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Kurdistan independence related articles & photos

A collection of threads on topics that get updated regularly :
Peshmerga, Kurdistan Universities, Consulates in Kurdistan, Construction in (Hewler, Slemani, Dohuk, Kerkuk).Top Kurdish Holidays, Top Kurdish News Sites, Top Kurdish Terms. ...

Re: Kurdistan independent related articles

PostAuthor: alan131210 » Sat Feb 04, 2012 1:50 pm

Rando wrote:if that turkish claim is true or not,i am sure KRG will declare independence soon. i hope most of us will see great kurdistan rise in our life time.
and thank you,kak alan,for keeping this topic updated. we apreciate your work. again,thank you


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Re: Kurdistan independent related articles

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The Kurdistan Constitution Is Back on the Agenda: Implicatio

PostAuthor: alan131210 » Sun Feb 05, 2012 3:30 pm

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February 5, 2012

The project to adopt a constitution for the federal region of Kurdistan (KRG) can be classified as one of the “silent drivers” of Iraqi politics.

The current draft constitution of the Kurdistan Regional Government KRG was finalized by the Kurdish parliament in 2009. At the time, a referendum on it was expected but it was eventually delayed. Some attribute the delay to internal bickering among the Kurds; others say pressures from Baghdad played a role.

At any rate, Kurdish politicians – and Kamal Kerkuki in particular – are once more talking about the need to have a referendum on the Kurdistan constitution. Reactions from outside Kurdistan have been quite massive.

The main reason the KRG constitution is sensitive to Iraqi politicians beyond the Kurdistan region itself is the definition of the Kurdistan region contained in the draft constitution. This includes several areas in the governorates of Wasit, Diyala, Salahaddin, Kirkuk and Nineveh that are claimed by the Kurds but are not currently controlled by them. Politicians in areas claimed by the Kurds in Diyala, Kirkuk and Nineveh are particularly furious about the renewed talk about a referendum.

The protestors make reference to the constitutional principle that no law passed in Iraq can contradict the constitution itself. Does the Kurdish constitution contradict the Iraqi constitution? Technically speaking, it certainly does. This is so because the definition of the Kurdistan region in the Iraqi constitution is very clear: Article 142 says article 53A of the Transitional Administrative Law from 2004 shall remain in force; that article in turn says “The Kurdistan Regional Government is recognized as the official government of the territories that were administered by the that government on 19 March 2003 in the governorates of Duhok, Erbil,www.ekurd.net Sulaimaniyah, Kirkuk, Diyala and Neneveh”. Of course, Kurdish politicians will lose no time in reminding us that also article 58 of the TAL regarding the settlement of “disputed territories” was given extended life through articles 140 and 142 of the constitution; their staunchest opponents say the failure to implement article 140 by the constitutionally mandated deadline in 2007 signified its death.

Irrespective of the legal complexities involved, it is noteworthy that in political terms, key allies of Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki have previously invested considerable energy in criticizing the Kurdistan constitution for being in conflict with the Iraqi constitution. Importantly, this goes beyond predictable resistance from Turkmen allies of Maliki like Abbas al-Bayati. It also includes people like Sami al-Askari, who in the past has specifically spelt out the differences between the TAL definition of Kurdistan and the definition contained in the Kurdish draft constitution.

The revival of the Kurdistan constitutional referendum question highlights the long-term options before Maliki today.

Maliki can choose to work with the Kurds, support their constitutional referendum plus implementation of article 140 (or the light version proposed by President Talabani). This will inevitably make him look sectarian in the eyes of many Sunni Arabs, who are among the main opponents of Kurdish expansionism – and will in turn likely make him more dependent upon Iran.

Alternatively Maliki can work with Iraqiyya, or with splinters from Iraqiyya, in which case it would be easier to keep Iran at an arm’s length. But this would also raise the prospect of full secession by Kurdistan, possibly followed by armed conflict to settle final boundaries.

