Topola Posted January 26, 2015 Posted January 26, 2015 U OGNJU KUĆE SPALJENA MATI… VETRA FIJUČE, SNEG SOLUJAVA. LJUDE VEĆ JEDVA NOGE DRŽE, PRENESI DALJE: – KORAČAJ BRŽE. PRENESI DALJE: – VJAZMA JE PALA… VJAZMA JE SLOBODNA, – PRENESI DALJE… RADOST SE RAZLILA PO KOLONI, SVA SRCA NADOM ZAIGRALA, VJAZMA JE SLOBODNA, VJAZMA JE PALA. NEKA SE VJAZMA ZOVE I MALA! PARTIZANKA JE PROŠAPTALA. NEKA SE VJAZMA ZOVE I MALA…
Bane5 Posted January 26, 2015 Posted January 26, 2015 (edited) Stvarno Kurdi povratili Kobane. Strava! Veceras je stiglo i zvanicno saopstenje YPG komande YPG: Defeat in Kobanê is the beginning of the end for ISIS YPG General Command has issued a statement in the wake of the victory attained in Kobanê following 133 days of resistance to ISIS gangs. “This is the victory of the line of freedom over the dark ISIS”, said YPG General Command, extending their thanks to all the Kurdish people, those in North Kurdistan in the first place, peshmerga, Burkan Al Fırat and FSA forces that have supported them in this battle. YPG General Command pointed out that fighters of the YPG/YPJ, male and female youths of Kurdistan, and volunteers joining them from across Kurdistan and other countries have put up a fierce fight and great resistance to the ISIS terror for 133 days. The statement underlined that: "Kobanê town of Rojava Kurdistan has entirely been liberated from ISIS gangs today. Our forces have not disappointed the expectations of our people and humanity by waging an epic struggle against ISIS terror for 133 days now. Our forces have fulfilled their promise of accomplishment. This victory is the achievement of the Rojava revolution, the achievement of democratic Syria, the achievement of humanity and the achievement of the line of freedom over the cruel and dark ISIS." YPG stated that a number of valued fighters, girls and boys of Kurdistan have fallen a martyr, and that it has been the spirit and will of the martyrs that has achieved victory. The statement said YPG has demonstrated once again that no one will ever be able to overthrow the Rojava revolution and proved itself as the true defense force of the Kurdish people and other folks in the region. "The battle waged in Kobanê wasn't just a fight between the YPG and the ISIS. This has been a battle between humanity and savagery, between freedom and cruelty and between the common values of humanity and enemies of humanity. It is rightness, spirit of freedom and the free will of peoples and humanity that has won this battle", the YPG General Command underlined. According to YPG General Command, the Kobanê battle has been the place of ISIS' destiny, and the defeat of ISIS is at the same time the beginning of the end for it. "The defeat of ISIS will not remain limited in Kobanê alone for it also means a psychological and spiritual collapse in the face of the will of the peoples. We believe that victory in Kobanê will be followed by further achievements against the ISIS. Some other good news will also be given soon", YPG said. Recalling that with the liberation of Kobanê YPG/YPJ fighters have fulfilled their promise to the Kurds and other peoples in the region, YPG said this achievement may be blessed to the peoples of Rojava, Syria and entire Kurdistan. YPG continued its statement by extending their thanks to every single person that has supported them and fought alongside, particularly to the North Kurdistan people that have owned the struggle, to the international coalition forces that have provided active support with airstrikes against ISIS, to Burkan Al Fırat and Free Syrian Army groups and peshmerga fighters that have fought alongside them. "We as the YPG are aware of the fact that our duty is not done. Ahead of us is the process of the liberation of Kobanê as a whole. We promise to fulfill this duty of ours with success", the statement underlined. YPG General Command reiterated the promise of victory before hundreds of brave fighters in the person of Diyar Bagok, Erîş, Zozan, Arîn, Dilgêş and Kendal who have sacrificed their lives, and vowed to follow in their path. Edited January 26, 2015 by Bane5
barrcode Posted January 27, 2015 Posted January 27, 2015 (edited) tok same bitke za Kobane podseća na Staljingrad (beše optisan), e sada da li će stvarno značiti i promenu celokupnog trenda rata kao Staljingrad januara 1943.... Edited January 27, 2015 by barrcode
J-♣ Posted January 27, 2015 Posted January 27, 2015 Sad kad Kurdi proglase Kurdistan sa logičnim proširenjem na račun Turske...
