Khawr Abd Allah
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Khawr_Abd_Allah an entity of type: Person
خور عبد الله هو خور يقع في شمال الخليج العربي ما بين جزيرتي بوبيان ووربة الكويتيتين وشبه جزيرة الفاو العراقية ويمتد خور عبد الله إلى داخل الأراضي العراقية مشكلاً خور الزبير الذي يقع به ميناء أم قصر العراقي، قامت الحكومة العراقية سنة 2010 بوضع حجر الأساس لبناء ميناء الفاو الكبير على الجانب العراقي.
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The Khawr Abd Allah (Arabic: خور عبد الله, Gulf Arabic pronunciation: [xawr ʕæbdɑɫɫɑ]) is today an estuary, but once was the point where the Shatt al-Arab emptied into the Persian Gulf. It is located in southern Iraq and northern Kuwait, the Iraq-Kuwaiti border divides the lower portion of the estuary, but adjacent to the port of Umm Qasr the estuary becomes wholly Iraqi. The Shatt al-Arab is now the point where the rivers drain out, east of the Khawr Abd Allah. As it extends northwestward into Iraq, it changes its name to Khawr az-Zubayr, at the location of Umm Qasr. From this point it links by canal again to the northwest and into the Tigris and Euphrates proper. It forms the northeast coastline of Jazirat Bubiyan and the north coastline of Jazirat Warbah. Both of these islands are offic
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Il Khawr ʿAbd Allāh (in arabo: خور عبد الله) è probabilmente una foce ad estuario in via di prosciugamento dello Shatt al-Arab la cui foce è ora più a nord e costituisce la parte sud-orientale del confine tra Iraq e Iran. Nel dicembre 2002 nei pressi dell'isola di Warbah una nave militare irachena ha aperto il fuoco contro due motovedette della guardia costiera kuwaitiana causandone la collisione. L'11 novembre 2008, ufficiali irakeni e kuwaitiani hanno siglato un protocollo d’intesa, grazie al quale vengono gestiti i rapporti confinari e le operazioni lungo il Khawr Abd Allah.
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خور عبد الله
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Khawr Abd Allah
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Khawr Abd Allah
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خور عبد الله هو خور يقع في شمال الخليج العربي ما بين جزيرتي بوبيان ووربة الكويتيتين وشبه جزيرة الفاو العراقية ويمتد خور عبد الله إلى داخل الأراضي العراقية مشكلاً خور الزبير الذي يقع به ميناء أم قصر العراقي، قامت الحكومة العراقية سنة 2010 بوضع حجر الأساس لبناء ميناء الفاو الكبير على الجانب العراقي.
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The Khawr Abd Allah (Arabic: خور عبد الله, Gulf Arabic pronunciation: [xawr ʕæbdɑɫɫɑ]) is today an estuary, but once was the point where the Shatt al-Arab emptied into the Persian Gulf. It is located in southern Iraq and northern Kuwait, the Iraq-Kuwaiti border divides the lower portion of the estuary, but adjacent to the port of Umm Qasr the estuary becomes wholly Iraqi. The Shatt al-Arab is now the point where the rivers drain out, east of the Khawr Abd Allah. As it extends northwestward into Iraq, it changes its name to Khawr az-Zubayr, at the location of Umm Qasr. From this point it links by canal again to the northwest and into the Tigris and Euphrates proper. It forms the northeast coastline of Jazirat Bubiyan and the north coastline of Jazirat Warbah. Both of these islands are officially Kuwait, however Iraq does claim them. It has also lent its name to the maritime Khawr Abd Allah Protocols, Kor Abd Allah or KAA Interoperability Protocols first developed by the British Royal Navy between March and June 2008 during the British command of Combined Task Force 158 in close co-operation with Kuwaiti and Iraqi senior naval personnel and government advisers. The non-legally binding KAA Interoperability Protocols were developed and mediated between the heads of the Kuwaiti and Iraqi navies by then, Major David Hammond Royal