More likely, Maliki will try to avoid making too strong commitments to either side. In the meantime, however, he still needs some political allies to get the annual budget for 2012 passed.

Copyright ©, respective author or news agency, Iran and Gulf Analysis | gulfanalysis.wordpress.com
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Solution for Iraq lies in its division: Analyst

PostAuthor: alan131210 » Thu Feb 09, 2012 10:35 am

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February 8, 2012

ERBIL-Hewlêr, Kurdistan region 'Iraq', — The best solution for the current crisis in Iraq is to divide the state into three separate states, a Kurdish analyst in North Iraq's Kurdistan Region has expressed on Wednesday.

"The best solution for the current crisis suffered by Iraq lies in dividing Iraq into 3 states, a Kurdish, an Arab Shiite and Sunni state," Abdul-Ghani Ali Yahya told Aswat al-Iraq news agency, expecting at the same time the failure of the proposed National Conference, scheduled to convene soon to discuss proposals to settle the current crisis in the country.

"The fate of this Conference will be no better than the Erbil Conference and other meetings, held at the residence of Iraqi President Jalal Talabani over the past few weeks; it is doomed to fail like the previous conferences, because it it would be the last nail to be struck in the coffin of the imposed Iraqi unity," he continued.

Iraqi leaders and politicians cannot fool themselves up any more, standing behind sectarian and ultra-nationalist trends have reached a limit that rejects all forms of an Iraqi Federal Unity," Yahya said,www.ekurd.net adding that "Iraqis have tried all forms of unionist solutions, but they have failed to reach an agreement".

www.aswataliraq.info
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Maliki Advisor "kurdish state is a fair demand"

PostAuthor: alan131210 » Thu Feb 09, 2012 10:39 am

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according to an article which has been published in (Al Arabiya) site , an adviser of Maliki has announced that establishing a kurdish state is a fair demand and Kurds should concentrate their efforts to go ahead with what they desire via a referendum and the international laws.

worth mentioning the Shia have recently expressed their support for such moves while the Sunni chauvinists have rejected the idea

http://skurd.net/Dreje.aspx?B=1&id=3268
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Kurdistan: Kurdistan Region Constitution includes the disput

PostAuthor: alan131210 » Thu Feb 09, 2012 11:32 am

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Erbil, February 8 (PNA) - Deputy for the Kurdistan Alliance said the Constitution of the Kurdistan Region includes the disputed areas between Baghdad and Erbil, saying that the constitution of the region does not violate the Federal Constitution, and that what is rumored the opposite purpose of the distinction between the Iraqi people.

Said Mohsen Saadoun, a member of the legal representative, told Kurdistan News Agency on Tuesday, said that "the disputed areas between the governments in Baghdad and Erbil, are within the framework of the constitution of Kurdistan," adding that "the constitution of the region says it includes the province of Dohuk its administrative borders present, and the provinces of Kirkuk, and Sulaimaniya and Arbil as well as the districts of Akre, and Sheikhan, and Sinjar, and Piper, and Tal Afar, Tall Afar, and Qaraqosh, and aspects of Piper, and Bashiqa, and ASCII all your in the province of Nineveh, in addition to judicial Khanaqin and Mandali, Diyala and Badrah and hand Jassan of Wasit province, its administrative borders before the 1968 ".

The Iraqi legal observers have considered that if the constitution was approved Kurdistan Region, it does not include the disputed areas, because it is not part of the province (so far).

Sadoun said that "the second article of the constitution of the region identified the administrative boundaries covered by the Constitution, and these areas that we have mentioned, is also provided for in Article 140 of the Federal Constitution."

However, saying "This means that this is the administrative border of the province, but also we respect the Article 140 and when he gets in a referendum to possibly eliminate or hand out of the scope of what voters in the constitution of the region, and are taking this situation into consideration."

He guessed that the "visions of some Iraqi legal experts on the subject indicate that they had not seen well on the constitution of the region, noting that Article 13 of the Federal Constitution says that no law may be enacted or any violation of the Constitution of the constitutions of the Federal Constitution."