Shan Jan Posted January 27, 2015 Posted January 27, 2015 Defeat in Kobanê is the beginning of the end for Kurdistan Bice ovo Staljingrad, kao sto ce biti Kurdi mrski sovjeti, prvo saveznici onda protivnici.
Dionysos Posted January 27, 2015 Posted January 27, 2015 (edited) како им је краљевска ова музика http://youtu.be/zELqTKH2oCU Edited January 27, 2015 by Dionysos
Ryan Franco Posted January 29, 2015 Posted January 29, 2015 http://www.aljazeera.com/news/middleeast/2015/01/raqqa-sad-life-isil-201511110501184890.html MIDDLE EAST Raqqa: 'It is a very sad life under ISIL' Residents fleeing Raqqa give testimonies of what life is like under ISIL. Umar Farooq | 28 Jan 2015 09:42 GMT | Middle East 381 83 1 A group of special police, called al-Hisba, ensures adherence to ISIL laws in public [AP] A year since the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL) took control of its de facto capital, Raqqa, located east of Aleppo, locals say the group is taking on the trappings of a government. But many of those who fled the city, told Al Jazeera that locals resent the group's meticulous control over public life, and live in a state of constant fear. "We hate them. Except for a few people who benefit from them personally, we do not want them around," said a shop owner who moved to Turkey six months ago from Raqqa, asking for his name not be used.ISIL is headed by Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi, the self-titled caliph, to whom all subjects, even school children, must pledge absolute allegiance. Daily affairs are run by at least nine ministries and governors in each of the 18 provinces under its control."People are afraid of them," said Zubair, 27, a college student and photographer who left the city four months ago, but still keeps in touch with his parents and siblings living in Raqqa. "It's a very sad life, there are almost no services at all. If you are walking in the street you can be forced to go pray at the mosque." OPINION: The blood antiquities funding ISIL ISIL, believed to run on a budget of around a million dollars a day most of which comes from smuggling oil, also collects taxes and utility payments in Raqqa. Zubair's father, who owns a corner grocery store, pays ISIL about $200 a month as tax. Other businesses, located in more lucrative parts of the city, pay twice the amount. Services like electricity, phone, and street cleaning, cost each household about 500 Syrian pounds a month ($2.73).Municipal workers are paid to maintain three major hydroelectric dams supplying power to Raqqa, but activists say much of the electricity is sold to the regime, leaving locals to cope with, on good days, four hours of blackouts every two days. We hate them. Except for a few people who benefit from them personally, we do not want them around. Anonymous, shop owner who moved to Turkey six months ago from Raqqa Clean water in the city is increasingly hard to come by, partly because power stations, needed to run pumps, and filtration plants were destroyed during anti-ISIL coalition air strikes that began last September, killing hundreds of fighters, and scores of civilians. While ISIL has occasionally raided aid supplies in other parts of Syria, a spokesperson for Raqqa Local Administration Council (LAC) in Turkey, an opposition body tasked with providing basic services in rebel-held areas, along with two aid agencies that send aid to the city told Al Jazeera that the group currently allows international aid in with little interference.Women must currently see female doctors, except in cases where they are wounded and need emergency treatment. Last December, ISIL announced it would open a medical college for men and women, a move activists like Abu Muhammad, from the group Raqqa is Being Slaughtered Silently, say is meant to address a severe shortage of medical personnel. "Almost all doctors have fled, because ISIL has executed anyone who treated fighters from other rebel groups," said Abu Muhammad, who left the city in September, 2014, but keeps in touch with dozens of activists still in Raqqa.Schools, which functioned even under rebel control, were closed in early January, after ISIL decided to rewrite the curriculum. "They want to cut out what they see as un-Islamic teachings from books," explained Abu Muhammad. The decision took670,000 children, in Raqqa and Deir Ezzor governorates and parts of rural Aleppo, out of the classroom, according to the United Nations. VIDEO: Turkey boosts forces along Syria border One of those effected is Zubair's 13-year-old sister. "She wants to leave the city to continue her studies," he said, "but ISIL is stopping her - they have a new law that says women under 30 cannot leave... My family is trying to leave the city, but cannot because my sister cannot leave."In what some activists say is an effort to keep the city's population intact, ISIL has barred young women like Zubair's sister from leaving