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Missan Governorate, Ali Al-Gharbi District
( ( Iraq- Missan Governorate, Ali Al-Gharbi District ( ( ( Al-dermany ( Al-baksayah Abas al-thikaib Jolan IQ-P21672 IQ-P21664 IQ-P21589 jabur Shaikh Ahma(d Turkey IQ-P21887 ( ( IQ-P2(2025 ( ! Ja'ab al-dakhnah Baksaie Markaz nahiyat Mosul ! ( IQ-P21867 Ziarat IQ-P21760 al-shihaby Erbil Kaka `Ali IQ-P21929 Syria ( IQ-P22067 Iran ( Baghdad Abd basi Ramadi! Moqata'at jazerat IQ(-P21593 !\ ramadhan 'ajiz ( Yara Kabir al-shimaliyah IQ-P22061 Jordan Najaf! IQ-P21945 ( ! Mula nafi'e Basrah IQ-P21954 ( Saudi Arabia Kuwait ( Iran Maftul-i-Saiyid Gozar IQ-P21910 ( Saiyid Subair Kiwaid IQ-P18052 sagher ( IQ-P18017 ( ( Al-hajj 'any IQ-P17946 ( Jilat IQ-P18013 ( ( ( Hamed sabri Moqata'at gharebah (( ( Moqata'at IQ-P17988 al-gharebah abu ( al-jolanah jamos al-shima ( ( IQ-P18026 (( IQ-P18027 ( ( ( ( ( ( Salaf ali ( ( Salaf hasan minjil abdul jabar ( IQ-P18053 (al-handhaliyah( ( al-sharqiyah) Al-ni'esah ( Salaf jasim (al-handhaliyah Al-ja'ayoriyah al-gharbiyah) ( IQ-P18054 IQ-P17960 ( ( Sa'adon IQ-P21694 IQ-P18055 Al-tahrer ( Sayyed hussain sabri Mitany IQ-P17967 Abdullah younis ( sayyed shiref IQ-P18047 IQ-P21936 ( ( ( (al-'audah) Daifiya IQ-P18060 Al-wihdah Al Musandaq ( ( ( ( ( IQ-P21605 IQ-P21638 IQ-P17979 ( IQ-P17969 Sayyid ( ( ( ( ( ( ((( ( Ghubair Salih Bait Sha`e ( Al kharab ( Hay ( IQ-P17984 Al-majd IQ-P22019 IQ-P21757 Al Shuhda('a ( ( ( ( ( IQ-P17920 ( Hussain najim ( IQ-P1795(7 ( ( Saiyid ( ( (al-kirnah) IQ-P21484 Hor Farhar ( ( IQ-P21859 Sayyed ( al saadiyah IQ-P18051 ( ( ( Kadhum abod mizhir khalaf IQ-P18011 Hay Al IQ-P21889 IQ-P18062 ( Sadir -
Health and Welfare in Iraq After the Gulf Crisis an in -Depth Assessment
HEALTH AND WELFARE IN IRAQ AFTER THE GULF CRISIS AN IN-DEPTH ASSESSMENT International Study Team October 1991 HEALTH AND WELFARE IN IRAQ AFTER THE GULF CRISIS AN IN -DEPTH ASSESSMENT From August 23 to September 5, the International Study Team on the Gulf Crisis comprehensively surveyed the impact of the Gulf Crisis on the health and welfare of the Iraqi population. The Team consisted of eighty-seven researchers drawn from a wide variety of disciplines, including agriculture, electrical engineering, environmental sciences, medicine, economics, child psychology, sociology, and public health. Team members visited Iraq’s thirty largest cities in all eighteen Governorates, including rural areas in every part of the country. The mission was accomplished without Iraqi government interference or supervision. Principal funding was supplied by UNICEF, the MacArthur Foundation, the John Merck Fund, and Oxfam- UK. The study team has prepared separate in-depth reports on the Gulf Crisis and its impact on Iraqi civilians focused on the following subjects: 1. Child Mortality and Nutrition Survey 2. Health Facilities Survey 3. Electrical Facilities Survey 4. Water and Wastewater Systems Survey 5. Environmental and Agricultural Survey 6. Income and Economic Survey 7. Child Psychology Survey 8. Women Survey This statement summarizes the principal findings of the research. Individual project reports, representing the findings and views of individual authors, are available for more detailed information. The economic and social disruption and destruction caused by the Gulf Crisis has had a direct impact on the health conditions of the children in Iraq. Iraq desperately needs not only food and medicine, but also spare parts to repair basic infrastructure in electrical power generation, water purification, and sewage treatment. -
Foreign ^Missions Reformed Church in America 1930
