Balad Ruz

Balad Ruz (arabic: بلدروز) is a city in the Diyala Governorate of Iraq.

Balad Ruz

بلدروز
Town
Balad Ruz
Balad Ruz's location inside Iraq
Coordinates: 33°42′N 45°05′E
Country Iraq
GovernorateDiyala
DistrictBalad Ruz
Government
  MayorMohamed Maroof Al-Hussein
Elevation
134.5 ft (41[1] m)
Time zoneUTC+3
Postal code
32005[2]

Balad Ruz has a radio station that was opened Dec. 18 2006, known as Al Noor Radio Station, meaning "The Light" in Arabic.

The current commander of all Iraqi Army ground forces Lt. General Ali Ghaidan Majid is from Balad Ruz.

History

Balad Ruz was historically known as Barāz al-Rūz,[3][4] a name meaning "the rice field".[5] Although its origin is unclear, the city has been continuously inhabited from at least Abbasid times to the present day.[6] The Abbasid caliph Al-Mu'tadid built a palace here. In 1340, Hamdallah Mustawfi noted that it paid 20,000 dinars annually to the treasury in Baghdad. Balad Ruz continued to prosper through the late 1700s, when it was described by an observer as a large town under the control of Baghdad.[7] When Felix Jones surveyed the area in the mid-1800s, he noted that the Rūz canal, on which the city lay, ended in the immediate vicinity of Balad Ruz; historically, it had extended over 50 kilometers further south.[8]

  • US and Coalition forces, in conjunction with Iraqi Army, engaged the Iranian Army on September 7, 2006.[9]
  • US Forces conducted a raid on December 27, 2006 because the town was believed to be used as a safe haven by insurgent forces to traffic people, weapons and money into other regions in Iraq to disrupt security operations by coalition forces. Following the raid, Coalition Forces discovered several large caches containing hundreds of rockets, IED-making materials, small arms munitions and dozens of anti-tank weapons.[10]
  • On February 1, 2007, approximately 150 local sheikhs, city council members and local citizens gathered in Balad Ruz for a town hall meeting with the governor of Diyala (named Ra’ad Hameed Al-Mula Jowad Al-Tanimi, the 5th Iraqi Army Division commander (named Maj. Gen. Shakur Halaim Husain) and the Provincial Director of Police (Named Maj. Gen. Ghanem Abass Ibraham al-Qureshy to discuss security.[11]
Leadership discuss security and services in the town

References

Sources

  • Le Strange, Guy (1905). The Lands of the Eastern Caliphate: Mesopotamia, Persia, and Central Asia, from the Moslem Conquest to the Time of Timur. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. OCLC 458169031.
  • Adams, Robert M. (1965). Land Behind Baghdad: A History of Settlement on the Diyala Plains. Chicago and London: University of Chicago Press. OCLC 899942882.


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