Iraq- Salah Al-Din Governorate, Daur District
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Wash Needs in Schools Iraq
COMPARATIVE OVERVIEW WASH NEEDS IN SCHOOLS OF KEY INDICATORS Note: Findings derived from WFP data are December 2019 IRAQ presented in turquoise boxes. Methodology Water Hygiene Sanitation 1 3 2 REACH Number of HH surveys conducted by Number of schools assessed by WFP Drinking water from a water source is available Drinking water from a water source is available Drinking water comes from an improved water source The water quality is perceived to be acceptable The main water source is at the school's premises Has access to handwashing facilities Has access to handwashing facilities of which is having water and soap available of which is functional of which is having soap Has access to improved sanitation facilities number of Average functional student toilets per school building number of toilets Average for students number of Average students per toilet Has access to student toilets separated by gender Has access to student toilets separated by gender Has unusable toilets Is having a good structural condition of student toilets Is having a good hygienic condition of student toilets Al-Falluja 115 88% 100% 78% 93% 100% 97% 100% 9,1 82% 0% Al-Ramadi 80 83% 98% 81% 98% 100% 100% 100% 8,6 93% 0% Al-Anbar Ana 74 31 44% 65% 87% 49% 72% 94% 94% 64% 66% 62% 94% 5,8 5,4 36 90% 90% 23% 100% 71% Heet 87 72% 100% 60% 100% 93% 97% 100% 9,0 88% 0% Shat Al-Arab 98 12% 92% 83% 11% 7,2 91 77% 56% 46% Al-Basrah Al-Khidhir 70 50% 66% 76% 11% 5,8 69 79% 74% 32% Al-Muthanna Al-Kufa 120 21% 46% 71% 99% 100% 23% 99% 6.5 71% 27% Al-Najaf Al-Najaf 94 2% 95% 98% -
Diyala Governorate, Kifri District
( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( (( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( Iraq- Diyala Governorate, Kifri( District ( ( ( ( (( ( ( ( ( ( ( Daquq District ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( Omar Sofi Kushak ( Kani Ubed Chachan Nawjul IQ-P23893 IQ-P05249 Kharabah داﻗوق ) ) IQ-P23842 ( ( IQ-P23892 ( Chamchamal District ( Galalkawa ( IQ-P04192 Turkey Haji Namiq Razyana Laki Qadir IQ-D074 Shekh Binzekhil IQ-P05190 IQ-P05342 ) )! ) ﺟﻣﺟﻣﺎل ) Sarhang ) Changalawa IQ-P05159 Mosul ! Hawwazi IQ-P04194 Alyan Big Kozakul IQ-P16607 IQ-P23914 IQ-P05137 Erbil IQ-P05268 Sarkal ( Imam IQ-D024 ( Qawali ( ( Syria ( IranAziz ( Daquq District Muhammad Garmk Darka Hawara Raqa IQ-P05354 IQ-P23872 IQ-P05331 Albu IQ-P23854 IQ-P05176 IQ-P052B2a6 ghdad Sarkal ( ( ( ( ( ! ( Sabah [2] Ramadi ( Piramoni Khapakwer Kaka Bra Kuna Kotr G!\amakhal Khusraw داﻗوق ) ( IQ-P23823 IQ-P05311 IQ-P05261 IQ-P05235 IQ-P05270 IQ-P05191 IQ-P05355 ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( Jordan ( ( ! ( ( ( IQ-D074 Bashtappa Bash Tappa Ibrahim Big Qala Charmala Hawara Qula NaGjafoma Zard Little IQ-P23835 IQ-P23869 IQ-P05319 IQ-P05225 IQ-P05199 ( IQ-P23837 ( Bashtappa Warani ( ( Alyan ( Ahmadawa ( ( Shahiwan Big Basrah! ( Gomatzbor Arab Agha Upper Little Tappa Spi Zhalan Roghzayi Sarnawa IQ-P23912 IQ-P23856 IQ-P23836 IQ-P23826 IQ-P23934 IQ-P05138 IQ-P05384 IQ-P05427 IQ-P05134 IQ-P05358 ( Hay Al Qala [1] ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( Ibrahim Little ( ( ( ( ( ( ( Ta'akhi IQ-P23900 Tepe Charmuk Latif Agha Saudi ArabiaKhalwa Kuwait IQ-P23870 Zhalan ( IQ-P23865 IQ-P23925 ( ( IQ-P23885 Sulaymaniyah Governorate Roghzayi IQ-P05257 ( ( ( ( ( Wa(rani -
Weekly Explosive Incidents Flash News
iMMAP - Humanitarian Access Response Weekly Explosive Hazard Incidents Flash News (26 Nov - 02 Dec 2020) 109 23 26 10 2 INCIDENTS PEOPLE KILLED PEOPLE INJURED EXPLOSIONS AIRSTRIKES BAGHDAD GOVERNORATE KIRKUK GOVERNORATE An Armed Group 26/NOV/2020 Popular Mobilization Forces 26/NOV/2020 Shot and injured a government employee in Taiji sub-district of Kadhimiya district. Repelled an ISIS attack in Al-Nakar area of Dibs district. An Armed Group 26/NOV/2020 An Armed Group 26/NOV/2020 Detonated an IED targeting a liquor store in Karada district. Detonated an IED targeting a military vehicle and injured four soldiers near Ali Saray Security Forces 26/NOV/2020 village