RSS
Логотип
Баннер в шапке 1
Баннер в шапке 2
2023/08/07 14:29:41

Iraq

.

Content

Main article: Countries of the world

Population

Population

2022:42 million people

Data for September 2022,

2000: Population growth to 23 million

Comparison of figures for 1800 and 2000

Migration

2021: Net outflow over 4 years

Nationalities

Kurds

Main article: Kurds

Marriages

Allowed to have more than one spouse

Выделены countries, in which citizens can officially have more than one spouse. Data for 2022

Foreign policy

2023: MIDA's pro-American chief Hussain

As of May 2023, pro-American Foreign Minister Fuad Hussein, who is one of the main lobbyists for the American military presence in Iraq, is operating in Iraq.

Economy

Main article: Economy of Iraq

Internet regulation

2023: Telegram blocked due to national security concerns

On August 6, 2023, Iraq's Ministry of Communications blocked Telegram's instant messaging system. This is said to be for "national security reasons" and to preserve the integrity of personal data in the country.

Telegram is widely used in Iraq to exchange information, as well as as a source of news and to forward various content. At the same time, as noted by Reuters, some Telegram channels contain a large amount of personal data, including the names, addresses and family ties of Iraqis.

Iraq blocked Telegram over national security concerns

In a statement, Iraq's Ministry of Communications said it had asked Telegram management to shut down "platforms that leak data from official government agencies and personal data from citizens." However, it is alleged that the company did not respond to these requests and did not contact the department.

File:Aquote1.png
The Ministry of Communications confirms its respect for the rights of citizens to freedom of speech and communication without compromising the security of the state and its institutions, the ministry said in an official statement.
File:Aquote2.png

It is noted that Telegram services were actually blocked by noon on August 6, 2023. Users have lost the ability to exchange messages and forward any files. However, the app was still available via VPN.

NetBlocks statistics collected in real time indicate that Telegram's external and internal interfaces are limited to the leading Iraqi providers Zain and Earthlink. At the same time, the service remains available to Kurdish operators Kurdistan Net and Korek Telecom.

File:Aquote1.png
Metrics show Telegram's messaging platform is limited across much of Iraq, with the exception of operators in the autonomous Kurdistan region, NetBlocks said.[1]
File:Aquote2.png

Education

2021: Literacy rate of the population - 43.7%

Data for 2021

2019: Number of years of education by citizens over 25

The number of years of education by citizens over 25 years old, as of 2019

Health care

Maternity leave

in
Число недель оплачиваемого maternity leave countries around the world for 2021

2022: Abortion ban in place

As of May 2022

2020: Duration of guaranteed paid sick leave 6 months or more

Data as of September 1, 2020

Armed Forces

2023: 2nd most military and economic aid from the US in 23 years

Data for 2023 incomplete

2021: Defence spending - 2.28% of GDP

Data for 2021

2020: US military aid worth $548 million

Data for 2020

US military bases

2020: Plan to reduce the number of US military in the country to 3 thousand people

The United States will reduce the military contingent in Iraq by more than a third by the end of September 2020, General Kenneth McKenzie, head of the US Central Command (CENTCOM), said on September 9, 2020.

He told reporters that this month the number of US military in Iraq will decrease from about 5.2 thousand to 3 thousand.

​​Na the Middle East, 60-70 thousand US troops are constantly based, 2019

2008

1,215 U.S. troops pray at Al Faw Palace, one of Saddam Hussein's former homes. Baghdad. July 4, 2008 Iraq War.

Ecology

2021: Ninth in terms of air pollution

In March 2022, Greenpeace, in collaboration with the development company AirVisual, compiled an annual rating of the countries of Europe and the world with the cleanest air. In Iraq, air pollution in 2021 was 49.7 PM2.5 (mkg/m³). Read more here.

