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Abadi government issued a decree banning the 60 military commander and responsible travel


yota691
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15-01-2015 11:20 AM

 

Free -


Iraqi political and security sources revealed the issuance of government-Abadi, in the late hours of the night on Wednesday, a decree banning 60 different military figure and administrative Iraqi from traveling outside the country, under any circumstances, and the sincerity of a judicial decision memorandum. A senior official in the Iraqi government and pointed out that 'the prime minister as head of government and commander in chief of the armed forces, issued a decree banning 60 people from traveling outside the country, and circulated the names on land ports, and airports, including the Kurdistan region. " 
He also explained the official, who occupies a position The cabinet, in a statement to the newspaper's new 'Arab', the 'decision-assigned and ratified memorandums of justice, due to accusations of those personalities financial and administrative corruption issues, and accusations of military officials senior high treason, and flee from the face of armed groups in Mosul, which led to its downfall.' 
This is pointed out that all the names in the list of the pillars of the government of Nouri al-Maliki and his aides and those close to him, 'was followed by a move to freeze their movable and immovable property.' 
, the official confirmed in the civil aviation authority of the source at Baghdad International Airport this information, pointing to the same newspaper that power and relevance to a copy of the decision and names, and became effective as of the date of issue, noting that one of the two names of the Minister Maliki's government, one of the former defense minister, Saadoun al-Dulaimi, as well as six former MPs in parliament, and 29 military leader, including a commander Wild and his assistant forces, and Chief of Staff of the Iraqi army, and the commander of the Second Division, and the commander of Nineveh, and the commander of Salahuddin operations.

 

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Sounds to me Maliki's insiders are finally going to see justice served on them. Now they need to arrest M and round up all his cronies and prosecute them to the fullest extent of Iraqi law. Go get em Abadi show them there's a new sheriff in town to clean it up.  

 

:cowboy2::cowboy: :cowboy: :rodeo:

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Sounds to me Maliki's insiders are finally going to see justice served on them. Now they need to arrest M and round up all his cronies and prosecute them to the fullest extent of Iraqi law. Go get em Abadi show them there's a new sheriff in town to clean it up.  

 

:cowboy2::cowboy: :cowboy: :rodeo:

AND let's not forget...recover da money !!

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Abadi issued an injunction prohibiting 60 military and political figure of travel, including "Ghraoui"

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 BAGHDAD - Iraq Press - January 15: According to informed sources, on Thursday, that "the Commander in Chief of the Armed Forces, Haider al-Abadi, issued a decision which prevents the 60 military figure from traveling outside Iraq," noting that a number of military commanders will be directed charged with treason on them in accordance with Article 29 of the Constitution and that the death penalty. " 

 

 

She said "the names of those barred circulated to all border crossings of the country's airports, including in the Kurdistan region, including the former commander of Nineveh, Mahdi al-Gharawi, and senior leaders who occupy important positions in the army," pointing out that "the ban includes 60 military and political figure of travel outside the country. "

 

 

 The agency that "the Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi order barring them from traveling on the back of the existence of charges against them of causing the fall of the city of Mosul and other areas of northern Iraq, however, the so-called organized Daash P and the involvement of other files of financial and administrative corruption." Admiral ended 

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I'm still not seeing

Corrupt officials doesn't mean that the prime minister is guilty of anything

I would think if maliki was put on a list not to travel they would say he's on that list

To me it's obvious maliki is not on that list

Maliki may be partially responsible for making the list

I thought maliki was in charge of the investigation

Personally I'd think the majority of these leaders will turn out to be Sunnis and possibly some kurds

But I guess we will see if any shittes were involved in trying to get maliki out of office

From what I've read maliki is buddy's with abadi

Maliki was given the Vice Presidents job

It wasn't a election result , I believe it was assigned to him

This all went down when maliki had the majority and ready to win pm position again during the election cycle

We're gonna eventually know who sabatoged the maliki chances for re- election

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From what I'm seeing they are talking about corruption and then referring to the fact it was under the last administration

I read last week about the ethnic cleansing going on right now by shittes and this is under a abadis administration so should they hang abadi too?

Here's the article link

RAWASHID, Iraq- Sunni residents of this tiny village north of Baghdad are all gone. Their homes now have Shiite graffiti scrawled on the walls. Shiite banners, many emblazoned with images of revered saints, are hoisted on the roofs.

The only people here now are Shiite fighters, who nearly two weeks ago helped Iraqi forces wrest the town from the Islamic State group. Outside one of the homes the fighters have occupied, their leader sat with his men on a recent day, warming themselves by a fire where tea brewed.

He made it clear: They have no intention of allowing the Sunnis back, accusing them of supporting the extremists.

"If we allow the residents of this village to return to their homes, they will do it all over again to us," said Adnan Hassan, 59. The militants used the village to fire mortars at the nearby, mainly Shiite city of Balad - and they still hold villages only a few miles away.

"These are our lands. They were taken away from us centuries ago," he said, pointing to the orchards and lush farmlands surrounding the village's relatively affluent homes.

Hassan's claim of Shiite ownership of the lands is tenuous at best. But his comments expose a grim side of Iraq's fight against the Sunni militants of the Islamic State group: The war is being used by Shiite militiamen to change the demographics of Sunni areas, in an attempt to solidify Shiite control. The practice appears mostly focused on Sunni areas astride roads leading to important Shiite shrines to the north and south of the capital, Baghdad.