of Daquq district. Found and cleared a cache of explosives containing 700kg of C4, west of the capital. Popular Mobilization Forces 28/NOV/2020 Security Forces 29/NOV/2020 Repelled an ISIS attack in Ataira village of Zab subdistrict. Found the corpse of a civilian showing a gunshot wound in Umm Al-Kabir area, east of the An Armed Group 30/NOV/2020 capital. Killed a major of the Federal Police Forces by detonating an IED striking their patrol An Armed Group 30/NOV/2020 vehicle in Hawija district. Detonated an IED targeting a liquor store in the Baghdad Al-Jdida area. Security Forces 02/DEC/2020 Security Forces 30/NOV/2020 Repelled an ISIS attack in Riyadh sub-district of Hawija district. Found the body of a civilian inside a car in Al-Sadr area, east of the capital. ANBAR GOVERNORATE An Armed Group 01/DEC/2020 Injured a civilian in a tribal conflict in Al-Mashtal area, east of the capital. -
For the Iraqi Flora
Volume 7, Number 4, December .2014 ISSN 1995-6673 JJBS Pages 293 - 297 Jordan Journal of Biological Sciences Short Communication A New Record of Cephalaria paphlagonica Bobrov (Dipsacaceae) for the Iraqi Flora Abdullah Sh. Sardar* Department of Biology, College of Education, University of Salahaddin, Erbil, Iraq Received: July 13, 2014 Revised: August 20, 2014 Accepted: September 1, 2014 Abstract Cephalaria paphlagonica Bobrov is a new record to the Dipsacaceae family in Iraq, from Sakran mountain (north-east of Erbil) within Rowanduz district (MRO). Description, photographs, differential morphological characters and map of distribution are conducted. Keywords: Cephalaria paphlagonica, Dipsacaceae, Rowandus district, Iraq. (Amadiya District), MRO (Rowanduz District), MSU 1. Introduction (Sulaimaniya District), FKI (Kirkuk District), FAR (Arbil District) and FNI (Nineveh District) during Spring and The Dipsacaceae is one of the Iraqi flora families. This Summer seasons of year 2014. Some Iraqi herbarial family involves 350 species throughout the world; these specimens were used; these specimens were identified are distributed on 11 genera (Heukles, 2000). Iraq through the help of some keys, especially the Flora of involves 24 species distributed on 4 genera (Al-Rawi, Turkey. The specimens were made herbarially to become 1964). In Europe, the family is called Teasel (Heukles, formal specimens, and putted in herbarium of the 2000), and the genus Dipsacus L., from the same family, Education College (ESUH). The geographical distribution is also called Teasel (Knopf, 2000). Komarov (1957) of the species was cleared with fixation of some mentioned 23 species of the genus Cephalaria in the ecological notes, and a map (plate 4) was putted. -
Download the COI Focus
OFFICE OF THE COMMISSIONER GENERAL FOR REFUGEES AND STATELESS PERSONS PERSONS COI Focus IRAQ Security Situation in Central and Southern Iraq 20 March 2020 (update) Cedoca Original language: Dutch DISCLAIMER: This COI-product has been written by Cedoca, the Documentation and Research Department of the CGRS, and it provides information for the processing of applications for international protection. The document does not contain policy guidelines or opinions and does not pass judgment on the merits of the application for international protection. It follows the Common EU Guidelines for processing country of origin information (April 2008) and is written in accordance with the statutory legal provisions. The author has based the text on a wide range of public information selected with care and with a permanent concern for crosschecking sources. Even though the document tries to cover all the relevant aspects of the subject, the text is not necessarily exhaustive. If certain events, people or organizations are not mentioned, this does not mean that they did not exist. All the sources used are briefly mentioned in a footnote and described in detail in a bibliography at the end of the document. Sources which have been consulted but which were not used are listed as consulted sources. In exceptional cases, sources are not mentioned by name. When specific information from this document is used, the user is asked to quote the source mentioned in the bibliography. This document can only be published or distributed with the written consent of the Office of the Commissioner General for Refugees and Stateless Persons. TO A MORE INTEGRATED MIGRATION POLICY, THANKS TO AMIF Rue Ernest Blerot 39, 1070 BRUSSELS T 02 205 51 11 F 02 205 50 01 [email protected] www.cgrs.be IRAQ. -