the city entirely. Men are given more freedom to move, but at checkpoints on the roads leading out of the city, ISIL police meticulously checks their identities, stopping those that are wanted, or suspected of working for other rebel groups. Each member of a group of special police called al-Hisba, is paid $300 a month to ensure adherence to ISIL laws in public. "They go around teaching people the law, and catching those breaking it, for disobeying the caliph, like by missing prayers, or smoking," Zubair said. Music, aside from religious songs without instruments praising jihad, is banned. Police stop people on the streets to check their cellphones for inappropriate pictures, an offence that can earn a flogging.At prayer time, al-Hisba men flood the streets. "It used to be that people were allowed to close their shops and pray individually there, but recently, al-Hisba has begun forcing men to go to the mosque for prayer in a congregation," Abu Muhammad said.Men are required to wear loose fitting pants, with hems falling above the ankles. "Some of the ISIL fighters have even started telling men to emulate their own example, [to] stuff your pants legs into your socks," said Yaseen, a senior member of LAC. "Barbers are still cutting hair, they are usually afraid to cut beards, but for now, it is not required [to keep a beard]."Billboards posted around town remind women to cover from head to toe, and a group of gun-toting police women, called al-Khansa Brigades, ensures compliance. RELATED: ISIL killed 'nearly 2,000' in Syria in months Markets are still frequented by women, but they must be accompanied by a male guardian - a husband, brother, or father, for example. Yaseen said that lately, women have adopted a covering that is stiff along the arms and chest. "We literally call it armour, when you wear it, when you move, your chest, your arms, it's like they don't move."Zubair and other locals say ISIL has formed a number of secret intelligence cells to root out dissenters and informants in the city. "They go to each home and tell kids, 12 to 18 years old, they will get $50 for each person they turn in," Yaseen said. "Like someone they see smoking cigarettes, for instance... Unfortunately many young people are becoming informants." Kurds on verge of 'taking full control' of Kobane ISIL has setup a special office to receive complaints from locals. "Once I saw a man get beaten up by police because he was told to close his shop for prayer time, but he said it was not time yet," Zubair told Al Jazeera. "Afterwards, he went and complained, and they [the judges] took the policemen and sentenced them to 30 days in prison."But in cases where ISIL members are involved, an objective decision is rare. "You always needed a personal connection in Syria, even under Assad. They have just changed the name of the system," Abu Muhammad said.For long-time activists like Abu Muhammad, ISIL now resembles the Assad regime. "Assad used to use secularism to impose his will on people, and now ISIL uses religion to impose its will on people."
Hamlet Strašni Posted January 29, 2015 Posted January 29, 2015 Ne znam gde bih drugo pitao. Koja je to fora sa pantalonama?
Utvara Posted January 29, 2015 Posted January 29, 2015 Vehabije nose pantalone koje su skraćene da se ne bi vukle po zemlji. http://www.imamitewhida.com/kutubhana/aktuelno/569-napad-na-dugu-bradu-i-kratke-pantalone-je-otvoreni-napad-na-allahovog-poslanika-alejhisselam-kao-i-na-vjeru-islam.html
Zaz_pi Posted January 29, 2015 Posted January 29, 2015 (edited) Evo necega zanimljivog, ne znam da li je bilo, osnivac ID u Iraku, koja se prosirila kasnije na Siriju, Abu Rasid al-Bagdadi je, po pisanju Nujork Tajmsa iz 2007, izmisljena licnost: Leader of Al Qaeda group in Iraq was fictional, U.S. military says As the titular head of the Islamic State in Iraq, an organization publicly backed by Al Qaeda, Baghdadi issued a steady stream of incendiary pronouncements. Despite claims by Iraqi officials that he had been killed in May, Baghdadi appeared to have persevered unscathed. On Wednesday, a senior American military spokesman provided a new explanation for Baghdadi's ability to escape attack: He never existed. Sa druge strane, kao ubijen je 2010, ali on je ubijan nekoliko puta pre toga. Nasledio ga je danasnji vodja ID-Abu Bakr al-Bagdadi, mislim da nisu rodjaci Edited January 29, 2015 by Zaz_pi
Shan Jan Posted January 29, 2015 Posted January 29, 2015 Ne znam gde bih drugo pitao. Koja je to fora sa pantalonama? zato sto tradicionalna nosnja u arabijskoj pustinji su sandale i skraenje hlace, prilagodjeno pesku i boljoj ventilaciji, jelte. Isto kao sto je klanje svinje i ostavljanje da se ladi na +50 stepeni los izbor. Steta sto prorok nije ostavio note da su ovo samo prakticni saveti kada si u Meci a ne nesto cega se treba drzati ko pijan plota od Sibira do Amazona.
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