“The Province shall take legal measures against the blacklisted companies in the event that they enter the work under other names and burdening them with the loss that had been caused to the public property,” he stressed, adding that “the contracts that were withdrawn from them would be transferred for other companies.”

Kut, the center of Wassit Province, is 180 km to the southeast of Baghdad.

==

Truck, loaded with rocket-launchers, uncovered in Wassit
7/3/2011 10:09 AM

WASSIT / Aswat al-Iraq: A police patrol has discovered a truck, loaded with rocket-launchers, in southern Iraq’s Wassit Province on Saturday, a Wassit Police source reported.



“A police patrol had discovered a truck, loaded with 5 rocket-launchers in Badra township, 90 km to the east of Kut, the center of Wassit Province on Saturday night,” the police source told Aswat al-Iraq.



He said that police reports had discovered that the said rocket-launchers were used three days ago in launching 3 rockets on the Shaker Military base, used by the U.S. forces in Badra city.



Noteworthy is that the Shaker Military Base, 90 km to the east of Kut, used as a base for the U.S.
forces, had been target for a 3 Katusha rockets attack on Wednesday, June 29, 2011, but the losses were not known.



Kut, the center of Wassit Province, is 180 km to the southeast of Baghdad.


===

Military base in Kut, south Iraq, under 3 rocket attack
7/5/2011 9:14 AM

WASSIT / Aswat al-Iraq: A military base, used by the Multinational Forces in southern Iraq’s city of Kut, has come under a 3 Katusha rocket attack on Monday night, but losses were not known, a security source reported.



“A group of unknown armed men launched an attack by 3 Katusha rockets against the Delta military base, used by the Multinational Forces, 7 km to the west of Kut, the center of Wassit Province, on Monday night,” the security source told Aswat al-Iraq news agency.



He said that police forces headed towards the area, from where the rockets were launched, in al-Jihad district, west of Kut, searching for the attackers.



No official confirmation was issued by the Multinational Forces in Delta base whether the rocket attack had caused any losses.



Noteworthy is that the Shaker base in Badra township, 90 km to the east of Kut, also used as a base by the Multinational Forces, had been target for a 3 Katusha rocket attack last week, wounding a number of American soldiers.



Kut, the center of Wassit Province, is 180 km to the southeast of Baghdad.

==

Rocket falls on fuel tank behind Baghdad’s al-Rashid Hotel
7/5/2011 9:22 AM

BAGHDAD / Aswat al-Iraq: A rocket fell on a fuel store, behind west Baghdad’s 5-star al-Rashid Hotel, causing a huge fire, a security source said on Monday.



“A Katusha rocket fell on a fuel store, behind al-Rashid Hotel, causing a huge fire,” the security source told Aswat al-Iraq news agency.



Eyewitnesses said they saw fire and smoke coming out from the area, where the rocket fell, whilst ambulance and fire-extinguishing cars headed towards the area, giving no further details.

==

Explosive charge blows up against U.S. Army patrol in Kut, south Iraq
7/12/2011 9:18 AM

WASSIT / Aswat al-Iraq: A U.S.
Army patrol had been attacked by an explosive charge in the city of Kut, the center of southern Iraq’s Wassit Province on Monday night, but losses were not known, an Iraqi police source reported.



“An explosive charge blew off close to the U.S.
Delta Military base, 7 km to the west of Kut, against an American military patrol on Monday night, but losses were not known,” the police source told Aswat al-Iraq news agency.



He said that the American forces imposed a security cordon around the area of the attack, whilst U.S. jets flew over Kut city after the attack.



Kut, the center of Wassit Province, is 180 km to the southeast of Baghdad.

===

Kut's Shakir Air Base handed over
7/20/2011 7:33 PM

WASSIT / Aswat al-Iraq: The Iraqi army in Wassit province received Shakir aerial base as part of the implementation of the security agreement signed between Iraq and the U.S., U.S.
sources said today.

The source told Aswat al-Iraq that the base lies 90 km east of Kut city witnessed a series of collaboration between the two sides in preserving security in the province.

Delta base, 7 km west of Kut is still in the hands of U.S.
forces.
It is expected to be handed over at the date of the withdrawal at the end of this year.

Kut, the center of Wassit province, lies 180 km southeast of the capital, Baghdad.


===


Mass grave found in Kut
7/20/2011 7:12 PM

WASSIT / Aswat al-Iraq: A mass grave was discovered north of Kut, a police source disclosed today.

The source told Aswat al-Iraq that "a group of workers found the mass grave today while they were working on the ring road north of Kut city."

"The victims wore civilian clothing, and appeared to be victims of the violent Samarra sectarian attacks in 2006", the source added.

Construction was halted and the Human Rights Ministry was informed accordingly to ensure appropriate removal of the bodies.


