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Sahand

@Sahandnl

Katılım Haziran 2020
205 Takip Edilen4.1K Takipçiler
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Miilato
Miilato@miiilato·
i hate when people take my isolation negatively like i'm just chilling fr
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Dantala
Dantala@Docfrosh·
A doctor using ChatGPT and you using ChatGPT is not the same, I cannot continue to over emphasize on this
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David Harris
David Harris@DavidHarrisNY·
Simple questions: Why do 5 million Palestinians have the "right" to a state, but not 40-60 million freedom-seeking #Kurds? Why are there endless marches & protests for Palestinians, but not Kurds? Why is the UN obsessed with Palestinians, but doesn't give a damn about Kurds?
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The Uncivilised One
The Uncivilised One@Sea2Sea1Way·
🚨BREAKING NEWS🚨 turkey sold thousands of underage children mainly survivors of the earthquake in 1999 to Jeffery Epstein's island for $200 million, smuggling them out by private planes. turkey as a country has no right to exist
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Jvnior
Jvnior@Jvnior·
🚨 BREAKING: Turkey allegedly sold THOUSANDS of UNDERAGE children to Epstein's island for $200 million, smuggling them out by private plane.
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Ashti Waissi
Ashti Waissi@ashtiwai·
Western countries abandoned the group on the right and chose to stand with the group on the left. Let that sink in.
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John Spencer
John Spencer@SpencerGuard·
We should support the Kurdish people. Numbering between 30 and 45 million, they are the world’s largest ethnic group without a sovereign state. They have repeatedly fought for their communities, security, and survival. They have lost more than 11,000 lives fighting ISIS for the world. Their cause and protection deserve serious attention and support.
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David Harris
David Harris@DavidHarrisNY·
#Kurds are once again being brutally targeted. Where are the Western nations? Where's the UN? Where's the "human rights" crowd? Where are the street protests? Where are college "activists"? Where's the media? Why the silence? Why the apathy? Why the indifference? WHY???
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נועה מגיד | Noa magid
So sick. A Syrian girl cuts off a braid she made from shoelaces and smiles, saying, "In solidarity with the Kurdish girl. Why did you cut only the braid? You should have cut off her entire neck so we could get rid of them and their religion."
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Jino Victoria Doabi ‏ژینۆ ویکتوریا دو‌آبی
Kobane Liberation Day marks the day in 2015 when the city of Kobane was freed from ISIS after months of brutal siege. The liberation became a powerful symbol of resistance, sacrifice, and hope, highlighting the decisive role of Kurds in the fight against terrorism. Today, Kobanê is under siege with a complete acceptance of the world leaders who clapped from their offices when Kurds sacrificed 15.000 lives in their honourable fight against ISIS. But for Kurds Kobanê is not a showcase, it’s our dignity. Bi can û bi xwîn em bi te ra, Kobanê ✊🏻
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Rudaw English
Rudaw English@RudawEnglish·
Why do Kurds say 2 + 2 = 1? Rudaw's @namo_abdulla explains.
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Sahand
Sahand@Sahandnl·
Rojava Kurds are bleeding, and too many of us are quiet. A repost, a comment, or even a like won’t fix it, but silence fixes nothing. This is not the time to spectate. Share something and show we stand together.
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Dr Halwest
Dr Halwest@Halwest_Jamal·
This is a call to the world: protect the Kurds, secure a decentralized future for them in Syria, and stop legitimizing violence as “stability.” Stand with the Kurds now, before ISIS and chaos rise again from the ruins.
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autist
autist@litteralyme0·
That damn penguin inspired a whole generation in one night
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Selîm
Selîm@selimworld·
This land has lost blood, but never pride. 📸: @kosar_khalil
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SyriacOSINT
SyriacOSINT@SyriacOSINT·
Okay, so you sold out the Kurds. Got it.
Ambassador Tom Barrack@USAMBTurkiye

The greatest opportunity for the Kurds in Syria right now lies in the post-Assad transition under the new government led by President Ahmed al-Sharaa. This moment offers a pathway to full integration into a unified Syrian state with citizenship rights, cultural protections, and political participation— long denied under Bashar al-Assad’s regime, where many Kurds faced statelessness, language restrictions, and systemic discrimination. Historically, the US military presence in northeastern Syria was justified primarily as a counter-ISIS partnership. The Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF), led by Kurds, proved the most effective ground partner in defeating ISIS’s territorial caliphate by 2019, detaining thousands of ISIS fighters and family members in prisons and camps like al-Hol and al-Shaddadi. At that time, there was no functioning central Syrian state to partner with—the Assad regime was weakened, contested, and not a viable partner against ISIS due to its alliances with Iran and Russia. Today, the situation has fundamentally changed. Syria now has an acknowledged central government that has joined the Global Coalition to Defeat ISIS (as its 90th member in late 2025), signaling a westward pivot and cooperation with the US on counterterrorism. This shifts the rationale for the US-SDF partnership: the original purpose of the SDF as the primary anti-ISIS force on the ground has largely expired, as Damascus is now both willing and positioned to take over security responsibilities, including control of ISIS detention facilities and camps. Recent developments show the US actively facilitating this transition, rather than prolonging a separate SDF role: • We have engaged extensively with the Syrian Government and SDF leadership to secure an integration agreement, signed on January 18, and to set a clear pathway for timely and peaceful implementation. • The deal integrates SDF fighters into the national military (as individuals, which remains among the most contentious issues), hand over key infrastructure (oil fields, dams, border crossings), and cede control of ISIS prisons and camps to Damascus. • The US has no interest in long-term military presence; it prioritizes defeating ISIS remnants, supporting reconciliation, and advancing national unity without endorsing separatism or federalism. This creates a unique window for the Kurds: integration into the new Syrian state offers full citizenship rights (including for those previously stateless), recognition as an integral part of Syria, constitutional protections for Kurdish language and culture (e.g., teaching in Kurdish, celebrating Nawruz as a national holiday), and participation in governance—far beyond the semi-autonomy the SDF held amid civil war chaos. While risks remain (e.g., fragile ceasefires, occasional clashes, concerns over hardliners, or the desire of some actors to relitigate past grievances), the United States is pushing for safeguards on Kurdish rights and counter-ISIS cooperation. The alternative—prolonged separation—could invite instability or ISIS resurgence. This integration, backed by US diplomacy, represents the strongest chance yet for Kurds to secure enduring rights and security within a recognized Syrian nation-state. In Syria, the United States is focused on: 1) ensuring the security of prison facilities holding ISIS prisoners, currently guarded by the SDF; and 2) facilitating talks between the SDF and the Syrian Government to allow for the peaceful integration of the SDF and the political inclusion of Syria’s Kurdish population into a historic full Syrian citizenship.

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Sahand
Sahand@Sahandnl·
@sannna0 Old batches? Sure, but the new ones aren’t even in the same room as the OG
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Sanna
Sanna@sannna0·
@Sahandnl The ADG Parfum and the ADG EDT are also really good
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Sahand
Sahand@Sahandnl·
Giorgio Armani woke up one day and chose to discontinue ADG Profumo
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