11 Kurdish collages catch world leaders red-handed in crimes against humanity

Published August 2nd, 2015 - 12:33 GMT

Last week, a Libyan court sentenced Saif al-Islam Gaddafi, son of deposed leader Colonel Muammar Gaddafi, to death over war crimes linked to the 2011 revolution. In terms of atrocious actions across the Middle East, he‘s not alone.

A suite of startling images flying ‘round social media are attention-grabbing, and stomach-turning. Created by Kurdish artist Ahmad Nabaz, they make bold artistic commentary in a region where political opinions are not freely broadcast.

Nabaz riffs off formal portraiture of world leaders, digitally erasing backdrops of pricey paintings, fine furniture, and state flags and replacing them with stark images of atrocities committed under their watch. He told Al Bawaba that his choice of leaders isn’t personal.

“During the Arab Spring thousands of people died and mass migration occurred. My project is specifically about leaders who caused innocent people to die. I feature rulers with the most death on their hands. I tried to translate their bellicosity into pictures that show their crimes, tell who they really are, and reveal their inhumane thinking,” said Nabaz.

The 29-year-old university art teacher began to post his digital collages on Facebook last year, attracting attention from websites locally and abroad. Nabaz told us he has total freedom in his work, but he has experienced some pressure from the social network to delete some of the more graphic pieces.

The series is called “The Destroyers,” and Nabaz will be expanding it beyond the Middle East.  There is no end to human atrocity underpinned by politics.

See more of his work on his Facebook page and weigh in on the online debate: does this art incite dialogue and advance understanding, or is it exploitative entertainment?

 
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Osama bin Laden is forever linked with the September 11, 2001 attack that felled New York’s World Trade towers killing 2,606 people, but the self-confessed mastermind behind the terror attack is a man named Khalid Sheikh Mohammed. Reality is subjective in art.

Saddam Hussein acted murderously against his countrymen, more than 250 mass graves were filled under his rule. His genocidal campaign against the Kurds, assisted by his cousin “Chemical Ali,” extended to the Shiite Dawa Party, the town of Halabja, and Shiite Marsh Arabs. He was hanged for killing 148 Shiite males in Dujail village.

Bashar Assad's alleged crimes are so numerous they’ve earned him a Facebook page called “Bashar Al-Assad crimes against unarmed civilians.” Reliable watchdogs say he choreographs mass arrests, torture, abductions, civilian detention and collective punishments with water and food deprivation, and denied access to healthcare.

Self-proclaimed ISIS Caliph Abu Bakr al Baghdadi has racked up more crimes than any of his colleagues. The UN issued a 2014 report listing the gruesome killing of Muslims, far outnumbering the murder of foreign aid workers and journalists. ISIS killed a record 9,347 and wounded 17,386 in the first eight months of 2014 (and counting).

The Egyptian Centre for Media Studies and Public Opinion revealed that 79% of Egyptians believe the 2013 massacres (targeting Morsi supporters) are crimes against humanity, with 73% holding General Abdel Fattah el-Sisi, then Defence Minister, responsible. Sisi sidestepped prosecution, becoming President of Egypt in June, 2014.

Under Colonel Muammar Gaddafi, the Libyan army bombed and starved the people of Misrata over a four-month siege. Documents show his orders to obliterate the port city and “turn the blue sea red" with citizens’ blood. His troops also hunted down wounded rebel fighters, in direct violation of the Geneva Conventions.

While Iraq was wracked by detentions, torture, rape and executions between 2006-14, all fingers pointed at then Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki. His government detained and brutally tortured an untold number of Iraqis on “unproven terrorism charges.” Meanwhile, the International Criminal Court proceeds with charges of genocide against al-Maliki.

Sayyid Ali Khamenei, Supreme Leader of Iran, rules over a nation widely accused of civilian abuse, torture and political executions. In 2009, hundreds were killed when the army crushed a popular uprising over disputed presidential elections that re-elected Ahmadinejad. Drugs, prostitution, and homosexuality can also earn you a public hanging.

Charges filed with the International Criminal Court last year tag Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdoğan with corruption and war crimes. Syria's Foreign Ministry asked the UN to investigate the PM's alleged support of terrorism. The PM says it's a conspiracy, but will he follow the path of ousted Serbian leader Milošević?

The artist has expanded his lens beyond the Arab world, in this instance lampooning the impotent reaction by presidents Barack Obama and Vladimir Putin to the taking of Palestinian refugee camp Yarmouk by ISIS forces in Syria. They were purportedly distracted by the escalating conflict in the Ukraine.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu gets a surprisingly light touch, given the myriad horrors of last summer offensive on Gaza, and the riveting photography that captured it all.

