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Barzanke in Iraqi kurdistan
LePictorium_0142633.jpg
Barzanke looks more like an archaeological site than a settlement. In this village, the Sunni jihadists were welcomed and the number of black flags that sprouted immediately, according to Kurdish troops, suggested that most of the inhabitants were already Islamic State of Iraq and Levant (ISIL) supporters. Currently, these streets are still dangerous due to the mines that have been laid. Some houses were bombed by US forces airstrikes, others may have been struck by the Peshmerga as they tried to dislodge the ISIL fighters who had seized the area last August
Barzanke in Iraqi kurdistan
LePictorium_0142627.jpg
Barzanke looks more like an archaeological site than a settlement. In this village, the Sunni jihadists were welcomed and the number of black flags that sprouted immediately, according to Kurdish troops, suggested that most of the inhabitants were already Islamic State of Iraq and Levant (ISIL) supporters. Currently, these streets are still dangerous due to the mines that have been laid. Some houses were bombed by US forces airstrikes, others may have been struck by the Peshmerga as they tried to dislodge the ISIL fighters who had seized the area last August
Barzanke in Iraqi kurdistan
LePictorium_0142628.jpg
Barzanke looks more like an archaeological site than a settlement. In this village, the Sunni jihadists were welcomed and the number of black flags that sprouted immediately, according to Kurdish troops, suggested that most of the inhabitants were already Islamic State of Iraq and Levant (ISIL) supporters. Currently, these streets are still dangerous due to the mines that have been laid. Some houses were bombed by US forces airstrikes, others may have been struck by the Peshmerga as they tried to dislodge the ISIL fighters who had seized the area last August
Barzanke in Iraqi kurdistan
LePictorium_0142629.jpg
Barzanke looks more like an archaeological site than a settlement. In this village, the Sunni jihadists were welcomed and the number of black flags that sprouted immediately, according to Kurdish troops, suggested that most of the inhabitants were already Islamic State of Iraq and Levant (ISIL) supporters. Currently, these streets are still dangerous due to the mines that have been laid. Some houses were bombed by US forces airstrikes, others may have been struck by the Peshmerga as they tried to dislodge the ISIL fighters who had seized the area last August
Barzanke in Iraqi kurdistan
LePictorium_0142630.jpg
Barzanke looks more like an archaeological site than a settlement. In this village, the Sunni jihadists were welcomed and the number of black flags that sprouted immediately, according to Kurdish troops, suggested that most of the inhabitants were already Islamic State of Iraq and Levant (ISIL) supporters. Currently, these streets are still dangerous due to the mines that have been laid. Some houses were bombed by US forces airstrikes, others may have been struck by the Peshmerga as they tried to dislodge the ISIL fighters who had seized the area last August
Barzanke in Iraqi kurdistan
LePictorium_0142631.jpg
Barzanke looks more like an archaeological site than a settlement. In this village, the Sunni jihadists were welcomed and the number of black flags that sprouted immediately, according to Kurdish troops, suggested that most of the inhabitants were already Islamic State of Iraq and Levant (ISIL) supporters. Currently, these streets are still dangerous due to the mines that have been laid. Some houses were bombed by US forces airstrikes, others may have been struck by the Peshmerga as they tried to dislodge the ISIL fighters who had seized the area last August
Barzanke in Iraqi kurdistan
LePictorium_0142632.jpg
Barzanke looks more like an archaeological site than a settlement. In this village, the Sunni jihadists were welcomed and the number of black flags that sprouted immediately, according to Kurdish troops, suggested that most of the inhabitants were already Islamic State of Iraq and Levant (ISIL) supporters. Currently, these streets are still dangerous due to the mines that have been laid. Some houses were bombed by US forces airstrikes, others may have been struck by the Peshmerga as they tried to dislodge the ISIL fighters who had seized the area last August
Barzanke in Iraqi kurdistan
LePictorium_0142634.jpg
Barzanke looks more like an archaeological site than a settlement. In this village, the Sunni jihadists were welcomed and the number of black flags that sprouted immediately, according to Kurdish troops, suggested that most of the inhabitants were already Islamic State of Iraq and Levant (ISIL) supporters. Currently, these streets are still dangerous due to the mines that have been laid. Some houses were bombed by US forces airstrikes, others may have been struck by the Peshmerga as they tried to dislodge the ISIL fighters who had seized the area last August
Barzanke in Iraqi kurdistan
LePictorium_0142635.jpg
Barzanke looks more like an archaeological site than a settlement. In this village, the Sunni jihadists were welcomed and the number of black flags that sprouted immediately, according to Kurdish troops, suggested that most of the inhabitants were already Islamic State of Iraq and Levant (ISIL) supporters. Currently, these streets are still dangerous due to the mines that have been laid. Some houses were bombed by US forces airstrikes, others may have been struck by the Peshmerga as they tried to dislodge the ISIL fighters who had seized the area last August
Barzanke in Iraqi kurdistan
LePictorium_0142636.jpg
Barzanke looks more like an archaeological site than a settlement. In this village, the Sunni jihadists were welcomed and the number of black flags that sprouted immediately, according to Kurdish troops, suggested that most of the inhabitants were already Islamic State of Iraq and Levant (ISIL) supporters. Currently, these streets are still dangerous due to the mines that have been laid. Some houses were bombed by US forces airstrikes, others may have been struck by the Peshmerga as they tried to dislodge the ISIL fighters who had seized the area last August
Barzanke in Iraqi kurdistan
LePictorium_0142637.jpg
Barzanke looks more like an archaeological site than a settlement. In this village, the Sunni jihadists were welcomed and the number of black flags that sprouted immediately, according to Kurdish troops, suggested that most of the inhabitants were already Islamic State of Iraq and Levant (ISIL) supporters. Currently, these streets are still dangerous due to the mines that have been laid. Some houses were bombed by US forces airstrikes, others may have been struck by the Peshmerga as they tried to dislodge the ISIL fighters who had seized the area last August
Barzanke in Iraqi kurdistan
LePictorium_0142638.jpg
Barzanke looks more like an archaeological site than a settlement. In this village, the Sunni jihadists were welcomed and the number of black flags that sprouted immediately, according to Kurdish troops, suggested that most of the inhabitants were already Islamic State of Iraq and Levant (ISIL) supporters. Currently, these streets are still dangerous due to the mines that have been laid. Some houses were bombed by US forces airstrikes, others may have been struck by the Peshmerga as they tried to dislodge the ISIL fighters who had seized the area last August
Barzanke in Iraqi kurdistan
LePictorium_0142639.jpg
Barzanke looks more like an archaeological site than a settlement. In this village, the Sunni jihadists were welcomed and the number of black flags that sprouted immediately, according to Kurdish troops, suggested that most of the inhabitants were already Islamic State of Iraq and Levant (ISIL) supporters. Currently, these streets are still dangerous due to the mines that have been laid. Some houses were bombed by US forces airstrikes, others may have been struck by the Peshmerga as they tried to dislodge the ISIL fighters who had seized the area last August
Barzanke in Iraqi kurdistan
LePictorium_0142640.jpg
Barzanke looks more like an archaeological site than a settlement. In this village, the Sunni jihadists were welcomed and the number of black flags that sprouted immediately, according to Kurdish troops, suggested that most of the inhabitants were already Islamic State of Iraq and Levant (ISIL) supporters. Currently, these streets are still dangerous due to the mines that have been laid. Some houses were bombed by US forces airstrikes, others may have been struck by the Peshmerga as they tried to dislodge the ISIL fighters who had seized the area last August
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