Protracted Displacement in Iraq: District of Origin Profiles
PROTRACTED DISPLACEMENT IN IRAQ: DISTRICT OF ORIGIN PROFILES AUGUST 2021 IOM IRAQ The opinions expressed in the report are those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect the views of the International Organization for Migration (IOM). The designations employed and the presentation of material throughout the report do not imply the expression of any opinion whatsoever on the part of IOM concerning the legal status of any country, territory, city or area, or of its authorities, or concerning its frontiers or boundaries. IOM is committed to the principle that humane and orderly migration benefits migrants and society. As an intergovernmental organization, IOM acts with its partners in the international community to: assist in meeting the operational challenges of migration; advance understanding of migration issues; encourage social and economic development through migration; and uphold the human dignity and well-being of migrants. The information contained in this report is for general information purposes only. Names and boundaries on DTM information products do not imply official endorsement or acceptance by IOM. The information in the DTM portal and in this report is the result of data collected by IOM field teams and complements information provided and generated by governmental and other entities in Iraq. IOM Iraq endeavors to keep this information as up to date and accurate as possible, but makes no claim —expressed or implied— on the completeness, accuracy and suitability of the information provided through this report. Challenges that should be taken into account when using DTM data in Iraq include the fluidity of the displaced population movements along with repeated emergencies and limited or no access to parts of the country. -
Copyright © and Moral Rights for This Thesis Are Retained by the Author And/Or Other Copyright Owners
R Karam, Salam Kamel (2017) The Constitution as Unfinished Business : The Making and Un‐Making of Power Relations in Iraq, 2003‐2010. PhD thesis. SOAS University of London. http://eprints.soas.ac.uk/26160 Copyright © and Moral Rights for this thesis are retained by the author and/or other copyright owners. A copy can be downloaded for personal non‐commercial research or study, without prior permission or charge. This thesis cannot be reproduced or quoted extensively from without first obtaining permission in writing from the copyright holder/s. The content must not be changed in any way or sold commercially in any format or medium without the formal permission of the copyright holders. When referring to this thesis, full bibliographic details including the author, title, awarding institution and date of the thesis must be given e.g. AUTHOR (year of submission) "Full thesis title", name of the School or Department, PhD Thesis, pagination. The Constitution as Unfinished Business The Making and Un-Making of Power Relations in Iraq, 2003-2010 Salam Kamel Karam Thesis submitted for the degree of PhD 2016 Department of Politics and International Studies School of Oriental and African Studies, SOAS University of London 1 Declaration for SOAS PhD thesis I have read and understood regulation 17.9 of the Regulations for students of the SOAS, University of London concerning plagiarism. I undertake that all the material presented for examination is my own work and has not been written for me, in whole or in part, by any other person. I also undertake that any quotation or paraphrase from the published or unpublished work of another person has been duly acknowledged in the work which I present for examination. -
Iom Emergency Needs Assessments Post February 2006 Displacement in Iraq 15 April 2008 Bi-Weekly Report
