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Wednesday, April 15, 2009
Wednesday April 15, 2009. Chaos and violence continue, the US taxpayer foots the bill for what exactly, provincial councils in disarray, and more.
Starting with costs, last week Barack asked for more money from Congress. On Saturday, Julian E. Barnes (Los Angeles Times) revealed that Barack's request "would mean the Iraq war will have cost taxpayers a total of about $694 billion. By comparison, the Vietnam War cost $686 billion in inflated-adjusted dollars and World War II cost $4.1 trillion, according to a Congressional Research Service study completed last year." Last night, Mike noted Kenneth Theisen (World Can't Wait) on how Barack's claiming that "Nearly 95 percent of these funds will be used to support our men and women in uniform as they help the people of Iraq to take responsibility for their own future". Citing AP, Philip Sherwell (Telegraph of London) offered the following breakdown of Barack's $83.4 billion request: "The request would fund an average force level in Iraq of 140,000 US troops, finance Mr Obama's initiatve to boost troop levels in Afghanistan to more than 60,000 from the current 39,000 and provide $2.2 billion to accelerate the Pentagon's plans to increase the overall size of the US military . . . Mr Obama also requested $350 million in new funding to upgrade security along the US-Mexico border and to combat narcoterrorists, along with another $400 million in counterinsurgency aid to Pakistan." Julian E. Barnes broke it down as inclduing "$75.8 billion for military operations. An additional $7.1 billion will go to diplomatic efforts and foreign aid, including $1.6 billion for Afghanistan, $1.4 billion for Pakistan and $700 million for Iraq." Mary Beth Sheridan and Scott Wilson ( Washington Post) offer a breakdown here. Deidre Walsh (CNN) observes, "About $75 billion of the latest request would pay for military operations, including $9.8 billion for body armor and protective vehicles and $11.6 billion to replace worn-out equipment. The rest would go to diplomatic programs and development aid -- including $1.6 billion for Afghanistan, $1.4 billion for Pakistan and $700 million for Iraq." Walsh lists $800 million going "to support U.N. peacekeeping missions in Africa" and another $800 million to the Palestinian Authority. And, by the way, Walsh cites 142,000 US service members on the ground in Iraq. "By the way" because so many outlets have been following the request of the White House -- but not the Defense Dept -- when first rule of a free press is that you don't take orders from any governmental body. But a free press doesn't reprint "nearly 95%" without pointing out that either Barack needs a math tutor or he's lying yet again.
A lot of money's being given away by the US to other countries and, thank goodness, the US economic crisis is over. Oh, it's not? No, it isn't. Carolyn Lochhead (San Francisco Chronicle) quoted US House Speaker Nancy Pelosi stating, "In the coming weeks, Congress will carefully review the president's request and will engage in a dialogue with the Administration on appropriate benchmarks to measure the success of our investments."
Lochhead quoted US House Rep Lynn Woolsey explaining, "As proposed, this funding will do two things -- it will prolong our occupation of Iraq through at least the end of 2011 and it will deepend and expand our military presence in Afghanistan indefinitely. I cannot support either of these scenarios. Instead of attempting to find military solutions to the problems we face in Iraq and Afghanistan, President Obama must fundamentally change the mission in both countries to focus on promoting reconciliation, economic development, humanitarian aid, and regional diplomatic efforts." Woolsey is correct. And the Congress can refuse to fund the illegal war at any moment. If they did, the troops would have to come home. That's not, "The troops would have to come home after Congress funded the departure." The money is already there at the Pentagon to cover the costs of withdrawing all US forces out of Iraq. But Barack's Big Giveaway (which will work for him about like it did for Oprah in prime time, translation, no one wants to see it) is also highly revealing.
