Live website intelligence
Campaign Against Sanctions on Iraq (CASI)
A humanitarian campaign to lift the U.N. sanctions against Iraq, run by students at Cambridge University. Unicef estimates an additional half million Iraqi children under five years old to have died under the sanctions.
Last refresh
Updated 13d ago
Analyst read
Professional
Detected stack
Quick read
casi.org.uk looks like news & politics. Traffic estimates are limited, so use the trust and structure modules first. Current AI trust scoring is 15/100.
What to do next
42/56 fields populated (75%)
Providers with missing fields
visual: 4/4
All expected fields present
meta: 3/3
All expected fields present
seo: 5/5
All expected fields present
dns: 4/4
All expected fields present
ads: 5/5
All expected fields present
publisher: 5/5
All expected fields present
files: 3/3
All expected fields present
traffic: 0/10
Missing: monthlyVisits, globalRank, countryRank, bounceRate, avgVisitDuration, pagesPerVisit, topCountry, topRegions, topKeywords, trafficSources
whois: 6/6
All expected fields present
radar: 0/4
Missing: globalRank, rankBucket, categories, sourceTimestamp
ai: 7/7
All expected fields present
Keep exploring
Good pSEO pages should not strand the visitor. These links keep the journey moving through adjacent directories and comparable live reports.
Why this module matters
Use the business tab to understand trust, monetization, audience fit, and brand posture before you spend time on outreach, partnerships, or competitive teardown work.
A student-run humanitarian campaign and archive documenting the effects of UN sanctions on Iraq, maintained by Cambridge University students. The organization was dissolved in October 2003 and is now preserved as a historical archive of sanctions-related documents and analysis.
Monetization Signals
Non-profit Advocacy / Educational Archive model detected
Low trust with 15/100 score
Researchers, policymakers, journalists, humanitarian organizations, and individuals interested in Iraq sanctions, international law, and humanitarian policy