IOM EMERGENCY NEEDS ASSESSMENTS POST FEBRUARY 2006 DISPLACEMENT IN IRAQ 15 APRIL 2008 BI-WEEKLY 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 on the ground. Significantly fewer Iraqis were displaced in 2007 than were displaced in 2006, suggesting that internal displacement in Iraq has slowed. However, displacement continues to occur in some locations and the humanitarian situation of those already displaced is worsening. The limited returns that have occurred so far represent only a small fraction of the displaced population. Internal displacement in Iraq continues to be a major humanitarian crisis, demanding both assessment and a targeted humanitarian response. The estimated number of displaced since February 2006 is almost 1,504,000 individuals 1. This figure, combined with the estimated 1,200,000 individuals 2 who were internally displaced before February 2006, results in a total of more than 2.7 million individuals displaced within Iraq to date. BACKGROUND AND SUMMARY ON IRAQI DISPLACEMENT: Displacement Displacement continues to occur due to military operations and generalized violence. The recent insecurity and fighting in Baghdad and the south, especially Basrah, caused low-scale displacement, although the figures continue to be difficult to confirm due to ongoing insecurity and restrictions on movement. Over the past few weeks, more than 100 families were displaced in Babylon and 230 families fled to Wassit from Al-Mada’in district in Baghdad. -
Weekly Report 13 to 19 Aug.Pdf (English)
IMMAP - MOSUL HUMANITARIAN RESPONSE 13 AUG - 19 AUG WEEKLY EXPLOSIVE INCIDENTS REPORT 2017 33 44 11 88 Airstrikes + Explosive Hazards + Armed Clash Areas = Explosive Incidents outskirt of Tuz khurmatu in Salah Al-Din AUG 13, 2017 AUG 14, 2017 and injured two members. Iraqi Military Forces found and Iraqi Military Forces cleared different types of projectiles, • Found and cleared IEDs, weapons, five 2000 mortars, locally made weapons, tunnels contained guns, communication AUG 15, 2017 and cylinder launchers in Al-Agidat area devices, documents contained names of Iraqi Military Forces in Mosul Al-Qadimah. the executed civilians, 50 gallons with • Found and cleared a VBIEDs and an chemical materials used for making IEDs factories, three weapons’ storages IEDs, and improvised fighting vehicle in Asaish Forces found and cleared a contained missiles and ordnances and the eastern side of Mosul city, Qayrawan storage of explosives near Prdi in Altun five SIEDs in Telafar district in Mosul, subdistrict in Mosul, Dayum area and the Kupri in Kirkuk. and near Al Bu Arak village in Salah way of Namel-Makhoul in Salah Al-Din. Al-Din. • Found 500 dead bodies belonging to the • Found 267 corpses belonged to the Popular Mobilization Forces civilians in western side of Mosul city. Spiker mass grave in Al Qosour area in • Found and cleared IEDs, and weapons; Salah Al-Din. 20 flat pack IED, 30 cylindrical IEDs, a bag of detonators, 100 meters of wires Popular Mobilization Forces that are used in IEDs, 10 command wire • Found and cleared SIED in the area ISIS between Adhem Lake and Al Buryash in IEDs, 50 mortars, thermal missile, and • Attacked Peshmarga Forces in Zarkah Salah Al-Din. -
Iraq and the Kurds: Resolving the Kirkuk Crisis
IRAQ AND THE KURDS: RESOLVING THE KIRKUK CRISIS Middle East Report N°64 – 19 April 2007 TABLE OF CONTENTS EXECUTIVE SUMMARY AND RECOMMENDATIONS................................................. i I. INTRODUCTION: GROWING TENSIONS............................................................... 1 II. A TRAINWRECK IN THE MAKING.......................................................................... 2 A. NORMALISATION ...................................................................................................................2 B. THE ARTICLE 140 COMMITTEE ..............................................................................................4 C. THE ILL-CONSIDERED PUSH FOR A REFERENDUM IN 2007.......................................................7 D. FALL-OUT FROM FAILURE......................................................................................................9 III. THE NEED FOR A PROCESS.................................................................................... 