Osama bin Laden is forever linked with the September 11, 2001 attack that felled New York’s World Trade towers killing 2,606 people, but the self-confessed mastermind behind the terror attack is a man named Khalid Sheikh Mohammed. Reality is subjective in art.
Saddam Hussein acted murderously against his countrymen, more than 250 mass graves were filled under his rule. His genocidal campaign against the Kurds, assisted by his cousin “Chemical Ali,” extended to the Shiite Dawa Party, the town of Halabja, and Shiite Marsh Arabs. He was hanged for killing 148 Shiite males in Dujail village.
Bashar Assad's alleged crimes are so numerous they’ve earned him a Facebook page called “Bashar Al-Assad crimes against unarmed civilians.” Reliable watchdogs say he choreographs mass arrests, torture, abductions, civilian detention and collective punishments with water and food deprivation, and denied access to healthcare.
Self-proclaimed ISIS Caliph Abu Bakr al Baghdadi has racked up more crimes than any of his colleagues. The UN issued a 2014 report listing the gruesome killing of Muslims, far outnumbering the murder of foreign aid workers and journalists. ISIS killed a record 9,347 and wounded 17,386 in the first eight months of 2014 (and counting).
The Egyptian Centre for Media Studies and Public Opinion revealed that 79% of Egyptians believe the 2013 massacres (targeting Morsi supporters) are crimes against humanity, with 73% holding General Abdel Fattah el-Sisi, then Defence Minister, responsible. Sisi sidestepped prosecution, becoming President of Egypt in June, 2014.
Under Colonel Muammar Gaddafi, the Libyan army bombed and starved the people of Misrata over a four-month siege. Documents show his orders to obliterate the port city and “turn the blue sea red" with citizens’ blood. His troops also hunted down wounded rebel fighters, in direct violation of the Geneva Conventions.
While Iraq was wracked by detentions, torture, rape and executions between 2006-14, all fingers pointed at then Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki. His government detained and brutally tortured an untold number of Iraqis on “unproven terrorism charges.” Meanwhile, the International Criminal Court proceeds with charges of genocide against al-Maliki.
Sayyid Ali Khamenei, Supreme Leader of Iran, rules over a nation widely accused of civilian abuse, torture and political executions. In 2009, hundreds were killed when the army crushed a popular uprising over disputed presidential elections that re-elected Ahmadinejad. Drugs, prostitution, and homosexuality can also earn you a public hanging.
Charges filed with the International Criminal Court last year tag Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdoğan  with corruption and war crimes. Syria's Foreign Ministry asked the UN to investigate the PM's alleged support of   terrorism. The PM says it's a conspiracy, but will he follow the path of ousted Serbian leader Milošević?
The artist has expanded his lens beyond the Arab world, in this instance lampooning the impotent reaction by presidents Barack Obama and Vladimir Putin to the taking of Palestinian refugee camp Yarmouk by ISIS forces in Syria. They were purportedly distracted by the escalating conflict in the Ukraine.
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu gets a surprisingly light touch, given the myriad horrors of last summer offensive on Gaza, and the riveting photography that captured it all.
Osama bin Laden is forever linked with the September 11, 2001 attack that felled New York’s World Trade towers killing 2,606 people, but the self-confessed mastermind behind the terror attack is a man named Khalid Sheikh Mohammed. Reality is subjective in art.
Osama bin Laden is forever linked with the September 11, 2001 attack that felled New York’s World Trade towers killing 2,606 people, but the self-confessed mastermind behind the terror attack is a man named Khalid Sheikh Mohammed. Reality is subjective in art.
Saddam Hussein acted murderously against his countrymen, more than 250 mass graves were filled under his rule. His genocidal campaign against the Kurds, assisted by his cousin “Chemical Ali,” extended to the Shiite Dawa Party, the town of Halabja, and Shiite Marsh Arabs. He was hanged for killing 148 Shiite males in Dujail village.
Saddam Hussein acted murderously against his countrymen, more than 250 mass graves were filled under his rule. His genocidal campaign against the Kurds, assisted by his cousin “Chemical Ali,” extended to the Shiite Dawa Party, the town of Halabja, and Shiite Marsh Arabs. He was hanged for killing 148 Shiite males in Dujail village.
Bashar Assad's alleged crimes are so numerous they’ve earned him a Facebook page called “Bashar Al-Assad crimes against unarmed civilians.” Reliable watchdogs say he choreographs mass arrests, torture, abductions, civilian detention and collective punishments with water and food deprivation, and denied access to healthcare.
Bashar Assad's alleged crimes are so numerous they’ve earned him a Facebook page called “Bashar Al-Assad crimes against unarmed civilians.” Reliable watchdogs say he choreographs mass arrests, torture, abductions, civilian detention and collective punishments with water and food deprivation, and denied access to healthcare.
