Nazli Tarzi
A freelance British-Iraqi journalist specialising in Middle East politics, with a particular interest in Iraqi affairs.
Items by Nazli Tarzi
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- August 30, 2018 Nazli Tarzi
Basra’s overstretched health sector faces a water crisis with no help from Baghdad
Iraq’s southern city of Basra — the “Venice of the East” — is on high alert. Citizens in their thousands have been admitted to hospital with undiagnosed illnesses after drinking contaminated water. The province’s water pollution has reached catastrophic levels, most noticeably over the past two weeks, health officials...
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- July 24, 2018 Nazli Tarzi
Iraq’s southern rebellion defies defeat in the face of state violence
Prominent Iraqi human rights activist Jabbar Abdul Karim Bahadli, famous for defending the rights of wrongfully convicted protesters and activists, was assassinated early on Monday by unknown assailants in Al-Hadi district of Basra Province. The killing was verified by Qasim Al-Otaibi, president of Basra’s Bar Association, after he expressed...
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- July 18, 2018 Nazli Tarzi
Iraq’s southern uprising could ignite the largest revolt the country has witnessed in recent memory
Decades of pent-up grievances blew up, as predicted, across Iraq’s oil-rich south. Motivated by the government’s unfulfilled reform agenda, a brewing electricity crisis and obscene summer heat, protesters took to the streets to make their voices heard. “Down with religious parties” – “out with the illegitimate” – “down with...
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- July 16, 2018 Nazli Tarzi
The private sector takeover of Iraq's date palm groves
The wanton destruction of life in Iraq has extended into the country’s southern hinterland where state developers are bulldozing date palm groves for commercial development purposes. In the last week of June, things came to a head in the district of Al-Madinah, with the uprooting of as many as...
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- July 9, 2018 Nazli Tarzi
Sadr City arms depot explosion sparks national disarmament debate
America’s imperial seizure of Baghdad fifteen years ago altered Iraq’s military landscape irrevocably. As “liberation” morphed into occupation, US-issued decrees promising reform dismantled Iraq’s security institutions. Undermining their own designs of a secure Iraq, America’s de-Baathification spree responsible for the dissolution of the Iraqi army cleared the road for...
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- June 26, 2018 Nazli Tarzi
Miss Iraq is a false prophet of peace and coexistence
Sarah Idan, Miss Iraq 2017, is the newest voice in the chorus of advocates calling for coexistence between Israel and Palestine. Speaking before international and Israeli officials at the American Jewish Global Forum in Jerusalem last week, the 28-year-old social media influencer spoke of the urgency to “seek a...
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- June 20, 2018 Nazli Tarzi
Strange bedfellows are cooperating and sharing intelligence in Iraq
Generals from Syria, Iran and Russia convened at the joint-intel centre (JIC) inside Baghdad’s fortified Green Zone last week to discuss matters of national security and cooperation. The meeting was held in response to an official invitation from Iraqi intelligence director Saad Al-Alaq. Fifteen months after the so-called Islamic...
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- June 11, 2018 Nazli Tarzi
Iraq walks a dangerous tightrope to relieve hydropolitical tension with neighbours
Daily reminders of Iraq’s tragic state of affairs are brought up across online spaces daily. The trending video of a dishdasha-clad Iraqi citizen, wading through what is left of the River Tigris – which is now ankle-deep – is just the latest. It shows, for the first time in...
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- June 5, 2018 Nazli Tarzi
Optimism fades as election results in Iraq are annulled
Celebrations that lit up Baghdad’s Liberation Square on the eve of the country’s parliamentary elections on 12 May have faded, replaced by the embers of old and new constitutional disputes that burn brightly. The air of cool optimism that supporters of the victorious Sairoon — Islamist-Sadrist alliance — felt,...
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- May 29, 2018 Nazli Tarzi
Like heavy fog, the stench of death fills the air in Mosul
Throughout the nine months from the beginning of military operations to liberate Iraq’s north-western province in October 2016, thousands of men, women and children, as well as fighters, perished. The Pentagon refers to the ancient city of Mosul’s fallen civilian population as “unintentional” casualties, but locally they are still...
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- May 17, 2018 Nazli Tarzi
Muqtada Al-Sadr has had a less than conventional journey into politics
Iraqi populist leader Muqtada Al-Sadr’s climb to fame has eclipsed the predictions of his inevitable demise heard over the past decade. Once described as an afterthought in the celebrated Sadr family’s long line of revered scholars, his rise is as much a surprise today as it was in 2003...
