Relacja filmowa z zawodów ACES Aircombat 1/12 WWII - eliminacja do Pucharu Polski, EuroCup - pod nazwą Bitwa o Tajny Bunkier Mad Dogs.
LONG LIVE PKK - DIRTY FASCIST TURKEY
in Turkey for PKK attack سه ردانی نێچیره ڤان بارزانی بۆ تورکیا له دوای هێرشه کانی تورکیا بۆ سه ر په که که
Kurdistan La Saly 1950 da ڤیدیۆیه کی نایابی ساڵه کانی ٥٠ بڵاو کرایه ووه که له ڕاگه یاندنه کانی ئینگلته را پارێزرا بو بو
Political prisoners and executions Kurds have suffered a long history of discrimination in Iran. In a report released in 2008, Amnesty International said that Kurds have been a particular target of the Islamic Republic of Iran, and the Kurds' "social, political and cultural rights have been repressed, as have their economic aspirations."[46] As a result, many human rights activists in Iran often shift their focus to specifically identify the Iranian authorities' violations of human rights against the Kurdish minority. However, according to Amnesty International, those activists who do "link their human rights work -- drawing attention to the government's failure to observe international human rights standards - to their Kurdish identity they risk further violations of their rights."[46] At the beginning of the 21st century, a number of Kurdish activists, writers, and teachers have been arrested for their work and were sentenced to death.[47] The increase is likely due to the government's crackdown following the nationwide protests after Iran's presidential elections. Even before the elections, Kurdish rebel groups - specifically the Party for a Free Life in Kurdistan or PJAK - have taken up arms against the state. In November 2009, Iran executed Ehsan Fattahian - the first of over a dozen political prisoners on death row - despite an international campaign calling for his release.[48] Authorities accused Fattahian of carrying arms for an "illegal organization" and ...
Darwishy Party Dimokraty Kurdistan Bo Mala Mustafa ka basy Barzani akat la kanaly Speda
Honraway kurdi bo maday 140 ka basar jalal talabani wa mas3ud barzani basar saroka Kurdakan wa basy Daftarish akat bas xosha :(
The PKK is usually share the guerrilla members in various places so it becomes more difficult to reach a judgement ژنە گەریلا دەگمەنەکانی پارێزەرەی کوردستان بەم شێوەیە ژیانیان
Kurdistan The land of the Kurds Exodus from cities In March and early April, nearly two million Iraqis, 1.5 million of them Kurds,[10] escaped from strife-torn cities to the mountains along the northern borders, into the southern marshes, and into Turkey and Iran. Their exodus was sudden and chaotic, with thousands of desperate refugees fleeing on foot, on donkeys or crammed onto open-backed trucks and tractors. Some were killed by army helicopters, which deliberately strafed columns of fleeing civilians in a number of incidents in both the North and South. Others were injured when they stepped on land mines planted by Iraqi troops near the eastern border during the war with Iran. Beginning in March until July 1991 the US and some of the Gulf War allies defended the Kurdish refugees from air attacks (shooting down two Iraqi Su-17 aircraft) and provided humanitarian assistance to them during Operation Provide Comfort. In April, in Yasilova incident, British and Turkish forces confronted each other over the treatment of refugees in Turkey. Draining of the Iraqi marshlands Main article: Draining of the Mesopotamian Marshes In southeastern Iraq, thousands of Shia civilians, army deserters, and rebels began seeking precarious shelter in remote areas of the Hawizeh Marshes straddling the Iranian border. After the uprising, the Marsh Arabs were singled out for mass reprisals, accompanied by ecologically catastrophic drainage of the Iraqi marshlands and the large-scale and ...
Kurdistan The land of the Kurds Exodus from cities In March and early April, nearly two million Iraqis, 1.5 million of them Kurds,[10] escaped from strife-torn cities to the mountains along the northern borders, into the southern marshes, and into Turkey and Iran. Their exodus was sudden and chaotic, with thousands of desperate refugees fleeing on foot, on donkeys or crammed onto open-backed trucks and tractors. Some were killed by army helicopters, which deliberately strafed columns of fleeing civilians in a number of incidents in both the North and South. Others were injured when they stepped on land mines planted by Iraqi troops near the eastern border during the war with Iran. Beginning in March until July 1991 the US and some of the Gulf War allies defended the Kurdish refugees from air attacks (shooting down two Iraqi Su-17 aircraft) and provided humanitarian assistance to them during Operation Provide Comfort. In April, in Yasilova incident, British and Turkish forces confronted each other over the treatment of refugees in Turkey. Draining of the Iraqi marshlands Main article: Draining of the Mesopotamian Marshes In southeastern Iraq, thousands of Shia civilians, army deserters, and rebels began seeking precarious shelter in remote areas of the Hawizeh Marshes straddling the Iranian border. After the uprising, the Marsh Arabs were singled out for mass reprisals, accompanied by ecologically catastrophic drainage of the Iraqi marshlands and the large-scale and ...