Self-proclaimed ISIS Caliph Abu Bakr al Baghdadi has racked up more crimes than any of his colleagues. The UN issued a 2014 report listing the gruesome killing of Muslims, far outnumbering the murder of foreign aid workers and journalists. ISIS killed a record 9,347 and wounded 17,386 in the first eight months of 2014 (and counting).
Self-proclaimed ISIS Caliph Abu Bakr al Baghdadi has racked up more crimes than any of his colleagues. The UN issued a 2014 report listing the gruesome killing of Muslims, far outnumbering the murder of foreign aid workers and journalists. ISIS killed a record 9,347 and wounded 17,386 in the first eight months of 2014 (and counting).
The Egyptian Centre for Media Studies and Public Opinion revealed that 79% of Egyptians believe the 2013 massacres (targeting Morsi supporters) are crimes against humanity, with 73% holding General Abdel Fattah el-Sisi, then Defence Minister, responsible. Sisi sidestepped prosecution, becoming President of Egypt in June, 2014.
The Egyptian Centre for Media Studies and Public Opinion revealed that 79% of Egyptians believe the 2013 massacres (targeting Morsi supporters) are crimes against humanity, with 73% holding General Abdel Fattah el-Sisi, then Defence Minister, responsible. Sisi sidestepped prosecution, becoming President of Egypt in June, 2014.
Under Colonel Muammar Gaddafi, the Libyan army bombed and starved the people of Misrata over a four-month siege. Documents show his orders to obliterate the port city and “turn the blue sea red" with citizens’ blood. His troops also hunted down wounded rebel fighters, in direct violation of the Geneva Conventions.
Under Colonel Muammar Gaddafi, the Libyan army bombed and starved the people of Misrata over a four-month siege. Documents show his orders to obliterate the port city and “turn the blue sea red" with citizens’ blood. His troops also hunted down wounded rebel fighters, in direct violation of the Geneva Conventions.
While Iraq was wracked by detentions, torture, rape and executions between 2006-14, all fingers pointed at then Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki. His government detained and brutally tortured an untold number of Iraqis on “unproven terrorism charges.” Meanwhile, the International Criminal Court proceeds with charges of genocide against al-Maliki.
While Iraq was wracked by detentions, torture, rape and executions between 2006-14, all fingers pointed at then Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki. His government detained and brutally tortured an untold number of Iraqis on “unproven terrorism charges.” Meanwhile, the International Criminal Court proceeds with charges of genocide against al-Maliki.
Sayyid Ali Khamenei, Supreme Leader of Iran, rules over a nation widely accused of civilian abuse, torture and political executions. In 2009, hundreds were killed when the army crushed a popular uprising over disputed presidential elections that re-elected Ahmadinejad. Drugs, prostitution, and homosexuality can also earn you a public hanging.
Sayyid Ali Khamenei, Supreme Leader of Iran, rules over a nation widely accused of civilian abuse, torture and political executions. In 2009, hundreds were killed when the army crushed a popular uprising over disputed presidential elections that re-elected Ahmadinejad. Drugs, prostitution, and homosexuality can also earn you a public hanging.
Charges filed with the International Criminal Court last year tag Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdoğan  with corruption and war crimes. Syria's Foreign Ministry asked the UN to investigate the PM's alleged support of   terrorism. The PM says it's a conspiracy, but will he follow the path of ousted Serbian leader Milošević?
Charges filed with the International Criminal Court last year tag Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdoğan with corruption and war crimes. Syria's Foreign Ministry asked the UN to investigate the PM's alleged support of terrorism. The PM says it's a conspiracy, but will he follow the path of ousted Serbian leader Milošević?
The artist has expanded his lens beyond the Arab world, in this instance lampooning the impotent reaction by presidents Barack Obama and Vladimir Putin to the taking of Palestinian refugee camp Yarmouk by ISIS forces in Syria. They were purportedly distracted by the escalating conflict in the Ukraine.
The artist has expanded his lens beyond the Arab world, in this instance lampooning the impotent reaction by presidents Barack Obama and Vladimir Putin to the taking of Palestinian refugee camp Yarmouk by ISIS forces in Syria. They were purportedly distracted by the escalating conflict in the Ukraine.
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu gets a surprisingly light touch, given the myriad horrors of last summer offensive on Gaza, and the riveting photography that captured it all.
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu gets a surprisingly light touch, given the myriad horrors of last summer offensive on Gaza, and the riveting photography that captured it all.

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