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- May 16, 2018 Nazli Tarzi
The ever-shifting landscape of Iraq's electoral results
Twenty-four hours after Iraq’s fourth parliamentary election concluded, global commentators and Iraqis together celebrated what they view to be “big developments”. The victory sealed by the Sairoon alliance between the Sadrist Movement and the Iraqi Communist Party has been the hottest trending topic since polls closed. Big parties came...
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- May 11, 2018 Nazli Tarzi
Calls for a boycott reach a crescendo a day ahead of Iraq's parliamentary vote
With less than 24 hours to go before Iraqis cast their votes in their country’s fourth parliamentary elections, people on the street are divided on whether to take part or abstain. Perhaps more than any other age-group, disillusion runs highest among Iraqi youth. Those aged 25 and below are...
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- April 23, 2018 Nazli Tarzi
Disgruntled citizens deface Iraq's billboard men
As Iraq’s Election Day approaches, political campaign posters adorned by smiling candidates — secular and religious zealots alike — crowd the landscape. It seems that the masses do not share the political elite’s merriment, though, with a growing trend of posters of defacing the billboard men. Political heavyweights stand...
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- April 10, 2018 Nazli Tarzi
Remembering the first battle of Fallujah
It was on 31 March 2004 that America’s occupation of Iraq turned a year old. The date also marked the beginning of the grisliest chapter of America’s unwelcome stay in Fallujah. Iraq’s occupier felt justified entering the city days after the killing of four Blackwater mercenaries by members of...
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- March 27, 2018 Nazli Tarzi
Contradictions abound in Turkey’s military incursions in Iraq and Syria
A military incursion ordered by Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan in the plains of Sinjar to thwart Kurdish rebels belonging to the Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK) is stoking old tensions and prompting new questions over Turkey’s partnership with its Arab neighbours. “We said we would go into Sinjar,” Erdogan...
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- March 20, 2018 Nazli Tarzi
Behind the mask of democracy Iraq is a failed state
Fifteen years ago today America remade the Iraqi Republic in its own image but the democratic mould pressed on the country has proven incompatible with the behaviour of Baghdad’s rogue elite. The political process occupying forces made nourishes this behaviour and allows punishable actions to slide. The association between...
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- March 15, 2018 Nazli Tarzi
Mutual resentment and distrust hardens as Baghdad shrinks Kurds’ share of budget
Commitments that Kurdish leaders made to a new Iraq 15 years ago are unravelling quicker than they were formed as the noose of budgetary matters tightens. The newest trigger, the passing of Iraq’s much delayed budget last week, left relations more frayed than before with Baghdad having offered no...
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- March 6, 2018 Nazli Tarzi
Iraq's drug habit is a threat to its stability
Inside Baghdad’s Ibn Rushd hospital are wards populated by male patients, old and young, battling drug and substance addictions. The hospital provides recovery services, but the misery of sufferers is kept out of sight and few possess the faith to let their tales be heard. The lasting imprint of...
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- February 28, 2018 Nazli Tarzi
Baghdad cosies up to Moscow as America's regional footprint fades
Relations between Iraq and the Russian Federation are warming visibly. That much is clear when looking back at the past eighteen months of recurrent diplomatic visits, intergovernmental conferences and new pacts between them. High ranking officials and representatives of Iraq’s political process who have visited the Russian capital are...
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- February 21, 2018 Nazli Tarzi
As Iraqis fear another cholera outbreak the government is absent
An unquantifiable number of Iraqi towns, villages and encampments are flooded with wastewater following three days of fierce rain storms on Valentine’s Day last week. Heavy rainfall paralysed segments of the capital, Fallujah and Mosul, to name but a few of war torn towns affected. There was still cause...
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- February 13, 2018 Nazli Tarzi
The reconstruction of Iraq is no longer a priority for the US
Iraq’s troubled reconstruction timeline entered a new chapter as representatives from 70 states poured into Kuwait in attendance of The International Conference for the Reconstruction of Iraq, the first of its kind in the history of the Gulf and Arabian Peninsula. The fact that Iraq’s IMF ranks at 164...
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- February 12, 2018 Nazli Tarzi
Iraqi dissident’s arrest sparks electrifying solidarity in response
Iraq’s southern province of Muthanna has been up in arms over the arrest of local celebrity dissident Basim Khazaal Khashan last Wednesday. An electrifying display of solidarity spilled onto the streets of Samawah, Amara and other cities, outraged by Khashan’s wrongful imprisonment and the erroneous application of Iraq’s Penal...
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- February 5, 2018 Nazli Tarzi
Gunfire on university grounds signals a surge of tribal power
There was a time that I remember vividly in which videos of fierce gunfire exchanges within the grounds of Iraq’s neutral and protected spaces would elicit shock. In the years since the 2003 invasion, however, schools and hospitals have been controlled by various armed non-state actors, whose growth has...