Marines, the British naval barrister and legal advisor to CTF 158. David Hammond is now the CEO of the UK charity Human Rights at Sea and separately independently practices law as an English barrister. The Protocols included the production of the KAA Interoperability Admiralty Chart by Major Hammond and which was subsequently distributed to both countries, having been produced by the United Kingdom Hydrographic Office. On November 11, 2008, the KAA Protocols were historically signed at Kuwait Naval Base having been verbally agreed on board HMS Chatham (F87) on 8 May 2008. The signing meeting saw the first formal meeting of the heads of respective navies since before the 1991 Gulf War. Subsequently, the success of the non-legally binding protocols was reported to the US Congress on January 9, 2009 in the Measuring Stability and Security in Iraq Report. The detail of the text of the KAA Interoperability Protocols has now been made available open source over the internet from leaked US diplomatic documents. More recently the former Head of the Kuwaiti Navy, Major-General Ahmad Yousef Al-Mulla, was invited to speak at the United Kingdom's Royal College of Defence Studies (RCDS) in London on February 1, 2012 on the topic of the Khor Abdallah waterway as part of a lecture covering Kuwaiti-Iraqi maritime boundary interactions and future relations. The lecture was introduced by Lord Astor of Hever John Astor, 3rd Baron Astor of Hever, the United Kingdom government's Parliamentary Under Secretary of State (Ministry of Defense) and the Commandant Royal College of Defence Studies Vice Admiral Charles Style. It was also attended by representatives of the Iraqi embassy in London. In September 2019, the Kuwaiti newspaper Al Rai allegedly claimed that Iraq submitted a letter of complaint to the UN Secretary General and UN Security Council accusing Kuwait of geographical changes to its maritime border at the Khor Abdullah waterway.
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Il Khawr ʿAbd Allāh (in arabo: خور عبد الله) è probabilmente una foce ad estuario in via di prosciugamento dello Shatt al-Arab la cui foce è ora più a nord e costituisce la parte sud-orientale del confine tra Iraq e Iran. L'estuario (in arabo: خور traslitterato Khawr) segna il confine tra il Kuwait e l'Iraq. Nella parte a sud dell'estuario si trovano le isole kuwaitiane di Warbah e Bubiyan, a nord dell'estuario la costa irachena. Estendendosi a nord-ovest la via d'acqua è totalmente irachena e cambia il suo nome in Khawr az-Zubayr, in corrispondenza di del porto di Umm Qasr, collegato, attraverso dei canali, allo Shatt al-Arab nei pressi della città di Bassora. Entrambe le isole di Warbah e Bubiyan sono disabitate e caratterizzate da una morfologia piatta e prevalentemente paludosa e appartengono al Kuwait, ma sono state a lungo rivendicate dall'Iraq. Dopo l'invasione del Kuwait da parte dell'Iraq, all'epoca guidato da Saddam Hussein, avvenuta il 2 agosto 1990, avvenimento che ha segnato l'inizio della Prima Guerra del Golfo, nel novembre 1994 l'Iraq ha accettato la definizione del confine col Kuwait come stabilito dalle risoluzioni 687 (1991), 773 (1992) e 833 (1993) del Consiglio di Sicurezza delle Nazioni Unite, ponendo fine ad ogni rivendicazione irachena sul territorio delle due isole. Nell'isola di Warbah è presente un punto di controllo della guardia costiera istituito sotto l'egida delle Nazioni Unite. Nel dicembre 2002 nei pressi dell'isola di Warbah una nave militare irachena ha aperto il fuoco contro due motovedette della guardia costiera kuwaitiana causandone la collisione. L'11 novembre 2008, ufficiali irakeni e kuwaitiani hanno siglato un protocollo d’intesa, grazie al quale vengono gestiti i rapporti confinari e le operazioni lungo il Khawr Abd Allah.
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