Jalal Talabani, veteran Kurdish leader, ex-Iraqi president dies

Iraqi President Jalal Talabani speaks at a news conference following his meeting with Director of US Foreign Assistance and USAID Administrator Ambassador Randall L. Tobias in the heavily fortified Green Zone in Baghdad May 25, 2006. (File photo: Pool via Reuters)
Updated 03 October 2017
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Jalal Talabani, veteran Kurdish leader, ex-Iraqi president dies

IRBIL: Jalal Talabani, the Kurdish leader who became Iraq’s president after the US-led invasion and helped steer the country through years of insurgent and sectarian strife, has died in a Berlin hospital at the age of 83, Kurdish officials said Tuesday.
Talabani died after his condition rapidly deteriorated, according to Marwan Talabani, a relative and senior official in the office of Talabani’s son. He had suffered a stroke in 2012 and was moved to a German hospital later that year for treatment.
The veteran pragmatist was elected by Parliament to the largely ceremonial role in 2005, two years after the US invasion that toppled his sworn enemy Saddam Hussein, and stayed in the position until 2014.
He won plaudits during his tenure for trying to build bridges between Iraq’s warring factions at the height of sectarian bloodletting between the Sunni and Shiite communities.
Widely known as “Mam (Uncle) Jalal,” the barrel-chested Talabani performed a delicate balancing act in a fraught region and was seen as being close to both the US and its rival Iran.
Talabani long dominated Kurdish political life along with the current leader of Iraqi Kurdistan Masoud Barzani.
Born in 1933 in the rustic village of Kalkan in the mountains, as a young man he was quickly seduced by the Kurdish struggle for a homeland to unite a people scattered across Iraq, Iran, Turkey and Syria.
After studying law at Baghdad University and doing a stint in the army, Talabani joined the Kurdistan Democratic Party (KDP) of Mullah Mustafa Barzani, Masoud’s father, and took to the hills in a first uprising against the Iraqi government in 1961.
But he famously fell out with Barzani after he sued for peace with Baghdad — the start of a long and costly internecine feud among Iraqi Kurds.
Talabani joined a KDP splinter faction in 1964, and 11 years later established the Patriotic Union of Kurdistan (PUK) after Barzani’s forces, abandoned by their Iranian, US and Israeli allies, were routed by Saddam Hussein’s army.
His long career in troubled modern Iraq witnessed some of the lowest moments in Kurdish history.
A renewed uprising in the 1980s against the Saddam regime sparked the notorious Anfal campaign of 1988 in which the army razed hundreds of Kurdish villages and gassed thousands of people.
More tragedy was to come in the aftermath of the 1991 Gulf war, when the Kurdish uprising collapsed, prompting hundreds of thousands of people to seek refuge on the mountainous borders with Iran and Turkey in the heart of winter.
Western intervention allowed the Kurds to re-establish control over the three most northerly provinces of Iraq, but the rebel enclave fell far short of Kurdish claims for full independence amid Turkish opposition to statehood.
The rivalry between Talabani and the Barzanis, which degenerated into all-out war in 1993, finally led to rapprochement in 2002, when it became clear that Washington intended to topple Saddam.
After his rise to the presidency following the first post-Saddam elections in Iraq, Talabani strived to smooth strained ties with Syria and Iran to help end their suspected support for the insurgency in Iraq.
He was chosen again as president twice in 2006 and 2010.
While he struggled to bring together Iraq’s disparate factions, the married father-of-two also battled a string of health problems.
In August 2008, he underwent successful heart surgery in the US and in 2012 he was flown to Germany after suffering a stroke.
Talabani eventually returned to Iraq in July 2014, just as Daesh seized control of much of the country, and was replaced by his ally Fuad Masum.
The death of the veteran leader in Germany came just over a week after a controversial referendum that saw over 92 percent of Kurds vote for independence.
The ballot, rejected by Baghdad as illegal, has caused major tensions between the Kurds and central Iraqi authorities, which have cut off international flights to the region and threatened further action.


Egypt blocks popular game-creator Roblox over child safety concerns

Updated 2 sec ago
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Egypt blocks popular game-creator Roblox over child safety concerns

CAIRO: Egypt’s top media regulator blocked access on Wednesday to the US-owned gaming platform Roblox over child safety concerns, joining several other governments that have moved to restrict the popular app.
Roblox has been banned by countries including Qatar, Iraq and Turkiye, and US states such as Texas and Louisiana have filed lawsuits citing similar risks.
Egypt’s Supreme Council for Media Regulation announced the ban soon after several senators called for tighter controls on the platform, arguing that it contained inappropriate, violent and otherwise unsuitable content for children.
Senator Walaa Hermes warned that excessive use of Roblox could expose children to “anxiety, bullying, online harassment, incitement to violence and other financial and behavioral risks.”
The move follows President Abdel Fattah El-Sisi’s call last month for new legislation aimed at protecting children from the risks of early smartphone use, though he did not specify an age limit.
In a statement shared with AFP, a Roblox spokesperson said the company had reached out to Egyptian authorities “with the offer of dialogue to try and resolve this matter and promptly restore access,” adding that user safety “is a top priority at Roblox.”
The platform, developed by California-based Roblox Corporation, allows users to create and share their own games.
Around 100 million people use Roblox daily, with under-13s accounting for around 40 percent of its 2024 users, according to the company.
The Roblox Corporation says it moderates all content through human review and artificial intelligence tools, including to remove “exploitative content.”