Yes, he's a War Hawk. Anyone paying attention during the Democratic Party primaries should have known that. Well, not "anyone." Professional idiots like Tom Hayden, Crazed Johnny Nichols (remember how he just knew that Barack lying on NAFTA was a 'Hillary plot' and he went to Canada to prove that and bragged on air to Amy Goodman that he'd be writing about that . . . but never did because his crackpot theories didn't pan out even though he allowed them to poison the dialogue), Laura Flanders and all the beggar trash that can't get real jobs were fooled because they wanted to be. But in the real world, most of us could figure it out. For example, today Kenneth J. Moynihan (Worcester Telegram) reminds why US House Rep Jim McGovern supported Hillary Clinton: "During the 2008 presidential election campaign it came as no surprise to observers of the Worcester political scene that U.S. Rep James P. McGovern should declare his support for Sen. Hillary Clinton. The congressman is a friend of Hillary and Bill, and he supported Sen. Clinton for many reasons. However, when asked about his choice, he usually began with the same words, 'She will end the war.' . . . The congressman never flinched from the position that people wanting to vote against the war should vote for Clinton." And they damn well should have if they were voting in the Democratic Party primary because she would have. I believe that, I know Hillary and have known her since 1992. But those saying "your opinion" are right except for one thing: The 'anti-war' movement would never have laid down for Hillary. Also true, as we pointed out repeatedly at Third beginning in 2007, Hillary couldn't give the imperialists and industrialists in this country the wars they wanted in Africa. Barack was required for that. So voting for Barack was always voting for war and for more war. And it's become obvious that Bully Boy Bush was replaced by Bully Boy Barack and that Obama will provide the third Bush term.
But still there's this idiotic notion that Barack's 'smarter'. Who knows what that's based on because it's certainly not based on academic proof -- he refused to release his college transcripts. It's not based on his alleged speaking abilities -- he stumbles and stammers and uh-uh-uh-uh his way through everything sounding like a buffoon. But he demonstrates that he is as stupid -- if not more -- than George W. Bush with his plans of how to spend the tax payers' monies. Like Bush, he's not really able to conceptualize.
Iraq is sending ambassadors around the world. Find the women. You won't. Pelosi says we need to measure the success. Let's measure it. Women are worse off and gays and lesbians are under constant assault. And yet Iraq needs the US -- or rather, the puppet government the US installed needs the US in order to stay in control. And Nouri does not want to touch the money he's stockpiled. That is why the Iraqi people suffer economically. This isn't Bangladesh or any other country dubbed "third world." Iraq has huge oil reserves. There's no reason in the world any Iraqi should ever go hungry. But they do because puppet Nouri really doesn't give a damn about them. Yesterday, NPR's Lourdes Garcia-Navarro (All Things Considered) reported, "Iraq is now cash-strapped due to the recent downturn in oil prices. As a result of the drop in revenue, a government hiring freeze has been put in place, including with the country's largest employer: the Ministry of Interior. The agency has recruited hundreds of thousands of police officers in recent years to help restore a measure of stability to the war-torn country. As long as the price of oil stays low, the Interior Ministry simply cannot afford to hire more people." Garcia-Navarro notes that unemployment is said to be at 18% according to the United Nations. [ 50% to 70% according to Dahr Jamail.] She also reported, "Despite America's own economic troubles, the US is spending $1.2 billion this year to supplement the Iraqi Interior Ministry budget." $1.2 billion?
You can buy a lot of things with $1.2 billion and when your a country giving that amount to another country, you can buy a lot of freedoms. The Iraq War has pushed Iraq closer to Iran and, no, that was never one of the anticipated 'wins' of the illegal war. The two countries were pushed together in part because the US installed Shi'ite fundamentalist thugs so it's no surprise that they would be close with their counterparts in Iran. (al-Maliki, of course, fled Iraq -- the US only installs exiled cowards -- and took up residence in Iran for many of his cowering years before the US invasion allowed him to return to Iraq.) They have many, many things in common and they will strengthen their ties as al-Maliki and his thug underlings remake Iraq into the fundamentalist state they desire. The US could have stopped that at any time as the occupying power. They could have made it clear that human rights abuses will not take place by rounding up the killers of Iraqi gays and lesbians. But that would have gone counter to the get-it-done-quick motives that led the US to install a strong-man as prime minister.
