Iraq PM paints his nation’s banner topsy turvy
Iraqi Prime Minister Mustafa Al-Kadhimi has started discussion via online media stages after he showed up in photographs painting the Iraqi banner topsy turvy on children’s appearances at an Iftar feast coordinated for vagrants in the Green Zone Palace, Baghdad.
Al-Kadhimi showed up in photographs playing with youngsters in the nursery of the public authority royal residence. Web-based media clients shared photographs and recordings of the head administrator painting the Iraqi banner topsy turvy, dispatching an influx of analysis via online media stages.
Iraqi Twitter dissident Hamad Al-Maliki distributed an image of Al-Kadhimi and subtitled it: “The banner of the nation has various tones; red is above and dark is underneath. Much thanks to you for your affection for the offspring of your country whose banner you don’t have the foggiest idea how to paint. I ask genuinely that this image is photoshopped, in any case, this is an outrage.”
Another Twitter client Ali Al-Kadhimi posted: “Ahead administrator who doesn’t have the foggiest idea about the request for shades of the banner of the country he runs the show.”
Thus, Twitter client Tayr Al-Janoub remarked on the episode, expressing: “is entertainingly worried that Prime Minister Al-Kadhimi doesn’t realize that in the banner of the country he runs the show. The red tone is above and the dark is beneath!”
Al-Kadhimi’s media office distributed a video clasp and photos of the dining experience without sharing the photograph that touched off the debate.
Reports uncovered that the photograph was eliminated from the online media records of the executive’s media office.