File:Flag of Iraq (1991–2004).svg

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Original file(SVG file, nominally 900 × 600 pixels, file size: 6 KB)

This file is from Wikimedia Commons and may be used by other projects. The description on its file description page there is shown below.

Summary

Description
English: Former Iraqi flag, used from 1991 to 2004.
العربية: علم العراق، ١٤٢٥-١٤١١
Kurdî: ئالا ئیراق، ١٤٢٥-١٤١١
ܐܪܡܝܐ : ܐܬܐ ܕܥܝܪܐܩ، ܐܬܬܩܨܐ - ܒܕ
Date 1991-2004
Source From openclipart.org, by Lauris Kaplinski.
Author See File history below for details.
Permission
(Reusing this file)
Public domain
This work was first published in Iraq and is now in the public domain because its copyright protection has expired by virtue of the Law No. 3 of 1971 on Copyright, amended 2004 by Order No. 83, Amendment to the Copyright Law (details). The work meets one of the following criteria:
  • It is an anonymous work or pseudonymous work and 50 years have passed since the year of its publication or it was published prior to 1 May 2004
  • It is a work where the copyright holder is a legal entity or a work of applied art and 50 years have passed since the year of its publication
  • It is a photographic or cinematic work that is not compositive (artistic in nature) first published before 1 May 1999
  • It is work published in Iraq before 1 May 1954, and the author died before 1 May 1979
  • It is another kind of work, and 50 years have passed since the year of death of the author (or last-surviving author)
  • It is one of "collections of official documents, such as texts of international laws, regulations and agreements, judicial judgements and various official documents."
  • It is the work of a body corporate, public or private, published by January 1st, 1980 (Article 20, 1971 law).

العربية | English | 日本語 | 中文 | Español | +/−

Iraq
Copyright notes

Copyright notes
Per U.S. Circ. 38a, the following countries are not participants in the Berne Convention or Universal Copyright Convention and there is no presidential proclamation restoring U.S. copyright protection to works of these countries on the basis of reciprocal treatment of the works of U.S. nationals or domiciliaries:
  • Eritrea, Ethiopia, Iran, Iraq, Marshall Islands, Palau, Somalia, Somaliland, and South Sudan.

As such, works published by citizens of these countries in these countries are usually not subject to copyright protection outside of these countries. Hence, such works may be in the public domain in most other countries worldwide.

However:

  • Works published in these countries by citizens or permanent residents of other countries that are signatories to the Berne Convention or any other treaty on copyright will still be protected in their home country and internationally as well as locally by local copyright law (if it exists).
  • Similarly, works published outside of these countries within 30 days of publication within these countries will also usually be subject to protection in the foreign country of publication. When works are subject to copyright outside of these countries, the term of such copyright protection may exceed the term of copyright inside them.
  • Unpublished works from these countries may be fully copyrighted.
  • A work from one of these countries may become copyrighted in the United States under the URAA if the work's home country enters a copyright treaty or agreement with the United States and the work is still under copyright in its home country.

Iraq has enacted Law No. 3 of 1971 on Copyright (Arabic) which came into force on 21 January 1971. Iraq has enacted Regulation No. 10 of 1985 on the National Committee for the Protection of Copyright (Arabic) which came into force on 2 September 1985. Iraq has enacted Order No. 83, Amendment to the Copyright Law (Arabic) (unofficial English (WIPO) translation) which came into force on 1 May 2004.
Note: As per Commons policy, this tag alone is not sufficient. You also need to supply a tag that describes why the work is public domain in its country of origin.
This work is ineligible for copyright and therefore in the public domain because it consists entirely of information that is common property and contains no original authorship.
Public domain
This logo image consists only of simple geometric shapes or text. It does not meet the threshold of originality needed for copyright protection, and is therefore in the public domain. Although it is free of copyright restrictions, this image may still be subject to other restrictions. See WP:PD § Fonts and typefaces or Template talk:PD-textlogo for more information.
Insignia This image shows a flag, a coat of arms, a seal or some other official insignia. The use of such symbols is restricted in many countries. These restrictions are independent of the copyright status.
Other versions
See also: en:Flag of Iraq.
 See also category: SVG flags of Iraq.
Colors
InfoField
Used colors:
     red rendered as RGB 206 017 038
     white rendered as RGB 255 255 255
     black rendered as RGB 000 000 000
     green rendered as RGB 000 122 061
SVG development
InfoField
 
The SVG code is valid.
 
This flag was created with Inkscape.
It is easy to put a border around this flag image
:

[[File:Flag of Iraq (1991–2004).svg|border|96x176px]]

Detailed color approximations

Red White Green Black
RGB 206/17/38 255/255/255 0/122/61 0/0/0
Hexadecimal #ce1126 #FFFFFF #007a3d #000000
CMYK 12/100/98/3 0/0/0/0 89/27/100/15 75/68/67/90

Interpretation of the colors

Scheme Textile colour
Red The Hashemite dynasty, bloody struggle for freedom.
White The Umayyad dynasty, bright and peaceful future.
Green The Islam, the takbīr (the phrase Allahu akbar, meaning "God is great" in Arabic)
Black The Abbasid dynasty,

Captions

Former Iraqi flag, used from 1991 to 2004

Items portrayed in this file

depicts

some value

image/svg+xml

File history

Click on a date/time to view the file as it appeared at that time.

Date/TimeThumbnailDimensionsUserComment
current18:39, 29 May 2022Thumbnail for version as of 18:39, 29 May 2022900 × 600 (6 KB)Cesar David MPReverted to version as of 23:31, 1 December 2018 (UTC)

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Metadata