— - y' , , y DAY MISSIONS Ninety-eighth Annual Report Board of Foreign ^Missions Reformed Church in America 1930 Reformed Church Building 25 East Twenty-second Street, New York Board of Foreign Missions MEMBERS OF THE BOARD 1928—1931 Rev. J. Frederic Berg, Ph.D. Rev. J. M. Martin, D.D. Rev. Edward Dawson, D.D. Rev. J. G. Meengs, D.D. Rev. Wm. Bancroft Hill, D.D. Rev. E. F. Romig, D.D. Rev. M. J. MacLeod, D.D. Mr. S. B. Chapin Mr. H. A. Kinports 1929—1932 Rev. J. W. Beardslee, Ph.D. Rev. George D. Hulst Rev. E. J. Blekkink, D.D. Rev. T. H. Mackenzie, D.D. Rev. J. H. Brinckerhoff Pres. E. D. Dimnent, Litt.D. Rev. W. H. S. Demarest, LL.D. Mr. Cornelius Dosker Mr. Herman Vanderwart 1930—1933 Rev. Henry E. Cobb, S-T.D. Rev. H. J. Veldman, D.D. Rev. J. A. Jones, D.D. Mr. A. P. Cobb Rev. Bernie Mulder Mr. N. Y. Dungan ReV. Harry W. Noble, D.D. Mr. W. E. Foster Mr. Jay Weemhoff OFFICERS OF THE BOARD President—Rev. Henry E. Cobb, D.D., S.T.D. Vice-President—Rev. Wm. Bancroft Hill, D.D. Recording Secretary—Rev. Edward Dawson, D.D. Corresponding Secretary—Rev. W. I. Chamberlain, Ph.D. Associate Secretary and Treasurer—Mr. F. M. Potter, L.H.D. District Secretary—Rev, W. J. Van Kersen, D.D., Holland, Mich. EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE Rev. T. H. Mackenzie, Chairman Rev. J .W. Beardslee Rev. E. F. Romin Rev. J. H. Brinckerhoff Mr. A. P. Cobb Rey. -
The Smoke Rain the Second Report
The Smoke Rain The Second Report Demonstrations of October 25 – December 1st in Iraq / Peace and Freedom Organization Peace and Freedom Organization / Baghdad office (PFO-BAGHDAD) Sergio de Mello Team to Monitor the Condition of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms in the Field (SDMT-PFO) The Smoke Rain The Report on the Condition of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms for the Demonstrations of the Republic of Iraq, October 25- December 1st Peace and Freedom Organization PFO / December 2019 Index | P a g e 1 The Smoke Rain The Second Report Demonstrations of October 25 – December 1st in Iraq / Peace and Freedom Organization No Content Page 1 Cover and the Cover Photo 1 2 Index 2 3 Background 7 4 Introduction 7 5 Methodology 8 6 The Human Rights Condition through the General context of the 10 Conduct of the Demonstrations 7 Legal Description and Recount of Violations and Breaches 11 8 Freedom of Movement and Transportation and Communication 12 Systems 9 The Safety and Security of the Demonstrators 15 10 Physical Liquidation (Extermination) 16 11 Arrest, detention, and interrogation 16 12 Use of Force and Firearms 16 13 Observers and Media Workers 18 14 The General life of Civilians 18 15 Legal Adaptation 19 16 Recommendations 38 Copyright is reserved for Peace and Freedom Organization, December 2019. The commercial exploitation of the content of this report is not allowed and is prohibited in any way. It is necessary to refer to the Peace and Freedom Organization when any text of this report has been used and quoted. Peace and Freedom Organization has the right to legal prosecution in accordance with the laws in force inside and outside the Republic of Iraq in the event that the report or its textual content or part of it is attributed to others. -
Missan Governoratre Profile.Indd
MISSAN GOVERNORATE PROFILE OVERVIEW3 JUNE 2015 94 IDP families 8% 1,245 IDP FAMILIES IDP camps DISPLACEMENT OVER TIME total population: 1,020 individuals1 IDP families hosted in the governorate2 7,470 IDP INDIVIDUALS IDP population density 1,259 1,197 1,272 977 IDP families 1,148 1,245 46% OF ALL IDPS ARE UNDER 1,170 1,155 78% 1,039 1,125 14 Eyes of Missan 688 GOVERNORATE OF ORIGIN 5 IDP families 109 IDP families 9% 13 IDP families less than 1% 1% 1% 1% of a 10% 9% n ll 4% ha ID t P 2% s s s i e n l 129 11% I r 4 6 a q 6 14 14 14 15 14 14 14 15 14 14 14 15 15 15 14 64% - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 47 IDP families Jul Jan 4% Jun Oct Apr Apr Sep Feb Dec Aug Nov Mar Mar May May 99% Anbar Babylon Baghdad Diyala Kirkuk Ninewa MOST COMMON SHELTER TYPES INTENTIONS Salah al-Din WAVES OF DISPLACEMENT Iraq 3% 87% 8% Missan Total 4% 85% 10% 21% 24% 9% Qal'at Saleh 4% 82% 2% Host Families Rented School 14% 42% housing 37% buildings 12% Amara 3% 89% 8% Al-Mejar Al-Kabir 11% 3% 64% 22% TOP PRIORITY NEEDS Al-Maimouna 40% 60% Al-Kahla 77% 23% 1 2 3 4 5 53% Ali Al-Gharbi 90% 10% 90% Locally integrate in current location Resettle to third location Access Shelter NFIs Health Food 1- Pre-June14 2- June-July14 Return to place of origin Waiting on one or several factors to work 3- August14 4- Post September14 1. -
14283 Saidi 2020 E