The apparent sectarian cleansing plants the seeds of future conflict - or even an outright civil war that could eventually break up the nation along sectarian and ethnic lines, a fate that a growing number of Iraqis, particularly Sunnis, see as the solution to the nation's bloody turmoil.

Tens of thousands of Iraq's Sunnis fled their home regions over the past year to escape the brutal rule of the Islamic State group. The militants swept over much of the north and west of Iraq, overrunning Sunni-majority regions all the way down to the doorstep of Baghdad.

Shiite-led security forces and militias made up of Shiite volunteers have since driven the militants out of some of those areas. But the Sunni residents have mostly been prevented from returning, on the grounds that the regions are not yet safe. In many cases, they have been unable to return because their homes have been destroyed in the fighting or blown up by militiamen.

Sunnis who stayed put and endured Islamic State governance face a worse predicament when Shiite forces recapture their areas. They are accused of helping the militants, often their homes are blown up, men jailed or entire families banished, with their properties given to Shiites.

The militiamen appear to be the ones enforcing the demographic change, unsettling the Shiite-led government. The danger is real enough that Shiite Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi has spoken forcefully about the need for national unity. Addressing graduating army cadets Tuesday, he called for residents of liberated areas to be allowed to return to their homes, so that their suffering ends. In an unusually bold gesture of reconciliation, he visited the capital's two landmark Sunni and Shiite shrines on Friday.

Iraq's top Shiite cleric, the Iranian-born Grand Ayatollah Ali al-Sistani, condemned the excesses of militiamen in a fatwa, or an edict, issued last weekend, specifically citing the theft of property in areas liberated from the Islamic State group.

"What we are dealing with here is a real attempt at demographic change, coupled with blatant abuses," Sunni politician Hamed al-Mutlaq told The Associated Press. "It is now extremely difficult for the Sunnis to return to their homes" - not because their homes have been destroyed, he added, "it is genuine fear that is stopping them."

The sectarian shift comes on top of one that occurred in the wave of vicious sectarian fighting sparked in 2006, when Sunni militants blew up the Shiite shrine of Imam al-Askari in the city of Samarra, north of Baghdad. That conflict became a virtual civil war, and it purged Baghdad of most mixed neighborhoods, leaving it sharply divided between Shiite and Sunni districts.

In Diyala province, northeast of the capital, Islamic State militants have almost completely been driven out, but Sunni Arab families have not been allowed back, said Raad al-Dahlaki, a Sunni lawmaker from the province. The province is a major route for Iranian pilgrims traveling overland to shrines in Iraq.

"They say they will only allow 'loyal' residents to go back. This is an excuse to change the demographics of the province," al-Dahlaki said.

Al-Mutlaq and other Sunni politicians said the area around Balad, about 40 miles north of Baghdad, is targeted to keep out Sunnis.

Balad is home to the shrine of one of the imams revered by Shiites and sits on the main highway from Baghdad to Samarra. While many of the larger towns in the area have Shiite majorities, the surrounding countryside along the Tigris River is dotted with Sunni towns and villages like Rawashid. Over the past weeks, Iraqi forces backed by Shiite volunteer fighters swept across the area, pushing back the extremists and trying to clear a corridor to Samarra.

Iraqi federal police and Shiite volunteers battled for five hours late last month to retake Rawashid. On Saturday, when AP journalists visited, the police were gone, and the volunteers led by Hassan were settled in, taking over several houses. Other houses were blackened, possibly by fire or shelling, or flattened by airstrikes.

It is not clear whether the village's estimated 1,000 residents fled when the Islamic State militants took over in the summer or when the village was retaken. Either way, none were in sight Saturday.

Laith Ahmed, an official with the "Popular Mobilization Authority" - the state agency overseeing the volunteers - painted the entire village population as Islamic State supporters.

"They own some of the most fertile farms in Iraq, so it's beyond me why they chose to take the side of the armed militants," he said.

Anti-Sunni bias is just as pronounced in Balad. There, Shiite residents successfully kept the Islamic State militants at bay during a weeks-long siege in June and July. The city's small Sunni population fled.

"By God, I will never allow the Sunnis to come back to Balad," said Mudhafar Abdul-Reddah, a Shiite in his 50s. "They were in contact with the Islamic State during the siege."

"We are better off without any Sunnis in our midst," said restaurant owner Hussein Shamel. "We (Shiites) all know each other and we are like one family," he said. During the IS siege, he said, Balad residents shared the little food they had and organized resistance, manning sand barriers set up around the city.

All along the highway from Baghdad to Balad, the depopulation is clear - along with the sectarian nature of the fight.

Shiite banners and images of saints fly over every military checkpoint and vehicle. Graffiti on concrete barriers and walls speak of Shiite victory. Farmland and homes along the road showed no sign of life.

http://m.fayobserver...a.html?mode=jqm

Should they get a rope for abadi?

Read more: http://dinarvets.com/forums/index.php?/topic/194248-iraqs-shiite-militiamen-cleansing-retaken-villages/#ixzz3Ov2ajSya

It's under his administration

Ya got to realize there's some crazy people over there and everything doesn't always fall on the prime minister

The usa wouldn't help maliki .... Remember

So the dawa party put his buddy in place of him

If maliki was responsible we may or may not see justice

We still got a few more weeks for the answers

If barzani was responsible we will know also

The kurds hated maliki because they were going broke under maliki

This is where I see the corruption ,,,, with the Sunnis and Kurds ,, we will see

Edited by dontlop
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