He explained, "Kurdish regional constitution began in the Federal Constitution does not violate any Iraqi paragraph of paragraphs."

And on the reference to Article 141 of the Federal Constitution which prohibits the issuance of laws contrary, said Sadoun that "Article 141 concerning about that all that was in the Kurdistan Region for the period from 1992 to 2005 from the decisions of courts and other decisions to take effect, and considered them as a legal and does not violate the Federal Constitution" , noting that "other interpretations that we hear are all out to differentiate between the Iraqi people, and we believe the federal Iraq, federal and Bdstourah, and that the province should have its powers and that it regulates the Constitution regulates the life in it."

He believes "there is no fear of the Constitution of the province in Iraq, expressing his regret" to hear the voices that will be the beginning of the separation is against the unity of Iraq, while the constitution of the region did not go towards anything to the contrary, did not demand anything beyond what we asked in Article 140 of the Federal Constitution. "

The number of deputies from the provinces of Kirkuk, and Nineveh, and Diyala have criticized the draft constitution of Kurdistan province, which officials called for a vote Kordstaon, also confirmed that the vote on the Constitution is secession and war, as it contains provisions that "hostile to the nation."

http://www.peyamner.com/Arabic/PNAnews.aspx?ID=265881#
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Map Of The Kurdistan | Nexşeya Kurdistan

PostAuthor: alan131210 » Fri Feb 10, 2012 9:02 am

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Re: Maliki Advisor "kurdish state is a fair demand"

PostAuthor: Kurdistano » Fri Feb 10, 2012 12:16 pm

alan131210 wrote:Image

according to an article which has been published in (Al Arabiya) site , an adviser of Maliki has announced that establishing a kurdish state is a fair demand and Kurds should concentrate their efforts to go ahead with what they desire via a referendum and the international laws.

worth mentioning the Shia have recently expressed their support for such moves while the Sunni chauvinists have rejected the idea

http://skurd.net/Dreje.aspx?B=1&id=3268



Now we see clearly who are the wolves in sheepskin! Get Independent and let Maliki deal with Sunnis.

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Re: Kurdistan independent related articles

PostAuthor: hevalo27 » Fri Feb 17, 2012 10:04 pm

i hope our brother and sisters in southkurdistan will be independent in 2012.
ist there a realistic chance for? we had since weeks no informations anymore about a possibel establishment of an kurdish state.
wasn`t there something about newroz? i think independence on newroz is the best timing for that, therefore i hope it will happen very soon.

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Barzani : its time to determine our fate

PostAuthor: alan131210 » Sun Feb 19, 2012 10:13 am

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in the remembrance of Republic of Mahabad held in Erbil today , Massoud Barzani kurdistan President said "time has come for us to declare our fate"

Kurds from all 4 parts participated in the conference from north BDP from West Kurdish national council leader Abdul hakim yashar and from east Democratic kurdistan party Hasan Sharafi.
BDP officials were invited to the conference were Ahmed Turk , Salahadin Damirtash ,Isal Tokhulu, Sirari Sak ,Nazmi Gulu and Layla zana.


read full story here

http://www.peyamner.com/PNAnews.aspx?ID=267271

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Last edited by alan131210 on Mon Feb 20, 2012 2:44 pm, edited 3 times in total.
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photos of the conference

PostAuthor: alan131210 » Sun Feb 19, 2012 1:14 pm

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Re: Kurdistan independent related articles

PostAuthor: Kurdistano » Sun Feb 19, 2012 1:34 pm

no iraqi flag suspecious

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Who Truly Deserves a State? The Kurds or the Palestinians?

PostAuthor: alan131210 » Mon Feb 20, 2012 8:30 am

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By Victor Sharpe — American Thinker

February 19, 2012

There are over twenty Arab states throughout the Middle East and North Africa, but the world demands, in a chorus of barely disguised animosity towards Israel, that yet another Arab state be created within the mere forty miles separating the Mediterranean Sea and the River Jordan.

