Monday, September 17, 2007
Kurdistan flights to Sweden and Germany to resume
"Flights from Sweden to Sulaimaniyah will resume by the next week, but another company will conduct those flights." He added. In August, Sweden has suspended commercial flights to and from Kurdistan region (Iraq) after an apparent rocket attack against a passenger jet as it took off from the northern city of Sulaimaniyah, the Nordic country's aviation authority said Tuesday. Sulaimaniyah International Airport Authority, Kamaran Ahmed, said a local investigation found no evidence that a missile was fired and blamed the scare on bright lights being used on the ground.
Labels: Burhan saeid Sofi, Germany, KRG, Nordic Airways, Sulaimaniyah, Sweden
Tuesday, September 11, 2007
Iraqi insurgent group threaten to kill German hostage
The video showed Sinan Krause seated drinking tea in front of a blue backdrop and talking with his mother, who was weeping. As the image shifted to Hannelore sitting alone dressed in her headscarf, a voice was heard saying she was released because she converted to Islam. The narrator then demanded that Germany withdraw its forces from Afghanistan within 10 days or "we will slaughter him (Sinan) like a sheep to please ourselves and in support of our brothers and a humiliation to our enemies."
A previously unknown insurgent group, the "Arrows of Righteousness," claimed March 10 to have abducted Sinan and his mother and released two earlier videos of the two. The authenticity of Monday's almost three minute-long video could not be verified, but it appeared on a Web site commonly used by Islamic militants and carried the logo of the group.
In both previous videos - released in March and April - the group also threatened to kill the hostages if Germany did not start withdrawing troops from Afghanistan within 10 days. In one video, the mother said she worked for the Austrian Embassy, and a militant's voiceover said her son worked for Iraq's Foreign Ministry.
Germany, which opposed the war in Iraq and has no troops there, has some 3,000 soldiers serving in NATO's International Security Assistance Force in Afghanistan - largely in the relatively calm north - and has said it will not comply with the kidnappers' demands.
Labels: Afghanistan, Arrows of Righteousness, Germany, Hannelore Krause, hostage, Iraq, Sinan Krause
Wednesday, August 29, 2007
Agility wins tender to supply AAFES
Agility will provide an integrated supply chain solution for the clearance and transportation of general department store merchandise destined for AAFES customers in Iraq by utilizing its operations in Jordan. Headquartered in Dallas, Texas, AAFES is a joint-service military organization serving soldiers and sailors that offers brand-name retail merchandise to active and retired military personnel and their families. With more than $9 billion in annual revenues, AAFES operates as one of the world’s top 40 largest retail companies.
In order to help AAFES find operational efficiencies while ensuring the highest levels of service quality, Agility will integrate best practices from its award-winning Retail Center of Excellence and Defense & Government Services (DGS) operations. AAFES will have the benefit of Agility’s experience in supporting world-class commercial retailers, optimized for use in a military environment.
AAFES retail operations in Iraq are currently being serviced by a distribution operation in Germany. This has historically left the retail sites in Western Iraq with minimal accessibility and the hardest challenges for re-supply. By partnering with Agility to open a new supply route through Jordan, these Western Iraq sites will realize major improvements in re-supply for the first time.
Labels: AAFES, Agility Defense and Government Services, Germany, western Iraq
Friday, July 13, 2007
German hostage released after five months
Labels: Afghanistan, Arrows of Righteousness, Germany, Hannelore Marianne Krause, hostage
Tuesday, April 03, 2007
Germany given 10-day deadline to withdraw from Afghanistan by abductors
The group had issued an earlier ultimatum on March 10 that it would kill the pair if Berlin failed to pull out its troops from Afghanistan. The two were seized from their home in western Baghdad in early February. "I urge the German people to help me in my difficult situation," said Krause, according to an Arabic translation of her comments, only parts of which could be heard.
"Germany was safe before it got involved in this satanic coalition with America against what they call terrorism," said Krause, shown sitting on the ground next to her son. "Maybe for the last time ... I urge you. Perhaps you can go to the newspapers, perhaps you can organize a protest march ... contact people who can help you, please please, please," she said, addressing a son and daughter living in Germany.
A militant speaking on the video but out of sight said: "We are giving the German government another 10 days to begin withdrawing its troops from Afghanistan or we shall kill this criminal woman and her son who works in the Foreign Ministry of the government of (Iraqi Prime Minister Nuri al-) Maliki."
Germany, which opposed the 2003 U.S.-led invasion of Iraq, has about 3,000 troops in Afghanistan as part of a NATO force stationed in the country after U.S.-led troops toppled the Taliban in 2001 for harboring al Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden. Austria said last month it had five officers in Afghanistan and was not planning to send more troops. Krause is married to an Iraqi physician and moved to Iraq 40 years ago. Her son is reported to be in his mid-20s and has dual German-Iraqi citizenship. The German government has said it is working to try to secure the hostages' release but will not be blackmailed.
Labels: Afghanistan, Arrows of Righteousness, Austria, Germany, Hannelore Krause, hostages
Tuesday, March 20, 2007
Al-Hashimi appeals for release of German hostages
The video showed the sobbing woman, sitting next to her grown son, appealing to the German government to respond to the kidnappers' demands. There has been no further word about the two. The video's authenticity could not independently verified, and German officials would not say where the two citizens were kidnapped nor what they were doing in Iraq.
"Our ethic and national responsibility needs to attract as much sympathy as we can from the world community to the ordeal now facing the Iraqi people," Vice President Tariq al-Hashimi said in a statement. "Kidnapping innocent people and holding them responsible for their countries' policies does not serve this noble goal," he said.
On Monday, German Chancellor Angela Merkel said Berlin would not meet demands from Islamic extremists.
"The government cannot let itself be blackmailed," Merkel said at a news conference with Afghan President Hamid Karzai.
Labels: Arrows of Righteousness, Germany, Hannelore Krause, hostages
Sunday, March 18, 2007
Islamic group calls for release of German hostages
Afghanistan.
Labels: Germany, Hannelore Krause, Islamic Council for Germany, Kataeb Siham al-Haq, kidnapping, Righteous Arrows Battalions
Sunday, March 11, 2007
Iraqi kidnappers threaten to kill Germans if demands not meant
"Crisis management officials are working on the case of the hostages" and are in contact with the appropriate government officials and with family members, according to the German Foreign Ministry. While sitting next to her son, Krause tells Merkel, "These people want to kill my son in front of my eyes, and then they'll kill me, if the German troops did not withdraw from Afghanistan." She and her adult son clutch each other and cry as they speak while three militants, two armed with large assault rifles, stand behind them. "They are not joking, and they'll kill us," Krause says. "I am very tired. Please help me. Make a decision or we will be killed."
As part of NATO's Afghanistan force, Germany has about 3,000 troops in the relatively peaceful northern part of the country. On Friday, Germany decided to send additional reconnaissance jets and personnel to the area.
German troops also help train Iraqi soldiers and police, but not in Iraq.
Krause also called on German citizens and government and nongovernmental organizations to help. The three masked men who are shown standing behind the two Germans are in civilian clothes, not the usual uniform worn by militants in Internet videos. Reading a prepared statement, one of the militants says: "We have warned you. Otherwise, you will not see their bodies. Muslims are all one nation, and have one religion. It is not acceptable that Germany leads the coalition troops in Afghanistan, and attacks the secured villages and claim it is not fighting in Iraq."
Labels: Arrows of Righteousness, Germany, Hannelore Marianne Krause, hostages