Maybe Lynn Woolsey will find other brave members of Congress to stand with her and reject even more money for illegal war. But barring that, Pelosi needs to live up to what she most recently stated. She needs to ensure that the Congress evaluate what is going on in Iraq and any more money given the puppet government for 'humanitarian' reasons needs to have real benchmarks such as, "X number of women will be ambassadors." Not in a year, not in two years. Nothing like Bush's benchmarks that were never reached. Immediate results. No results, the 'humanitarian' money is immediately cut off. As US House Rep Jared Polis stated, "The United States should not tolerate human rights violations of any kind, especially by a government that Americans spend billions of taxpayer dollars each year supporting." Why is the US funding the Ministry of the Interior -- a thug department -- which hires homophobes who go out and express their homophobia when they're supposed to be protecting ALL Iraqis? That's not what 'humanitarian' money does. Allegedly, the money is spent to improve lives. So let's see some real effort by the Congress to ensure that this indeed happens. Iraq was not Iran before the US invasion. Bully Boy's actions pushed Iraq closer to Iran and, for all his alleged 'smartness,' there's no indication that Barack knows any better.
Iraq is a disaster, it is a US-made disaster. No more money should be thrown to the puppet government but those foolish enough to continue tossing it should be ensuring that every dollar spent pulls Iraq away from the fundamentalist nation that al-Maliki's attempted to build. At Foreign Policy, Marc Lynch noted, "The crackdown on the Awakenings has regional implications as well, particularly with the ever-skeptical Saudis who have generally supported the Awakenings movements. The Arab press has taken careful note of their reversal of fortunes, which Adel al-Bayati in al-Quds al-Arabi calls Maliki's coup against the Awakenings. Tareq al-Homayed, editor of the Saudi daily al-Sharq al-Awsat (which usually reflects official Saudi thinking), complains bitterly today that recent events have made his warnings from last August about the coming betrayal of the Awakenings come true. The Awakenings were not bearing arms against the Iraqi state, argues Homayed, but rather were protecting the Iraqi state against al-Qaeda and assisting its stabilization ahead of the American withdrawal. But, he warns, narrow, sectarian perspectives in Baghdad are winning out over the Iraqi national interest with potentially devastating consequences." Marc Lynch shouldn't be alone in pointing that out, the White House should have already figured that out. (Figured it out? They should have anticipated it.) There's nothing to indicate that they have or that they've made adjustments. Or demands and, again, when you're the country handing over $1.2 billion, you can make a lot of demands. While the puppet government attempts to appear cash-strapped, AFP reports reality, "Iraq has signed a contract with British engineering and construction company Foster Wheeler to build the country's largest-ever oil refinery, an Iraqi official said on Wednesday." Meanwhile Pakistan's Daily Times reports "Iraqi authorities are currently holding about 26,200 people in detention, including 782 minors and 422 women, Human Rights Minister Wejdan Mikhail said on Wednesday." The paper notes US forces are currently holding 12,800 Iraqi prisoners.
Returning to the topic of Sahwa (also known as "Awakening" Councils and "Sons of Iraq"), Geoff Ziezulewicz (Stars and Strips) files a report today indicating the US is still paying some and focuses on Fadhil. That's the neighborhood of Baghdad where Nouri's crackdown on Sahwa led to a stand off between Sahwa members on one side and Iraqi and US forces on the other. Ziezulewicz reports, "The fact that Fadhil remains up for grabs makes continued support of the Iraqi government's efforts that much more critical, said Lt. Col. David Buckingham, commander of the cavalry regiment, part of the 82nd Airborne." The fact that Nouri al-Maliki has not put more on the payroll, found jobs for more Sahwa goes to the fact that he's taking US dollars from US tax payers and getting to do with it whatever the heck he wants. It's past time for real Congressional oversight. Elsewhere in the article, Ziezulewicz also notes, "While the U.S. military has trumpeted Iraqi forces taking the lead since the U.S.-Iraq security agreement went into effect Jan. 1, Iraqi troops were largely absent or showed up late to some missions last week." Meanwhile Nouri's mouthpiece on the presidency council, Shi'ite vice president Adel Abdul Mehdi was in Paris today. Alsumaria reports he insisted that Sahwas were "secretly plotting . . . terrorists attacks in Iraq."
