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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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    An expert explains the position of international law by cutting off Turkey's water from Iraq

    Rocky
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    An expert explains the position of international law by cutting off Turkey's water from Iraq Empty An expert explains the position of international law by cutting off Turkey's water from Iraq

    Post by Rocky Fri 03 Mar 2023, 9:28 am

    [size=45][size=41]An expert explains the position of international law by cutting off Turkey's water from Iraq[/size]
     two hours ago
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    Today, Friday, the legal expert, Ali Al-Tamimi, clarified the position of international law regarding Turkey's cutting off water from Iraq.
    Al-Tamimi said, in a clarification, that "Turkey and Iraq are among the 196 countries affiliated with the 1982 Convention or the so-called Law of the Sea, which Iraq ratified in 1985, and this agreement has a court specialized in cutting off water, through which the problem that Iraq suffers from can be solved."
    He added, "The 1982 agreement, through Article 297, gave the right to the countries affected by the water cuts to resort to the court in the event of the intractability of bilateral solutions."
    And he indicated that “Article 27 of international law allows Iraq to request assistance from the United States of America according to the strategic agreement of 2008,” stressing that “the damage caused to Iraq according to this article is considered a crime against humanity.”
    And he added, "The dirtiest wars are water wars, which are crimes against humanity that allow Iraq to resort to the United Nations and the Security Council and request that the file be referred to the International Criminal Court."
    He continued, "Iraq has the right to resort to the International Court of Justice as a result of the damage it suffered from the water cuts." The surplus of water that goes in vain to the Shatt al-Arab, but now the matter has changed and Turkey has built dams and completely blocked the water, and this violates international laws and agreements.
    Al-Tamimi called on the Iraqi government to resort to “one of the schools of international arbitration as an international judiciary, especially since there are countries that have resorted to arbitration in resolving disputes, as happened between China, the Philippines, Russia, Georgia, Qatar and Bahrain, so it is better to go to international arbitration.”
    The legal expert pointed out, “There are other international agreements that regulate the issue of water, including the Lausanne Convention of 1923 and the Friendship Watch 1946, in addition to bilateral agreements and protocols between Iraq and Turkey, including 1977, 1997 and 2007, as well as the international sewage law and the rules of the United Nations, all of which allow Iraq to solve its problems.” ".
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