Israel, a territory no larger than the tiny principality of Wales or the state of New Jersey, would be forced to share this sliver of land with a new and hostile Arab entity to be called Palestine, while seeing its present narrow waist reduced to a mere and suicidal nine miles in width -- what an earlier Israeli statesman, Abba Eban, described as the Auschwitz borders.

Remember, there has never existed in all of recorded history an independent sovereign nation called Palestine -- and certainly not an Arab one. The term "Palestine" has always been the name of a geographical territory, such as Siberia or Patagonia. It has never been a state.

But there is a people who, like the Jews, deserves a homeland and truly can trace their ancestry back thousands of years. They are the Kurds, and it is highly instructive to review their remarkable history in conjunction with that of the Jews. It is also necessary to review the historical injustice imposed upon them over the centuries by hostile neighbors and empires.

Let us go back to the captivity of the Ten Tribes of Israel, who were taken from their land by the Assyrians in 721-715 BC. Biblical Israel was depopulated, its Jewish inhabitants deported to an area in the region of ancient Media and Assyria -- a territory roughly corresponding to that of modern-day Kurdistan.
Assyria was, in turn, conquered by Babylonia, which led to the eventual destruction of the southern Jewish kingdom of Judah in 586 BC. The remaining two Jewish tribes were sent to the same area as that of their brethren from the northern kingdom.

When the Persian conqueror of Babylonia, Cyrus the Great, allowed the Jews to return to their ancestral lands, many Jews remained (and continued to live) with their neighbors in Babylon -- an area which, again, included modern-day Kurdistan.

The Babylonian Talmud refers in one section to the Jewish deportees from Judah receiving rabbinical permission to offer Judaism to the local population. The Kurdish royal house and a large segment of the general population in later years accepted the Jewish faith. Indeed, when the Jews rose up against Roman occupation in the 1st century AD, the Kurdish queen sent troops and provisions to support the embattled Jews.

By the beginning of the 2nd century AD, Judaism was firmly established in Kurdistan, and Kurdish Jews in Israel today speak an ancient form of Aramaic in their homes and synagogues. Kurdish and Jewish life became interwoven to such a remarkable degree that many Kurdish folk tales are connected with Jews'.

It is interesting to note that several tombs of biblical Jewish prophets are to be found in or near Kurdistan. For example, the prophet Nachum is in Alikush, while Jonah's tomb can be found in Nabi Yunis, which is ancient Nineveh. Daniel's tomb is in the oil-rich Kurdistan province of Kirkuk; Habbabuk is in Tuisirkan; and Queen Hadassah, or Esther, along with her uncle Mordechai, is in Hamadan.

After the failed revolt against Rome, many rabbis found refuge in what is now Kurdistan. The rabbis joined with their fellow scholars, and by the 3rd century AD, Jewish academies were flourishing. But the later Sassanid and Persian occupations of the region ushered in a time of persecution for the Jews and Kurds,www.ekurd.net which lasted until the Muslim Arab invasion in the 7th century. Indeed, the Jews and Kurds joined with the invading Arabs in the hope that their action would bring relief from the Sassanid depredations they had suffered.

Shortly after the Arab conquest, Jews from the autonomous Jewish state of Himyar in what is today's Saudi Arabia joined the Jews in the Kurdish regions. However, under the now-Muslim Arab occupation, matters worsened, and the Jews suffered as dhimmis in the Muslim-controlled territory. The Jews found themselves driven from their agricultural lands because of onerous taxation by their Muslim overlords. They thus left the land to become traders and craftsmen in the cities. Many of the Jewish peasants were converted to Islam by force or by dire circumstances and intermarried with their neighbors.

From out of this population arose a great historical figure. In 1138, a boy was born into a family of Kurdish warriors and adventurers. His name was Salah-al-Din Yusuf ibn Ayyub -- better known in the West as Saladin. He drove the Christian crusaders out of Jerusalem even though he was distrusted by the Muslim Arabs because he was a Kurd. Even then, the Arabs were aware of the close relationship that existed between the Kurdish people and the Jews.