Crime

Terrorism

Prisons

2021: 7th in the world in the number of death executions: 17 in a year

Data for 2021

2019: The minimum age for children to be jailed is 9

Data for 2019

2018: Number of prisoners per 100 thousand citizens

World Prison Brief data for 2018

Sport

2022: The most popular sport is football

in
Самый популярный вид sport countries of the world to to data June 2022

History

2023: Map of Iraqi Kurdistan

In November 2023, the Turkish Armed Forces continue episodic hostilities in Iraqi Kurdistan

2022

Political crisis: A year without a government and president

By October 2022, there is no government in Iraq for a year after the parliamentary elections in October 2021. This is the longest period of de jure anarchy since the 2003 US invasion.

In October 2021, the Muqtada al-Sadr-led political bloc As-Sairun lil-Islah (Reform-Minded) won a majority of votes (73 seats) in the parliamentary elections. The alliance of Shiite parties - including those affiliated with Al-Hashd al-Shaabi (a power structure that includes paramilitary Shiite groups, part of the Iraqi Armed Forces) - received a record low number of seats, essentially losing an instrument of political influence.

According to the Iraqi constitution, the next step was to elect a president, prime minister and speaker. The first should be representative of the Kurdish community, the second should be Shia, and the third should be Sunni. And the choice should be based on the consensus of the country's powerful groupings.

In Iraq, the "three presidents" system ensured the interests of each of the three ethno-religious groups inhabiting Iraq, and made it possible to create the appearance of stability in the country.

Sadrists, along with the Sunni Sovereignty movement and the Kurdistan Democratic Party, have tried to lure several Shiite parties to their side and push for a majority-based parliament, avoiding the rule in place since 2005.

Muqtada al-Sadr tried to completely deprive his traditional opponents of power - the party of ex-Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki and pro-Iranian groups. The confrontation that arose led to the fact that neither the president nor the head of government were ever chosen.

After a string of setbacks and a breakdown in dialogue in June 2022, all 73 Sadrist MPs resigned. Their seats went to the Al-Maliki party, strengthening the pro-Iranian position in the country.

Al-Sadr tried unsuccessfully to bring opponents to negotiate on more favorable terms. However, Nouri al-Maliki and the allies tried to elect a new prime minister without the participation of Sadr, which caused great indignation from the Ayatollah and his supporters.

In early July 2022, an audio recording of Nuri al-Maliki's offensive statements about Muqtad al-Sadr was published on the Web - this provoked mass pogroms.

At the end of July, Al-Sadr's followers stormed the parliament building twice, and in August, after Al-Sadr's announcement that he was leaving politics, the riots turned into riots. Then at least 30 people died, and over 700 were injured.

Despite Al-Sadr's statements, spontaneous riots and rallies continue.

At the end of September, Muqtada supporters defeated the office of Channel 4 in the Karrad district of Baghdad due to the disrespectful treatment of the leading Mahdi Army. Then a federal police officer was injured.

In early October, scuffles took place between sadrists and pro-Iranian factions in Basra over an attempt by sadrists to seize the local headquarters of Al-Hashd al-Shaabi.

In Di Kar province, during rallies, the building of the provincial council caught fire, the arson of which was accused of protesters. Members of the security forces began to use live ammunition.

On October 4, rallies were held in several cities of Wasit province, Tahrir Square and the Republican Bridge in Baghdad. Then more than 100 people were injured.

The next day, unrest in Baghdad continued between sadrists and supporters of Nuri al-Maliki in the vicinity of the Republican Bridge and on Saadun Street. Several people were injured.

Protests and insurgencies in Iraq are quite common. Each such case ended quite predictably, despite the statements of analysts of all varieties about the upcoming collapse of the country.

But the crisis of 2022 is knocked out of the previous ones due to the desire of Muqtada al-Sadr to completely take control of power, the Rybar telegram channel noted. Al-Sadr took advantage of the loss of popular confidence in pro-Iranian parties due to failed social policies and a catastrophic election campaign.

Ayatollah encroached on the principle of distribution of power, which has already become familiar to all Iraqi society. Since it is almost impossible to achieve the necessary quorum of 220 places in modern Iraq.

But since both the top of Iraq and their curators are completely satisfied with the current order of things, nothing came of Muqtada al-Sadr's attempt. Each faction has its own bit of power, and this maintains a very shaky parity between Shiites, Sunnis and Kurds in parliament.