Kut, the center of Wassit province, lies 180 km south east of the capital, Baghdad.

===

Tribal conflict kills 8, injures dozens in Wassit
8/14/2011 8:39 AM

WASSIT / Aswat al-Iraq: At least 8 persons have been killed and dozens injured in a tribal clash between two tribes in Dujeila area, south of Kut, the center of southern Iraq’s Wassit Province on Saturday, a Wassit police source reported.



“A tribal clash broke out between the ‘Dalfawiyeen’ and the ‘Fahdawiyeen’ tribes on a conflict about land ownership at Dujeila area south of Kut, killing 8 persons and wounding dozens,” the source told Aswat al-Iraq news agency.



He said that the injured persons were driven to hospitals for treatment, whilst the police forces were sent to the venue of the clash, giving no further details.



Kut, the center of Wassit Province, is 180 km to the southeast of Baghdad.

===

U.S. base in Iraq hit by rockets
Published: Aug. 14, 2011 at 11:10 AM
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BAGHDAD, Aug. 14 (UPI) -- The U.S. military's remaining base in Iraq came under rocket attack Sunday but there were apparently no casualties, Iraqi officials told Aswat al-Iraq.

A trio of Katyusha rockets fell on the Delta base in southern Kut, prompting a response from Iraqi police who rushed to the scene to hunt for the unknown insurgents, a Wassit security source told the news agency.

Delta is the lone U.S. base in Iraq and is due to be handed over to the Iraqi government once the withdrawal is completed at the end of the year.

There was no immediate word from the U.S. military on the reported attack.

Read more: http://www.upi.com/Top_News/World-News/2011/08/14/US-base-in-Iraq-hit-by-rockets/UPI-84871313334626/#ixzz1V4jIWLoL
=============


URGENT: U.S. Base under 3 Katusha rocket attack in Wassit, south Iraq
8/14/2011 10:28 AM

WASSIT / The U.S.
Delta military base in southern Kut, the center of southern Iraq’s Wassit Province, has come under a three Katusha rocket attack on Sunday morning,” a Wassit security source reported.



“A group of unknown gunmen have launched 3 Katusha rockets from northern Kut’s al-Shuhadaa (Martyrs) district against the U.S.
Delta military base, 7 km to the west of Kut,” the security source told Aswat al-Iraq news agency.




“The 3 rockets fell inside the U.S. military base,” he said, adding that “Iraqi police forces had rushed to the venue, where the rockets were fired from, in an attempt to detain their launchers, but gave no further details.



The Delta base is the only place, where the American forces have stayed after handing over all other military positions to the Iraqi side, in a step to implement the Agreement on the withdrawal of the U.S.
forces from Iraqi cities, whilst the Delta base would be handed over to the Iraqi forces at the time of the complete withdrawal of the U.S.
forces from Iraq at the end of 2011.



Kut, the center of Wassit Province, is 180 km to the southeast of Baghdad.

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TWO BLASTS KILL AT LEAST 15 PEOPLE IN IRAQ CITY OF KUT - LOCAL O

15 Aug 2011 06:15

Source: reuters // Reuters

TWO BLASTS KILL AT LEAST 15 PEOPLE IN IRAQ CITY OF KUT - LOCAL OFFICIAL


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Aswat Al Iraq / Thi-Qar , Security
Truck collides with US armored vehicle in Thi-Qar
8/14/2011 8:09 PM

THI-QAR / Aswat al-Iraq: Nine Iraqi civilian cars have been burnt due to an accident between a U.S.
armored vehicle and a truck in Souq al-Shiyoukh township of southern Iraq’s Nassiriya city on Sunday, causing no human casualties, a security source reported.

“A civilian truck, carrying 12 modern cars and heading for Nassiriya city, the center of Thi-Qar Province, collided with an American armored vehicle on a main road leading to Souq al-Shiyoukh township, 30 km to the south of Nassiriya city.
The crash resulted in 8 of the cars loaded onto the truck burning from a fire resulting from the crash.
No harm was reported from the American side,” the source told Aswat al-Iraq news agency.

He said that police carrying fire-extinguishers headed to extinguish the fire that broke out in the truck.
They were able to save 4 of the loaded cars.

“The American side said the accident took place due to a technical fault in the civilian truck and its failure to stop, subsequently crashing into the U.S.
armored vehicle,” he added.

Nassiriya, the center of Thi-Qar Province, is 380 km to the south of Baghdad.

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Twin central Iraq blasts kill 33
2011/08/15

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KUT, Iraq: A car bomb and a roadside blast in the central Iraqi city of Kut killed at least 33 people and wounded 52 others, a doctor said, updating an earlier toll.