Saladin employed justice and humane measures in both war and peace. This was in contrast to the methods employed by the Arabs. Indeed, it is believed that Saladin not only was just to the Christians, but he allowed the Jews to flourish in Jerusalem and is credited with finding the Western Wall of the Jewish Temple, which had been buried under tons of rubbish during the Christian Byzantine occupation. The great Jewish rabbi, philosopher, and doctor Maimonides was for a time Saladin's personal physician.

According to a team of international scientists, a remarkable discovery was made in 2001. Doing DNA research, a team of Israeli, German, and Indian scientists found that many modern Jews have a closer genetic relationship to populations in the northern Mediterranean area (Kurds and Armenians) than to the Arabs and Bedouins of the southern Mediterranean region.

But let us return to the present day and to why the world clamors for a Palestinian Arab state but strangely turns its back upon Kurdish national independence and statehood. The universally accepted principle of self-determination seems not to apply to the Kurds.
In an article in the New York Sun on 6 July 2004 titled "The Kurdish Statehood Exception," Hillel Halkin exposed the discrimination and double standards employed against Kurdish aspirations of statehood. He wrote, "[T]he historic injustices done to them and their suffering over the years can be adequately redressed within the framework of a federal Iraq, in which they will have to make do -- subject to the consent of a central, Arab-dominated government in Baghdad -- with mere autonomy. Full Kurdish statehood is unthinkable. This, too, is considered to be self-evident."

The brutal fact in realpolitik, therefore, is that the Arabs who call themselves Palestinians have many friends in the oil-rich Arab world -- oil the world desperately needs for its economies. The Kurds, like the Jews, have few friends, and the Kurds have little or no influence in the international corridors of power.

Mr. Halkin pointed out that "the Kurds have a far better case for statehood than do the Palestinians. They have their own unique language and culture, which the Palestinian Arabs do not have. They have had a sense of themselves as a distinct people for many centuries, which the Palestinian Arabs have not had. They have been betrayed repeatedly in the past 100 years by the international community and its promises, while the Palestinian Arabs have been betrayed only by their fellow Arabs."

The old nostrum, therefore, that only when the Palestinian Arabs finally have a state will there be peace in the world is a mirage in the desert. Fellow writer Gerald Honigman also writes on the world's preoccupation with the Arabs who call themselves Palestinians while ignoring the plight of the Kurds, Berbers, and millions of other non-Arab peoples of the Middle East and North Africa. Honigman's book was part of the LSS exhibit at the prestigious ASMEA Conference of scholars last November (and is now in at least a dozen major universities so far) and has several chapters focusing on the Kurdish issue. It's no accident that its foreword was written mostly by the President of the Kurdistan National Assembly of Syria.
During the tyranny of Saddam Hussein, the Kurds were gassed and slaughtered in large numbers. They suffered ethnic cleansing by the Turks and continue to be oppressed by the present Turkish government, whose foreign minister, Ahmet Davutoglu, had the gall to suggest, at a meeting of the Center for Strategic and International Studies, that Turkey supports the oppressed of the world. He ignored his own government's oppression of the Kurds and predictably named the anti-Semitic thugdom in Gaza "oppressed." On the basis of pure realpolitik, the legality and morality of the Kurds' cause is infinitely stronger than that of the Arabs who call themselves Palestinians.

On the other hand, after the overthrow of Saddam Hussein, the Kurds displayed great political and economic wisdom. How different from the example of the Gazan Arabs who, when foolishly given full control over the Gaza Strip by Israel, chose not to build hospitals and schools, but instead bunkers and missile launchers. To this they have added the imposition of sharia law, with its attendant denigration of women and non-Muslims.

The Kurdish experiment, in at least the territory's current quasi-independence, has shown the world a decent society where all its inhabitants, men and women, enjoy far greater freedoms than can be found anywhere else in the Arab and Muslim world -- and certainly anywhere else in Iraq, which is fast descending into ethnic chaos now that the U.S. military has left.