Nouri's attacking the press. The New York Times always knows how to kiss butt (what, you thought CNN was the only one just because Eason Jordan confessed to it?). Which explains Alissa J. Rubin's report today which takes the work of the Foreign Ministry and attempts to call the puppet government a success as a result. While the Foreign Ministry does deserve praise for some of their abilities to function, they are not representative of the puppet government nor of Iraq's population. Rubin may note 40 other countries have ambassadors from Baghdad but she forgets to note how none are women. This is just a kiss-their-ass piece to ensure that the Times remains on good terms with the puppet government. (Nouri is highly upset with reports about his attacks on Sahwa.)
There is no functioning government. For example, who is heading Iraq's Parliament? Answer: No one. They still have no speaker. So this is really an insult to the readers, this attempt to play, "Look at this functioning government!" As noted in the January 12th snapshot: Willam Brockman Bankhead was the Speaker of the US House of Representatives for over four years. He died unexpectably of a heart attack on September 15, 1940. (For those unfamiliar with Bankhead, he was the father of Tallulah Bankhead.) The following day, Sam Rayburn became Speaker of the House. The following day. December 23rd, Mahmoud al-Mashhadani was forced out of the Speakership of the Iraqi Parliament. The week prior he had stated he was resigning. He attempted to take that back but a large number wanted him gone as Speaker and had wanted him gone for some time with repeated public efforts to oust him. It is now January 12th and they have still not appointed a new Speaker. And they still have no speaker. It's April 15th. William Bankhead dies in office and he's replaced the next day. Iraq's Parliament runs off Mahmoud al-Mashhadani December 23rd and they still have no replacement, all this time later. Or as Alsumaria noted Saturday, "Parliament Speaker issue awaits solution." Further indications of the dysfunction and disarray comes from Liz Sly and Caesar Ahmed (Los Angeles Times) who report that the provincial councils still aren't moving along. Januray 31st 14 of Iraq's 18 provinces held provincial elections. The results were finally certified and officially announced in March. And yet . . . Sly and Ahmed explain there have been "walkouts, boycoots and street protests, highlighting continued sectarian divisions and the frictions that prevail even between those factions that are reconciled to the political process. On Tuesday, all factions in Shiite Muslim-majority Wasit province boycotted the latest meeting called to choose a governor after street protests were held the previous day against the leading contender." Corinee Reilly and Ali Abbas (McClatchy Newspapers) report that a boycott is taking place in Nineveh Province as well where "Kurds vowed not to return until the Arabs hand over two of the council's top three leadership positions." Alsumaria explains that the Yazidi majority from the Sinjar District of Nineveh are calling for their district to become "an independent governorate that is part of Kurdistan, in protest to the fact that a Sunni list took all main administrative positions in the provincial council."
Meanwhile Caroline Alexander and Ryan Finn (Bloomberg News) report that a Kirkuk car bombing resulted in 10 dead and twenty-two wounded and that "[m]any of the casualties were police protecting an oil installation, President Jalal Talabani's Patriotic Union of Kurdistan said on its Arabic-language Web site." BBC notes 11 dead and that the death toll is expected to rise. Mustapha Mahmoud and Sherko Raouf (Reuters) add, "The casualties were piled into a police truck, and police travelling with the dead and wounded fired into the air to clear traffic on the road ahead, a Reuters witness said." And they quote
eye witness Othman Sharif asking, "What did I do to deserve this? I was going home from work in a taxi . . . there was a huge blast and I fell unconscious. I didn't wake up until I was in hospital covered in bandages." In other violence, Sahar Issa and Hussein Kadhim (McClatchy Newspapers) report a Baghdad sticky bombing left two people injured and a Baghdad roadside bombing left two people injured.
Yesterdy at Foreign Policy, Thomas E. Ricks noted one-time CIA asset Ahmed Chalabi has ben making the press rounds and is stating that George W. Bush is "[a] man with very little skill and knowledge" (the better to manipulate him, Wolf Chalabi?) and is claiming that Iran and the US had a deal to topple Iraq. (In the interview he also cites "Israelis," use the link.) Thomas E. Ricks is the author of the bestseller The Gamble.