11 IV. THE PATH TO A SETTLEMENT ............................................................................. 15 A. THE UNITED STATES AND TURKEY ......................................................................................15 B. OUTLINES OF A GLOBAL SOLUTION......................................................................................17 V. CONCLUSION.............................................................................................................. 19 APPENDICES A. MAP OF IRAQ ......................................................................................................................21 -
Investment Map of Iraq 2016
Republic of Iraq Presidency of Council of Ministers National Investment Commission Investment Map of Iraq 2016 Dear investor: Investment opportunities found in Iraq today vary in terms of type, size, scope, sector, and purpose. the door is wide open for all investors who wish to hold investment projects in Iraq,; projects that would meet the growing needs of the Iraqi population in different sectors. Iraq is a country that brims with potential, it is characterized by its strategic location, at the center of world trade routes giving it a significant feature along with being a rich country where I herby invite you to look at Iraq you can find great potentials and as one of the most important untapped natural resources which would places where untapped investment certainly contribute in creating the decent opportunities are available in living standards for people. Such features various fields and where each and characteristics creates favorable opportunities that will attract investors, sector has a crucial need for suppliers, transporters, developers, investment. Think about the great producers, manufactures, and financiers, potentials and the markets of the who will find a lot of means which are neighboring countries. Moreover, conducive to holding new projects, think about our real desire to developing markets and boosting receive and welcome you in Iraq , business relationships of mutual benefit. In this map, we provide a detailed we are more than ready to overview about Iraq, and an outline about cooperate with you In order to each governorate including certain overcome any obstacle we may information on each sector. In addition, face. -
Kirkuk Governorate Profile
KKIIRRKKUUKK NCCI Governorate Profile Geography Population Historical Overview Pre-2003 Post-2003 Armed Groups Provincial Council Humanitarian Overview Presence of NGOs Culture Further Reading Geography Situated in northern Iraq, Kirkuk is located between the Zagros Mountains in the northeast, the Lower Zab and Tigris rivers in the west, the Hamreen Mountains in the south, and the Sirwan (or Diyala) river in the southwest. Kirkuk is also approximately 250 kilometres (155 miles) from Baghdad. The governorate is relatively small, covering 9,679 km2, or 2.2% of Iraq. Iraq’s northeastern highlands begin in southern Kirkuk and extend towards the Iraqi borders with Iran and Turkey. Much of Kirkuk is characterized as arable land. Agriculture provides essential sustenance and income for most of the governorate’s residents. In 2007, about 572,080 residents lived in Kirkuk city, the capital, according to World Food Programme estimates. The other three districts of Kirkuk are Daquq, Al-Hawiga and Dibis. Population The exact demographic composition of Kirkuk is unknown today. No comprehensive census has been conducted in Kirkuk since the 2003 US-led invasion of Iraq. In 2007, the Iraqi government estimated the population of Kirkuk at 902,019, or about 3% of Iraq’s total population. Gender distribution is equal (50% male/50% female) in the governorate. Kirkuk is also highly urbanized with estimates that only 31% of its residents live in rural areas. While many Kurds have returned to Kirkuk after decades of displacement, local authorities are not sure whether Kurdish or Arab residents are the majority. Some Arab residents of Kirkuk are originally from southern Iraq.