International Journal of Innovation, Creativity and Change. www.ijicc.net Volume 14, Issue 2, 2020 Analysis of Human Development Indicators in the Maysan Governorate Hayder Oleiwi Shami Al Saidia, Naji Radees Abdb, aFaculty of Administration and Economics, University of Misan, Maysan, Iraq, bThe Council of Representatives, Baghdad, Iraq, Email: ahaideral- [email protected], [email protected] This research is concerned about clarifying human development in the Maysan Governorate, by addressing it and its most important measures, as well as highlighting health, education and the standard of living. The research found that the Maysan governorate experiences significant disadvantage, in addition to deterioration of the levels of health, education, and standard of living, despite its contribution to oil production. This decline is due to the decrease in allocations, as well as high level of administrative and financial corruption in implementing projects. Keywords: Human development, development benchmarks, development indicators. Introduction Human development is one of the important issues as all countries are searching for economic and social progress, and seek to occupy a position that places them in the rank of developed countries in welfare and using material and human potential to attain this goal (Ali, Almagtome, & Hameedi, 2019; Ali, Hameedi, & Almagtome, 2019; Almagtome, Shaker, Al-Fatlawi, & Bekheet, 2019). All countries in the civilized world seek to achieve a standard of living that guarantees the individual and his or her family a decent standard of living away from destitution and poverty, and to ensure a level of education that increases status and develops skills, ensuring an extended lifespan free from health problems and traditional and unconventional diseases. -
98Th Annual Report of the Board of World Missions Reformed Church in America
Hope College Hope College Digital Commons Annual Reports Board of World Missions 1930 98th Annual Report of the Board of World Missions Reformed Church in America Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalcommons.hope.edu/world_annual_report Part of the Archival Science Commons Recommended Citation Reformed Church in America, "98th Annual Report of the Board of World Missions" (1930). Annual Reports. 77. https://digitalcommons.hope.edu/world_annual_report/77 This Article is brought to you for free and open access by the Board of World Missions at Hope College Digital Commons. It has been accepted for inclusion in Annual Reports by an authorized administrator of Hope College Digital Commons. For more information, please contact [email protected]. Ninety-eighth Annual Report Board of Foreign Missions Reformed Church in America 1930 : H E ARCHIVES .CHIVES e . .nti LEE LIBRARY ...,o..i.£E L I B R M V Sltitrt i m O G I C A L S E M I N A R Y (IERH THEOLOGICAL SB I NARY THE ARCHIVES BEARDSLEE LIBRARY WESTERN THEOLOGICAL SEMINARY Reformed Church Building 25 East Twenty-second Street, Ne w York Board of Foreign Missions MEMBERS OF THE BOARD 1928— 1931 Rev. J. Frederic Berg, Ph.D. Rev. J. M. Martin, D.D. Rev. Edward Dawson, D.D. Rev. J. G. Meengs, D.D. Rev. W m . Bancroft Hill, D.D. Rev. E. F. Romig, D.D. Rev. M. J. MacLeod, D.D. Mr. S. B. Chapin Mr. H. A. Kinports 1929-1932 Rev. J. W. Beardslee, Ph.D. Rev. George D. Hulst Rev. E. -
Iraq- Missan Governorate, Qal'at Saleh District
( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( Iraq- Missan Governorate, Qal'at Saleh District ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( Al-mehali wa Amara District Sayyed ( Amara District Ghazah al-murahalen Turkey sharef ( IQ-P18554 Al-'ewaij IQ-P18604 اﻟﻌﻣﺎرة IQ-P18574 ! اﻟﻌﻣﺎرة ) ) Al mouajid IQ-P18525 IQ-P18547 Mosul ! ( ( ( Erbil IQ-D078 Bait shihayl Al talah IQ-D078 ( IQ-P18568 Syria Shabib [1] Al-bahatha ( IQ-P18535 Al-sabaghiyah Iran ( Al radah IQ-P19040 IQ-P18539 ( Al-sa'fah IQ-P18560 ( ( althaniyah Abu-kafaf Baghdad ( ( IQ-P18561 ( ( IQ-P18510 Abu al toot Ramadi! ( Al-adell IQ-P18528 ( !