Turning to Germany. BBC reports that US Master Sgt John Hatley was found guilty today by a military jury ("eight officers and NCOs) in the murder of four Iraqi prisoners and BBC adds of Hatley and other US service members, "When they found four Iraqi men not far from a cache of weapons, including sniper rifles, just a week after one of their own sergeants had been shot and killed, they took the law into their own hands, says the BBC's Kevin Connolly in Washington. With no real evidence against them the detainees should have been released, our correspondent says. Instead they were bound, blindfolded and summarily killed. It is thought their bodies were dumped in a canal but they have never been found." Seth Robson (Stars and Stripes) explains, "Sgt. 1st Class Joseph P. Mayo, 27, was sentenced to 35 years' confinement after he admitted in court last month to shooting one of the detainees. At a court-martial in February, Sgt. Michael Leahy Jr., 28, was sentenced to life in prison with the possibility of parole for shooting two of the detainees. Both Mayo and Leahy told the court this week that Hatley also shot detainees."
In other legal news, Robert Wilonsky (Dallas Observer) explains, "On September 14, 26-year-old Army Sgt. Wesley Durbin of Hurst was killed at a small patrol base south of Baghdad when he and another soldier, 24-year-old Staff Sgt. Darris Dawson of Florida, were gunned down by a fellow soldier. As The Dallas Morning News noted in September, Durbin was a former Marine who enlisted after graduating Dallas Lutheran School and fought in Iraq, only to enlist in the Army later -- because, said his wife, 'He was a soldier from the time he woke up to the time he went to bed'." Wilonsky noted that US Army Sgt Joseph Bozicevich is accused of murdering Wesley Durbin and Darris Dawson. UPI notes that "Durbin and Dawson allegedly were shot while counseling Bozicevich for what the squad leaders considered was his poor performance". Frenchi Jones (Coastal Courier) reports that the court-martial heard more testimony today and that none of the witnesses had testimony similar to Staff Sgt John Dresel's Tuesday:
Bozicevich: Mother [expletive], I am going to kill you.
Darris Dawson: Why? Stop. Please don't shoot.
Jones adds, "According to Dresel, the person on the ground lay three or four feet from the figure. At first, he said, he didn't know if the two figures were enemies or allied troops. Suddenly, there was more fire. The man with the gun discharged two shots into the body, the muzzle flash from the weapon lit up the night, revealing the shooter's identity." Dresel.
Together with the other groups - in what WVWV has identified as the Rising American Electorate - African-Americans, Hispanics, non-whites, and young people (52% of the population)- unmarried women dramatically increased their voter participation and changed America's leadership and direction.
Now, recently released statistics from the U.S. Census Bureau further explain why unmarried women are the decisive demographic in this country and the cutting-edge of the Rising American Electorate. Unmarried women are the largest fastest growing demographic group. At a time when voter participation slightly declined among all adult Americans, unmarried women registered and voted in significantly greater numbers than ever before. In fact, unmarried women's growing participation was essential to the increase in voting by young people, non-whites, African-Americans and Hispanics. They are the consistent outperformers of the 2008 turnout.
Much remains to be done before unmarried women participate in our democracy in proportion to their growing numbers, and advance the issues that address their needs, including employment, fair pay, universal health coverage, and increased investments in child care, public education, college opportunity, and career training.
But, together we have made great progress. These facts from the Census Population Survey analysis of the voting-eligible population show how much we have achieved - and how far we still have to go. (The Census Bureau statistics represent "real numbers" and are more accurate than last year's exit polls, which understated the voter participation of unmarried women.)
Finally, independent journalist David Bacon, whose latest book is Illegal People -- How Globalization Creates Migration and Criminalizes Immigrants (Beacon Press), covers the Employee Free Choice Act in "Why workers need the Employee Free Choice Act" (San Francisco Chronicle):
Unions are good for workers. Today, median weekly pay for union members is $886, compared to $691 for nonunion workers. Moving cargo on the Oakland waterfront pays three times what stocking shelves does at Wal-Mart because longshore workers have had a union contract since 1934.In 1936, Congress recognized the value of unions and passed the National Labor Relations Act, setting up a legal system in which private sector, nonfarm workers could join unions and bargain. The preamble declares the law's purpose: "encouraging the practice and procedure of collective bargaining and ... protecting the exercise by workers of full freedom of association, self-organization, and designation of representatives of their own choosing."Today, however, the law is virtually unable to fulfill its intended function. Rep. George Miller, D-Martinez, has proposed commonsense measures to restore its effectiveness in the Employee Free Choice Act. Employers are mounting a hysterical campaign against it, even calling it "bolshevism," and claiming to be protectors of their workers' rights. We need a reality check about what really happens when workers try to organize.
