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Established in 2006 as a Community of Reality

Welcome to the Neno's Place!

Neno's Place Established in 2006 as a Community of Reality


Neno

I can be reached by phone or text 8am-7pm cst 972-768-9772 or, once joining the board I can be reached by a (PM) Private Message.

Established in 2006 as a Community of Reality

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Established in 2006 as a Community of Reality

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    What will Baghdad do with Iraqis who fled the last bastion of Daash?

    Rocky
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     What will Baghdad do with Iraqis who fled the last bastion of Daash? Empty What will Baghdad do with Iraqis who fled the last bastion of Daash?

    Post by Rocky Thu 14 Feb 2019, 2:48 am

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    What will Baghdad do with Iraqis who fled the last bastion of Daash?[/size]
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     3 hours ago




    A small area in the north of Syria still has few "Da'ash" fighters, no more than 500 people refuse to leave the area they control, which is about two square kilometers, the "remnants of the alleged caliphate state," a British newspaper reported.
    Women and children fled the town of Baguz in northeastern Syria on Tuesday after weeks of bombardment and mass exodus of the vast majority of the region's pre-war population of nine thousand, Besieged the town led by the Kurds to civilians out of them.
    But after three days of intense bombardment, more people appeared than they thought, leaving them slowly heading to nearby battle points.
    Among them were women from France, Russia and Tajikistan, as well as families from Iraq and nearby Syrian towns and cities. Where the area of ​​"Baguz" a gathering point for fighters and their families from the territory, which was controlled by the group for a period of time.
    "There are more women and children left behind by the organization than in the town than we expected before the start of the operation on Saturday," said Adnan Afrini, commander of the Kurdish unit known as the Syrian Democratic Forces. "We are receiving hundreds of families and their children every day".
    "We are facing fierce fighting because the region is very small, full of fighters, the most extreme and experienced, and they have no intention of giving in, and the fighters inside are the most radical extremists," he said.
    "She went for four hours to get to safety, and now she will accept whatever fate she has," said a 50-year-old war survivor named Hamida Hussein.
    "There is nothing left in Bagouz, we could only eat once a day, there are some women and children who are not allowed out, the whole city is destroyed, and bullets fly in the sky like rain."
    Hamida says she was from outside the city, but fled to Baguz at a time when the war was going on like many other people standing in the square.
    Abu Ahmad al-Rawi, a 35-year-old from Rawa, Iraq, said: "We had no chance of leaving until now, we were in Kishma before we moved to Baguz, and the war came here too. I did not know what would happen next, but I knew that this was the only way to survive. "
    "More than 1,000 members of foster families have been received by the Kurdish forces over the past two days and will be transferred to nearby refugee camps," said Saleh Omar, a member of a local civil council.
    They are believed to have more foreigners than Iraqis, as well as some 10,000 non-Syrians being accommodated by local authorities in the Kurdish north.
    During the last four days of the final stages of the battle, which has been described as the traditional battle of the four and a half years war against "Dahesh," there are signs of an agreement to allow the remaining people to flee to the desert - their only way to escape.
    This arrangement ended the fighting in the city of Raqqa in late 2017, where fighters and their families were moving to the central Syrian deserts, where many disappeared, according to the Guardian report.
    "The information about the US deal with Qusd regarding the transfer of the families of the organization's gunmen to Iraq is still foggy," the Lebanese daily al-Akhbar said in a report released Thursday.
    Sources say that the relocation of the families, which number more than 8,000 people, into the Iraqi interior, specifically to the western region of Anbar, actually began three weeks ago. In the same context, Iraqi government sources indicate that this "migration" is an Iraqi demand, but that the American side "postponed its completion more than once," linked to Washington's intention to declare victory on the first call, and the withdrawal from Syria to the Iraqi territory.
    Sources confirm that the process will be in several stages. The American side in Syria receives the Iraqi families from Qusad and then moves them to camps adjacent to the border, similar to those in Nineveh provinces belonging to the Da'ash tribe. Closed camps will be waiting for those families. The Iraqi security forces will then start investigating their members and then refer those found to be involved in criminal operations to the competent security and judicial authorities, while reintegrating these detainees with their communities once the legal steps are completed.
    The government seeks to embrace them, that is, between "criminals" and "victims", since elders, women and children can be innocent, and men have to be considered individually. But key working leaders in western Anbar say the move is "difficult to verify" at the moment, or at least as the US hopes.
    Field sources confirm that the fighting between "Dahesh" and "Qusd" is not to be shortened at the moment, especially as the militants "da'ash" are distributed between the Iraqi and Syrian communities, as well as foreign dependents. Sources point out that the reality of the field, especially in terms of the deployment of the forces of "popular mobilization" may not be a facilitator for the process of transition of this kind, especially as the leadership of these forces are looking carefully to complete a similar deal, which raises the possibility of moving dormant cells within those camps, Other sources speculate that the agreement includes only Iraqi families, while the foreign militants will be re-entered into Syria from the southern side of the city of Qaim, as an open area with the Syrian side.



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