“We have so far received 33 dead bodies and are now treating 52 injured,” said Ali Hussein, a doctor at Kut’s Al-Zahra hospital. He said there were women and children among the casualties.

A security official earlier said the 8:00 am (0500 GMT) explosions occurred in a crowded area in the centre of the city, 160 kilometres (100 miles) south of Baghdad.

The attacks come less than two weeks after Iraqi leaders said they would hold talks with the US over a security training mission to last beyond 2011, when all 47,000 American soldiers must withdraw under the terms of a bilateral security pact.


Violence in Iraq has declined from its peak in 2006 and 2007, but attacks remain common. A total of 259 Iraqis were killed in attacks in July, the second-highest figure for 2011. -- AFP

Read more: Twin central Iraq blasts kill 33 http://www.nst.com.my/nst/articles/TwincentralIraqblastskill33/Article/index_html#ixzz1V4onRTPQ


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KUT, Iraq (AFP) - A car bomb and a roadside blast in the central Iraqi city of Kut killed at least 33 people and wounded 52 others, a doctor said, updating an earlier toll.

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DEATH TOLL FROM IRAQ'S KUT BOMBING RISES TO 30 KILLED, 40 WOUNDE

15 Aug 2011 06:16

Source: reuters // Reuters

DEATH TOLL FROM IRAQ'S KUT BOMBING RISES TO 30 KILLED, 40 WOUNDED- SECURITY OFFICIAL

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(CNN) -- A double bombing killed 34 people and wounded 68 on Monday in the central Iraqi city of Kut, authorities told CNN.

A car bomb blast followed by a roadside bomb blast occurred on a busy commercial street during morning rush hour, said Kut police officials, speaking on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to release information to the media.

While violence in Iraq has fallen off in recent years, bomb blasts remain a near daily occurrence throughout the country.

Kut is about 100 kilometers (62 miles) south of Baghdad.

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Two bombs kill at least 34 in Iraq's Kut-officials

15 Aug 2011 06:35

Source: reuters // Reuters

BAGHDAD, Aug 15 (Reuters) - A roadside bomb and a car bomb killed at least 34 people in Iraq's Kut city, police and local officials said on Monday.

The roadside bomb exploded in a public square in Kut, 150 kms (95 miles) southeast of Baghdad, and a car bomb detonated when security forces arrived on the scene, police said.

Khamis al-Saad, Iraq's deputy health minister, told Reuters 34 people were killed in Kut and 64 wounded.

"Hospitals are still receiving casualties, but the situation is under control," Saad said. (Reporting by Kahlid al-Ansary and Ahmed Rasheed; writing by Patrick Markey, editing by Tim Pearce)

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By SINAN SALAHEDDIN, Associated Press – 15 mins ago

BAGHDAD – An Iraqi medical official says the death toll from twin bombings at a market in a city southeast of Baghdad has risen to 34.

The top medical official in the province where the city of Kut is located, Diaa al-Aboudi, says 60 people were also wounded in the blast on Monday.

Police spokesman Lt. Col. Dhurgam Mohammed Hassan says the first bomb went off in a freezer used to keep drinks cold. Then as rescuers and onlookers gathered, a parked car bomb exploded.

THIS IS A BREAKING NEWS UPDATE. Check back soon for further information. AP's earlier story is below.

BAGHDAD (AP) — An Iraqi spokesman says 25 people were killed when two bombs exploded in a market in a city southeast of Baghdad.

Lt. Col. Dhurgam Mohammed Hassan, the spokesman for Wasit province police, says the first bomb went off Monday morning in a freezer used to keep drinks cold. Then as rescuers and onlookers gathered, a parked car bomb exploded.

He says construction workers were gathered in the area when the blast went off. Sixty people were also wounded in the explosions.


Kut is 100 miles (160 kilometers) southeast of Baghdad.

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Four persons killed, 17 others injured in 2 Najaf blasts
8/15/2011 10:17 AM

NAJAF / Aswat al-Iraq: At least 4 persons have been killed and 17 others were injured in 2 booby-trapped car explosions east of the old city in southwestern Iraq’s holy city of Najaf on Monday, a security source reported.



“Two booby-trapped cars blew off in Hay al-Hussein district east of the old city in Najaf on Monday, killing 4 persons and wounding 17 others,” the security source told Aswat al-Iraq news agency.

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24 contracts companies on black list in Wassit province
11/16/2011 6:00 PM

WASSIT / Aswat al-Iraq: Chairman of Wassit Provincial Council announced today that 24 local companies were black listed for delaying their projects.

Mahnoud Abdul Redha told Aswat al-Iraq that the province the directors of these companies were prevented from new bids, under their names or others, which matter shall be referred to the ministry of planning for notification.

These companies will bear the financial differences for referring these projects to other contractors, he added.