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Posted at 03:25 pm by thecommonills
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Moncada family has questions regarding Raul's death
April 13th the US military announced:
"A Coalition forces Soldier died of injuries sustained during an
explosively formed projectile attack on a convoy five kilomenters south
of Karbalah, Iraq April 13 at approximately 7:40 a.m. The Soldier's
name is being withheld pending notification of next of kin and release
by the department of Defense. The incident is currently under
investigtion." The Defense Dept has identified the fallen as Sgt. Raul Moncada from Madera, Calif who was 29-years-old. Jaegun Lee (Watertown Daily Times) lists
the following military honors, "Sgt. Moncada's awards and decorations
include the Army Commendation Medal, Army Good Conduct Medal, National
Defense Service Medal, Iraqi Campaign Medal with Combat Service, Global
War on Terrorism Service Medal, Army Service Ribbon, Overseas Service
Ribbon, Armed Forces Reserve Medal with "M" device and Combat Action
Badge." Preston Phillips (KSEE -- link has text and video) notes
Raul Moncada was on a 15 month tour in Iraq and became the 1740th US
service member killed in Iraq by an IED. During an earlier portion of
his tour in Iraq, Raul, his sister Alex Young and Alex's husband were
all serving in Iraq. Alex Young tells Phillips, "I couldn't believe it.
Like now it's hard. It still hasn't sunk in. I -- I never thought it
would happen. " Raul's brother Julio Moncada states, "I just can't
describe it. Especially when I see my mom, you know, I see my mom
suffer that's -- that's -- and his little girl. So that's pretty much,
you know, just feel it like a gut feeling. " Raul Moncada leaves behind
one daughter and he has another child on the way. Chris Collins (Fresno Bee) explains,
"Army Sgt. Raul Moncada was the father of Priscila, a 6-year-old girl
with a toothy grin and a dimple that looks exactly like her father's.
Moncada was expecting a second daughter, whom he had named Mia. He
planned to return from his second tour of Iraq before her birth in
July, end his decade-long military career and settle down." There is
also some confusion about his death. Collins explains: Family
members said another military representative told them that Moncada
lost an arm and leg in the attack and died in a hospital."They
don't know what happened," said Moncada's older brother, Ruben Moncada,
expressing the family's frustration at hearing differing accounts of
the attack. KMPH (link has text and video) also covers this aspect: Norma
Yuriar: Well guys he comes from a big family. Four brothers,three
sisters and two loving parents who tonight are seeking answers in the
death of their son. Inside their home in the Madera Ranchos, the
Moncada family finds solace in each other after the death of Sgt. Raul
Moncada leaves a huge void in their hearts.Alex Young: It hit my mom the hardest.Norma
Yuriar: Alex Young says the toughest part is not knowing exactly how
her brother was killed. In a statement to the public, the Department of
Defense said the 29-year old died near Baghdad, of injuries he
sustained when an explosive device detonated near his vehicle. But Alex
says there are discrepancies in the explanation her family was given by
a Casualty Advisor.Alex
Young: The first story we got was that he passed away instantly, which
is a relief because he didn't suffer. Then when we got the second
story, it was completely different.Norma
Yuriar: Alex says her brother's wife was told by a separate Casualty
Advisor that Sgt. Moncada did suffer and that he died at the hospital
and not at the scene.Alex: So, that's why like we -- we don't know and that's what hurts.At
the end of her report, Norma Yuriar translates the father, Raul Moncada
Sr., stating, "I don't want anyone else to go through what our family
is going through, he says, we just want answers." Meanwhile Matt Ehler's " Tears flow as soldiers prepare to depart for Iraq" ( News & Observer) opens with: Adults
wiped their eyes solemnly during Tuesday's two-hour deployment ceremony
for nearly 4,000 members of the N.C. National Guard headed to Iraq. A woman sobbed while standing in line at a concession stand waiting to order a pizza. Babies wailed. Spc.