Barack Obama, David Cameron, Angela Merkel, Nicolas Sarkozy, and all the leaders of the free world should look to Kurdistan, with its huge oil reserves, as the new state that needs to be created in the Middle East. It is simple and natural justice, which is far too long overdue. A Palestinian Arab state, on the other hand, will immediately become a haven for anti-Western terrorism, a base for al-Qaeda and Hamas (the junior partner of the Muslim Brotherhood), and a non-democratic land carved out of the Jewish ancestral and biblical lands of Judea and Samaria upon which the stultifying shroud of sharia law will inevitably descend. In short, it will be established with one purpose: to destroy what is left of embattled Israel.

Finally, it is also natural justice for the Jewish State -- with its millennial association of shared history alongside the Kurdish people, who number over 30,000,000, scattered throughout northwestern Iran, northern Iraq, Syria and Turkey -- to fight in the world's forums for the speedy establishment of an independent and proud Kurdistan. An enduring alliance between Israel and Kurdistan would be a vindication of history, a recognition of the shared sufferings of both peoples, and bring closer the advent of a brighter future for both non-Arab nations.
Mahmoud Abbas, Holocaust denier and present president of the Palestinian Authority, has never, and will never, abrogate publicly in English or in Arabic the articles in Fatah's constitution, which call for the "obliteration of Zionist economic, political, military and cultural existence" -- or, in other words, the destruction of the Jewish State and the genocide of its citizens. So much for the man President Obama and the Europeans shower with money and praise.

It is the Kurds who unreservedly deserve a state. The invented Palestinian Arabs have forfeited that right by their relentless aggression, crimes, and genocidal intentions towards Israel and the Jews.

Victor Sharpe is a freelance writer and author of the trilogy Politicide: The attempted murder of the Jewish state.

Victor Sharpe is a freelance writer with many published articles and essays in leading national and international conservative websites and magazines. Born and educated in England, he is now a U.S. citizen and lives in the Pacific Northwest. He has been a broadcaster and has authored several books including a collection of short stories under the title The Blue Hour. His highly acclaimed two-volume set of in-depth studies on the threats from resurgent Islam to Israel and Judeo-Christian civilization is titled Politicide. When not writing, he is also an accomplished Jazz musician and performer.

www.americanthinker.com
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Romanian Ambassador : Kurds will have a state soon or later

PostAuthor: alan131210 » Wed Feb 29, 2012 12:41 pm

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29-02-2012

Adel Murad Secretary of Central Council of the Patriotic Union of Kurdistan (PUK) , received in his office in the City of Sulaimani the Ambassador of Romania to Baghdad Yakob Barada.

The two sides , stressed the need to consolidate bilateral ties between Kurdistan Region and Romania as well as exchange democratic experiences .

The Ambassador expressed his country’s readiness to participate in reconstruction of Kurdistan Region infrastructure .

"The Kurdish people will achieve their goal of establishing their own state sooner or later, in this stage , I see that it is not impossible to achieve, but it is difficult" , the Romanian Ambassador said.

He stressed that his country in near future will open a consulate in Erbil the Capital of Kurdistan Region.

PUKmedia.com
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Re: Kurdistan independent related articles

PostAuthor: hevalo27 » Wed Mar 14, 2012 6:36 pm

http://ekurd.net/mismas/articles/misc20 ... te5979.htm

kurdistan is ready for independence. i see it so available. the day is coming closer. they day is not far. :D
kurds should support to make it true the dream of independence.

biji kurd u kurdistan

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Re: Kurdistan independent related articles

PostAuthor: alan131210 » Thu Mar 15, 2012 4:18 am

hevalo27 wrote:http://ekurd.net/mismas/articles/misc2012/3/state5979.htm

kurdistan is ready for independence. i see it so available. the day is coming closer. they day is not far. :D
kurds should support to make it true the dream of independence.

biji kurd u kurdistan


thanks for the post
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