But the Sadrists' desire to redraw the political system predictably faced resistance, primarily from pro-Iranian formations, which since the war with IS have received enormous powers in Iraqi state life.

Even looking at the geography of the protests, it can be seen that only the southern and southeastern regions of Iraq and Baghdad are affected - mainly the places of compact Shiite residence.

What does Sadr want?

By this time, Muqtada al-Sadr has been a kind of "necessary opposition" for 15 years, whose interests must be reckoned with due to the wide support of the Iraqi population and the increasing popularity of the concept of withdrawing all foreign forces from Iraqi political life promoted by him.

Al-Sadr all these years competently used his supporters to gain benefits in the ongoing political processes. When he needed something, he would drive off followers and knock out a tidbit without crossing the "red line."

In this case, the Ayatollah most likely intended to do the same. He announced the withdrawal of his party from parliament, under its pretext he wanted to agree with his opponents on favorable terms, after which he would give a signal to his supporters to go home. However, the Coordination Union, led by Al-Maliki, decided to do otherwise, which put the country at risk of starting a civil war.

Western curators do not allow the conflict to develop into something more, realizing that it will then be more difficult to control.

The most important problem of the Iraqi political system is its disorganization. Pluralism, due to the abundance of opposing parties, deprives Iraq of the opportunity to resolve the internal political conflict.

Turkey launches new operation in Iraqi Kurdistan

On April 17, 2022, SV special forces units Turkey with artillery support landed in the Metina, Zap and Avashin districts of Dahuk province with UAV support from the air. The positions of the Kurdistan Workers' Party were attacked by F-16 aircraft.

The Turkish foreign minister said: "If we see a fire in our neighboring country, we come to extinguish it."

Defense Minister Hulusi Akar: "The tasks of the first stage of the special operation have been achieved. Unlike previous operations, this will be long, as Turkey will not stop until the last terrorist is killed. "

On Turkish television, in addition to the above-mentioned areas of the operation, it is said that the territories at the Sinjar-Mosul line may be possible final goals.

Simultaneously with the operation, bots started working on social networks talking about "Great Turkey" with part of the territories of Iraq, Syria and Greece.

On the morning of April 18, the Iraqi official authorities did not speak out about the actions of the Turkish Armed Forces.

2021: Pope's Visit

On March 5, 2021, Pope Francis arrived in Baghdad, which was the Pope's first visit to Iraq. His trip is designed to rally the country's dwindling Christian community after decades of war.

2011: "Payments" to Unaoil in Iraq to obtain contracts in the oil sector

Unaoil made the payments in an attempt to influence at least five Iraqi officials making decisions on lucrative contracts for oil production and infrastructure maintenance in the country. Four of them were mentioned in emails under code names:

  • Hussein al-Shahristani served as Minister of Energy from 2006 to 2010, was Deputy Prime Minister under Nouri al-Maliki in 2010-2014, and briefly became Minister of Foreign Affairs in 2014. The company gave him the codename 'Teacher'. For 2023, he is the Deputy Prime Minister of Iraq for power.

  • Karim Luaibi, who succeeded Shahristani as oil minister, who was called 'M'.

  • Kifah Numan, head of the Southern Oil Company until 2009.

  • Dhia Jaffar al-Mousavi, CEO of Iraq's Southern Oil Company from 2009 to 2015, when he became the country's deputy oil minister. The emails refer to him as' The Lighthouse '.

  • Odai al-Quraishi, another Southern Oil Company employee, codenamed 'Ivan'.

The two most important people Unaoil tried to bribe in Iraq were so senior that the company was forced to use an intermediary - Ahmed al-Jibouri, codenamed 'Doctor' - to try to contact them. In 2010 and 2011, Unaoil paid Djiburi at least $20 million in an attempt to influence Shahristani and Luaibi.