Matt Sears was leaving behind his only child, Aidyn, a daughter born
April 9. His grandmother, Rosetta Allen of Goldsboro, said, "I feel
like my heart's coming out." In Iraq, Corinne Reilly and Ali Abbas offer " Kurdish-Arab tensions continue to grow in northern Iraq" ( McClatchy Newspapers)
which explores futher tensions between Kurds and Arabs and notes that
"a Kurdish political coalition in one northern province is boycotting
provincial council meetings until the main Arab party there cedes
council leadership positions." They're reporting on Nineveh province.
And it fits in with Liz Sly and Caesar Ahmed's " Establishment of Iraq provincial councils drags" ( Los Angeles Times). Reilly and Abbas explain: Kurds
had been in the majority on the council until the January elections,
but then the main Arab party, al Hadbaa, won slightly more than half
the seats, and the Kurds fewer than a third. The Kurds vowed not to
return until the Arabs hand over two of the council's top three
leadership positions.[. . .]"The
people of Sinjar demonstrated yesterday in protest against the
exclusion of Kurds from the administration of (Nineveh)," Dekheel Qasim
Hassoun, mayor of the mostly Kurdish city, said Monday. " . . . we have
decided not to acknowledge or deal with the new governor."We don't get any of the above from Democracy Now!
today which has decided it's time to bore us all with a bad
documentary, narrated by the monotoned Alice Walker. It's a factually
challenged documentary. It's one thing to hear or see it once and say,
"Well done." It's another thing for an alleged daily public affairs
program to waste all of our time with such garbage. Garbage? America
doesn't need more ignorance. The left needs to demand better. They need
to say "NO!" to lies and to faulty and fraudulent history. The
alternative media movement did not begin in the US after the 1930s. It
has a long, long history in the US -- a history that predates the
creation of the US. And this refusal to learn and share history is why
the left has to rebuild over and over. Why are they playing this
junk? Because Goody's damn worried about her money and her outlets.
It's all an attempt to try to play 'brave' journalist and create a wave
of protest ahead of what she sees as an end or, at least, slowing down
of her gravy train. Reality: They don't cover Iraq, they don't
cover the bulk of the things that matter. As a result, they really
don't have the time to waste another hour. So many of this trash
needs to be taken off the air. Not due to politics, but due to not
doing their damn job. Your job is to go to work and work. If you can't
do it, get the hell off the air and, as Ava noted two weekends ago,
there is NO DAMN reason for those BAD AL LEWIS programs to still take
up an hour of air time each Saturday afternoon on WBAI. The man died
years ago. His slot should have been given to someone else long, long
ago. It's that kind of garbage, that useless b.s. of offering canned
programs of a dead man because he 'hung' with the 'right' people
(cronyism) at WBAI that is ruining Pacifica Radio. It's past time trash
was taken to the curb and if Amy Goodman's unable to broadcast an hour
of programming each day -- NEW programming -- her tired ass needs to
relinquish her death hold on Pacifica. (Doing so would free up millions
-- more money is wasted on that program than on any other Pacifica
program -- and, get this, Pacifica doesn't even own the program. They
signed it over to Amy.) And someone needs to break it to Amy that she's
carved out enough 'special days' (where she plays canned programming)
and doesn't need to waste our time with any more. Finally, independent journalist David Bacon, whose latest book is Illegal People -- How Globalization Creates Migration and Criminalizes Immigrants (Beacon Press), covers the Employee Free Choice Act in "Why workers need the Employee Free Choice Act" (San Francisco Chronicle):
Unions
are good for workers. Today, median weekly pay for union members is
$886, compared to $691 for nonunion workers. Moving cargo on the
Oakland waterfront pays three times what stocking shelves does at
Wal-Mart because longshore workers have had a union contract since 1934.In
1936, Congress recognized the value of unions and passed the National
Labor Relations Act, setting up a legal system in which private sector,
nonfarm workers could join unions and bargain. The preamble declares
the law's purpose: "encouraging the practice and procedure of
collective bargaining and ... protecting the exercise by workers of
full freedom of association, self-organization, and designation of
representatives of their own choosing."Today,
however, the law is virtually unable to fulfill its intended function.