\ ( IQ-P18506 Al Kahla IQ-P18537 Balwa ( Mashro ( Al-'alwah ( ( ( ( ( IQ-P18569 al bath Al fatameyah Jordan Najaf! ( ( IQ-P18538 Al-narijah IQ-P18589 ( ( Al atwaneah ( ( IQ-P18517 ( ( ( IQ-P18558 IQ-P18511 ( ( Al-dhalemah (Al-shubah Abod ( ( ! Zelat al-sharqiyah IQ-P18564 smary Basrah Hay Al-Quds( abu khasab IQ-P18543 ( IQ-P18505 ( IQ-P18577 ( IQ-P19053 Kuwait Salih (al Al-mui'el Al-bidhah Saudi Arabia Mahmud( IQ-P18557 IQ-P18540 ( ( IQ-P18601( Kahla District Sayyed Alradhaweyah Abu Shindy hashim al'ola ( al-khanazer اﻟﻛﺣﻼء Al-talie'ah Al-taref IQ-P18608 IQ-P18602 IQ-P18559 IQ-P18507 ( ( IQ-P18565 ( IQ-P18566 ( ( Um Al Toos ( Karim Umm shiefah IQ-P18490 IQ-D079 ( ( IQ-P18587 Umm adhemat IQ-P18613 ( Al Angariyah Umm alhenah ( Umm sa'ah ( IQ-P18610 ( Furayjan IQ-P18103 IQ-P18611 Al-dibin Al-'etimad IQ-P18612 IQ-P18573 ( Bani Hashim ( IQ-P18545 ( IQ-P18546 ( ( Al-massefat IQ-P18570 Abu khasaf ( ( ( Al hejereyah IQ-P18553 IQ-P18509 Qaryat ( Al- masab ( ( -
Ocha Iraq Humanitarian Situatio
Iraq: Humanitarian Crisis Situation Report No. 54 (22 – 28 July 2015) This report is produced by OCHA Iraq in collaboration with humanitarian partners. It covers the period from 22 – 28 July. Due to the rapidly changing situation, it is possible that the numbers and locations listed in this report may no longer be accurate. The next report will be issued on or around 7 August. Highlights The humanitarian situation in Anbar governorate continues to worsen. Humanitarian access is limited and people are reportedly prevented from leaving Ramadi and Falluja to seek safer territory Emergency response continues to people who are on the move as rising temperatures increase the threat of dehydration. With a severe funding shortfall, health partners have been forced to suspend much needed support to health facilities in areas with high concentration of displaced people Food insecurity increased in Iraq in the second quarter of the year according to new assessment data. Location map. The boundaries and names shown and the design- ations used on this map do not imply official endorsement or acceptance by the United Nations. 8.6 m 5.6 m 3.1 m 2.9 m 3.2 m 0.25 m people in need targeted for internally displaced displaced people affected people in Syrian refugees assistance people live outside camps host communities Situation Overview The humanitarian situation remains precarious in Anbar governorate. Military operations have continued into a third week with airstrikes and ground fighting. Protection concerns are increasing for people caught in the midst of the escalating conflict, especially in Ramadi and Falluja towns. -
Iom Emergency Needs Assessments Post February 2006 Displacement in Iraq 1 November 2008 Monthly Report
IOM EMERGENCY NEEDS ASSESSMENTS POST FEBRUARY 2006 DISPLACEMENT IN IRAQ 1 NOVEMBER 2008 MONTHLY REPORT Following the February 2006 bombing of the Samarra Al-Askari Mosque, escalating sectarian violence in Iraq caused massive displacement, both internal and to locations abroad. In coordination with the Iraqi government’s Ministry of Displacement and Migration (MoDM), IOM continues to assess Iraqi displacement through a network of partners and monitors on the ground. Most displacement over the past five years (since 2003) occurred in 2006 and has since slowed. However, displacement continues to occur in some locations and the humanitarian situation of those already displaced is worsening. Some Iraqis are returning, but their conditions in places of return are extremely difficult. The estimated number of displaced since February 2006 is almost 1,596,448 individuals1. In addition, there are an estimated 1,212,108 individuals2 who were internally displaced before February 2006. SUMMARY OF CURRENT IRAQI DISPLACEMENT AND RETURN: Returns Government and security forces in Iraq continue to emphasize improved security and opportunity for returns, attempting to facilitate the process where possible. In Baghdad, returnees are requested to make themselves known to the security forces, so as to ensure that areas of return are routinely patrolled and kept secure. Overall, returns are continuing at a slow but significant rate, while displacement is still slowed nationwide, limited to isolated events such as the recent displacement of Christian families in Mosul. Returnee families are in need of humanitarian assistance in order to reconstruct their homes and their livelihoods. IDP and host community children crowd In Hurriya neighborhood of Baghdad, the one together in a primary school in Wassit. -