Kurdistan The land of the Kurds Exodus from cities In March and early April, nearly two million Iraqis, 1.5 million of them Kurds,[10] escaped from strife-torn cities to the mountains along the northern borders, into the southern marshes, and into Turkey and Iran. Their exodus was sudden and chaotic, with thousands of desperate refugees fleeing on foot, on donkeys or crammed onto open-backed trucks and tractors. Some were killed by army helicopters, which deliberately strafed columns of fleeing civilians in a number of incidents in both the North and South. Others were injured when they stepped on land mines planted by Iraqi troops near the eastern border during the war with Iran. Beginning in March until July 1991 the US and some of the Gulf War allies defended the Kurdish refugees from air attacks (shooting down two Iraqi Su-17 aircraft) and provided humanitarian assistance to them during Operation Provide Comfort. In April, in Yasilova incident, British and Turkish forces confronted each other over the treatment of refugees in Turkey. Draining of the Iraqi marshlands Main article: Draining of the Mesopotamian Marshes In southeastern Iraq, thousands of Shia civilians, army deserters, and rebels began seeking precarious shelter in remote areas of the Hawizeh Marshes straddling the Iranian border. After the uprising, the Marsh Arabs were singled out for mass reprisals, accompanied by ecologically catastrophic drainage of the Iraqi marshlands and the large-scale and ...
Kurdistan The land of the Kurds Exodus from cities In March and early April, nearly two million Iraqis, 1.5 million of them Kurds,[10] escaped from strife-torn cities to the mountains along the northern borders, into the southern marshes, and into Turkey and Iran. Their exodus was sudden and chaotic, with thousands of desperate refugees fleeing on foot, on donkeys or crammed onto open-backed trucks and tractors. Some were killed by army helicopters, which deliberately strafed columns of fleeing civilians in a number of incidents in both the North and South. Others were injured when they stepped on land mines planted by Iraqi troops near the eastern border during the war with Iran. Beginning in March until July 1991 the US and some of the Gulf War allies defended the Kurdish refugees from air attacks (shooting down two Iraqi Su-17 aircraft) and provided humanitarian assistance to them during Operation Provide Comfort. In April, in Yasilova incident, British and Turkish forces confronted each other over the treatment of refugees in Turkey. Draining of the Iraqi marshlands Main article: Draining of the Mesopotamian Marshes In southeastern Iraq, thousands of Shia civilians, army deserters, and rebels began seeking precarious shelter in remote areas of the Hawizeh Marshes straddling the Iranian border. After the uprising, the Marsh Arabs were singled out for mass reprisals, accompanied by ecologically catastrophic drainage of the Iraqi marshlands and the large-scale and ...
Kurdistan The land of the Kurds Exodus from cities In March and early April, nearly two million Iraqis, 1.5 million of them Kurds,[10] escaped from strife-torn cities to the mountains along the northern borders, into the southern marshes, and into Turkey and Iran. Their exodus was sudden and chaotic, with thousands of desperate refugees fleeing on foot, on donkeys or crammed onto open-backed trucks and tractors. Some were killed by army helicopters, which deliberately strafed columns of fleeing civilians in a number of incidents in both the North and South. Others were injured when they stepped on land mines planted by Iraqi troops near the eastern border during the war with Iran. Beginning in March until July 1991 the US and some of the Gulf War allies defended the Kurdish refugees from air attacks (shooting down two Iraqi Su-17 aircraft) and provided humanitarian assistance to them during Operation Provide Comfort. In April, in Yasilova incident, British and Turkish forces confronted each other over the treatment of refugees in Turkey. Draining of the Iraqi marshlands Main article: Draining of the Mesopotamian Marshes In southeastern Iraq, thousands of Shia civilians, army deserters, and rebels began seeking precarious shelter in remote areas of the Hawizeh Marshes straddling the Iranian border. After the uprising, the Marsh Arabs were singled out for mass reprisals, accompanied by ecologically catastrophic drainage of the Iraqi marshlands and the large-scale and ...
Kurdistan The land of the Kurds Exodus from cities In March and early April, nearly two million Iraqis, 1.5 million of them Kurds,[10] escaped from strife-torn cities to the mountains along the northern borders, into the southern marshes, and into Turkey and Iran. Their exodus was sudden and chaotic, with thousands of desperate refugees fleeing on foot, on donkeys or crammed onto open-backed trucks and tractors. Some were killed by army helicopters, which deliberately strafed columns of fleeing civilians in a number of incidents in both the North and South. Others were injured when they stepped on land mines planted by Iraqi troops near the eastern border during the war with Iran. Beginning in March until July 1991 the US and some of the Gulf War allies defended the Kurdish refugees from air attacks (shooting down two Iraqi Su-17 aircraft) and provided humanitarian assistance to them during Operation Provide Comfort. In April, in Yasilova incident, British and Turkish forces confronted each other over the treatment of refugees in Turkey. Draining of the Iraqi marshlands Main article: Draining of the Mesopotamian Marshes In southeastern Iraq, thousands of Shia civilians, army deserters, and rebels began seeking precarious shelter in remote areas of the Hawizeh Marshes straddling the Iranian border. After the uprising, the Marsh Arabs were singled out for mass reprisals, accompanied by ecologically catastrophic drainage of the Iraqi marshlands and the large-scale and ...