Unaoil employee Bazil al-Jarah, who handled the company's Iraqi business, said he believed Jibouri was not just a lobbyist, but was handing over some of his remuneration to Shahristani and Luaibi. 'He is a tool,' Al Jarah wrote in a Skype conversation that was copied and pasted into an email. 'The people standing above him are real greedy mu * * ki'. In another email, Al Jarah described promising '1.5 days of leave' - the code for paying $1.5 million - for Djiburi's' side '. Djibouri 'passed on this information to the' Teacher 'and on the basis of this the' Teacher 'gave the go-ahead,' Al Jarah added.

It was possible to decipher these code designations as a result of a leak from the company's internal server - then tens of thousands of emails fell into the hands of journalists. The management and management of Unaoil are not personnel officers of the special services. Their lack of experience in working with classified data allowed investigators to quickly draw up a complete picture of what is happening.

From the full context of the emails, it became clear that 'holidays' are bribes, one day of which corresponds to $1 million. Sometimes an invoice for the appropriate amount was attached directly to a letter mentioning 'leave'.

In several emails, Unaoil employees gave enough details to identify the people behind the code names. In one letter, for example, Unaoil staff describe how the Prime Minister sent 'The Teacher' to inspect a particular site. From that day's news reports - and subsequent responses in the email chain - it becomes clear that 'Teacher' is Shahristani.

When Saddam Hussein was still in power, Shahristani, a nuclear physicist by training, was imprisoned in Abu Ghraib prison for years after refusing to help with his country's nuclear weapons program.

There is no direct evidence that the money Unaoil paid Djiburi actually went to Shahristani or Luaibi. But this does not absolve the company of responsibility, since even agreeing to pay a bribe, regardless of whether it was executed, is illegal in many countries.

2003: US and British attack on Iraq and hanging of President Saddam Hussein

On March 20, 2003, US troops, with the support of Britain and several other countries, attacked Iraq. On April 9, Baghdad fell, and President Saddam Hussein was overthrown. The Iraqi president was subsequently executed by hanging.

On December 13, 2003, the ousted Iraqi President Saddam Hussein was arrested, hiding in the basement of a village house near the village of Ad-Daur.

The pretext for the invasion was the statements of the Americans about the presence of weapons of mass destruction in Iraq, which were subsequently never found.

Average annual U.S. military spending for wars from 1950 to 2023

The country plunged into chaos and a series of feuds for a long time, turning into a bleeding ulcer on the body of the Middle East. After 10 years in 2013, it was from Iraq that the rise of the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant began.

1991: Amnesty International's false legitimization of the US war in Iraq

Amnesty International reports are believed to have been used to legitimize the US war in the Persian Gulf. The organization distributed the story of a Kuwaiti woman, which was known to the US Congress only by the name of Nayira. She said that when Iraq invaded Kuwait, she stayed to volunteer at a local hospital and saw Iraqi soldiers steal incubators with children and leave them to freeze to death.

Amnesty International confirmed this story, somewhat exaggerating the number of dead children to more than 300, which in principle exceeded the number of incubators available in all city hospitals in the country.

Nayira's testimony aired on ABC's Nightline and NBC Nightly News, and had an audience of 35 million to 53 million Americans at the time. Subsequently, US senators repeatedly cited Nayira's testimony in their speeches in support of the use of military force. President George W. Bush himself repeated the story at least ten times in the weeks that followed.

After the war ended, it turned out that the woman was lying, the story was invented, and her name was not given, since her father was a delegate from the government of Kuwait to the same hearings in the American Congress.

1978

Iraq, 1970s.

1958

Saddam Hussain (future Iraqi president) pictured with his first wife and part-time cousin Sajida. Parents matched the children when Saddam was five and Sajid seven. Iraq, 1950s

1700: Part of the territory in the east as part of Safavid Persia

Safavid Persia

114: Roman Emperor Trajan's military campaign

Military campaigns of the Roman Emperor Trajan in 101-115

129 BC.

Seleucid state and Parthian kingdom

326 BC: As part of the empire of Alexander the Great

530 BC: As part of the Achaemenid Persian State

650 BC: Assyria and Babylonia

Calendar

Какой день считается первым в неделе в countries of the world, 2022

Notes