The Privy Purse and the Infrastructure of Development in Late Ottoman Iraq, 1882–1914
HOS0010.1177/0073275321999265History of ScienceCole 999265research-article2021 Special Issue: Technology-in-Use during the Last Decades of the Ottoman Empire (1850s to 1920s) HOS History of Science 1 –23 Nafia for the Tigris: The Privy © The Author(s) 2021 Purse and the infrastructure of Article reuse guidelines: development in late Ottoman sagepub.com/journals-permissions https://doi.org/10.1177/0073275321999265DOI: 10.1177/0073275321999265 Iraq, 1882–1914 journals.sagepub.com/home/hos Camille Lyans Cole Jesus College, University of Cambridge, UK Abstract Between 1893 and 1908, at least six private consortia and the municipality of Baghdad were denied permission to operate steamships on the Tigris and Euphrates on the grounds that a navigation concession had already been granted to the Privy Purse (hazine-i hassa). The Privy Purse justified its insistence on monopoly with reference to the emerging ideology of development (nafia), though its ideas about the role of steam technology in nafia stood in contrast to those of private investors and other Ottoman bureaucrats. Working from the hazine-i hassa’s planning memos and contracts, I show that the private treasury envisioned a primarily agrarian future for Iraq, with steamships serving agricultural aims. As such, it focused on envisioning future steamships rather than managing its existing fleet, while still acquiring dominance over land and transport in the region. However, private companies and officials contested this vision, emphasizing the materiality of existing steamships, their roles in trade, and the potential for commercial competition as a means of resisting British imperial encroachment. After the Committee of Union and Progress came to power in 1908, the Privy Purse was disestablished and its properties reverted to the Finance Ministry, opening a brief window during which steamship companies were encouraged to proliferate. -
Qalat Saleh 2018
Copyright © United Nations Human Settlements Programme in Iraq (UN-HABITAT) 2018 All rights reserved United Nations Human Settlements Programme (UN-HABITAT) www.unhabitat.org DISCLAIMER The designations employed and the presentation of material in this publication do not imply the expression of any opinion whatsoever on the part of the secretariat of the United Nations concerning the legal status of any county, territory, city or area or its authorities, or concerning the delimitation of its frontiers or boundaries regarding its economic system or degree of development. Excerpts may be reproduced without authorization, on condition that the source is indicated. Views expressed in this publication do not necessarily reflect those of the United Nations Human Settlements Programme, the United Nations and its member states. ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS UN-Habitat Iraq thanks the European Union for its support and interest in sustainable urban development and the implementation of the New Urban Agenda in Iraq. This report was developed under the Local Area Development Programme (LADP-EU) by Anna Soave, Haitham Obaid Riwaih Shamkawi, Natacha Rohmer, and Dr Sara Mahmoud Al Jawari, with contributions from Bozhan Hawizy and Rania Kamal and Dr Rafid Al Jamawandi. Special thanks go to Ivan Thung. The UN-Habitat team would like to express its deep gratitude to the people of Qalat Saleh and Amarah, in Maysan Governorate, whose valuable inputs have helped to shape this proposal. We would like to thank in particular H.E. Ali Dawai, Maysan Governor; Ghadeer Abduljabbar Ridah, Qalat Saleh Municipality; Hayder Shefi Jankeez, Maysan Planning Directorate; Mohammed Hussien Abdulsada; Ahmed Hadi Abd Ali; Hussien Raheem Lazim, Directorate of Physical Planning of Maysan; Kudair Abdul Abbas; H.E.