Rep. George Miller, D-Martinez, has proposed commonsense measures to
restore its effectiveness in the Employee Free Choice Act. Employers
are mounting a hysterical campaign against it, even calling it
"bolshevism," and claiming to be protectors of their workers' rights.
We need a reality check about what really happens when workers try to
organize.The e-mail address for this site is common_ills@yahoo.com. iraqjaegun leepreston phillipschris collinskseekmphnorma yuriarmcclatchy newspaperscorinne reillyali abbasthe los angeles timescaesar ahmedliz slymatt ehlerdavid bacon
Posted at 06:24 am by thecommonills
Permalink
Gates retracts, NYT spins and LAT tells you what's what
Defense
Secretary Robert Gates said Tuesday that he'd made a mistake when he
said that the rising tide of violence in Iraq is the "last gasp" of al
Qaida there."What I should
have said is that I hope it's al Qaida's last gasp. I don't know if it
is," Gates told reporters traveling with him on a trip to Fort Rucker,
where he went to meet troops and discuss his proposed budget.Gates
made the comment last Tuesday on "The News Hour" on PBS. In the days
that followed, Iraq saw some of the worst violence of the year,
including the deaths of five American soldiers in a suicide attack the
northern Iraqi city Mosul. At least 60 Iraqis were killed and another
200 injured in that and other attacks. The above is the opening to Nancy A. Youssef's " Gates says 'last gasp' remark on al Qaida in Iraq was mistake" ( McClatchy Newspapers) and this is a follow up to her " Is Gates channeling Cheney on Iraq with 'last gasp' remark?" from last week. Gates made the original remarks last Tuesday during an interview with Judy Woodruff on The NewsHour. In today's New York Times, Alissa J. Rubin offers " Iraq Tries to Prove Autonomy, and Makes Inroads" which is a problematic article. On the plus, she notes: Forty
countries now have ambassadors or charges d'affaires in Baghdad, along
with 12 international agencies, including the United Nations and the
Red Cross. In February, President Nicolas Sarkozy of France made the
first visit of a French leader to the country since the 2003 invasion,
and Frank-Walter Steinmeier became the first German foreign minister to
visit Baghdad in 22 years.That's the Ministry of Foreign
Affairs, the equivalent of the US State Dept, and it's not about Nouri
or his vision. Hoshyar Zebari heads that ministry and he deserves
praise for a lot of the work he's done. And it didn't happen yesterday
or last month or even just last year. Zebari and the Ministry of
Foreign Affairs have worked very, very hard. But don't take one
ministry and try to give Nouri credit or try to infer something about
the puppet government. As much as the Ministry of Foreign Affairs
functions, the Ministry of the Interior fails. That's reality. We could
go through the article at length but that is its problem: It takes one
ministry's work and tries to paint the puppet government a success.
Meanwhile who is heading Iraq's Parliament? Answer: No one. They still
have no speaker. So this is really an insult to the readers, this
attempt to play, "Look at this functioning government!" As noted in the January 12th snapshot: Willam
Brockman Bankhead was the Speaker of the US House of Representatives
for over four years. He died unexpectably of a heart attack on
September 15, 1940. (For those unfamiliar with Bankhead, he was the
father of Tallulah Bankhead.) The following day, Sam Rayburn became Speaker of the House. The following day. December 23rd,
Mahmoud al-Mashhadani was forced out of the Speakership of the Iraqi
Parliament. The week prior he had stated he was resigning. He attempted
to take that back but a large number wanted him gone as Speaker and had
wanted him gone for some time with repeated public efforts to oust him.
It is now January 12th and they have still not appointed a new Speaker.
And they still have no speaker. It's April 15th. William
Bankhead dies in office and he's replaced the next day. Iraq's
Parliament runs off Mahmoud al-Mashhadani December 23rd and they still
have no replacement, all this time later. The 'success' report is also undermined by Liz Sly and Caesar Ahmed's " Establishment of Iraq provincial councils drags" ( Los Angeles Times) which captures the disarray and the dysfunction. From the article's opening: Disarray
and dissent are clouding the formation of Iraq's new provincial
councils, which only now are taking shape more than two months after
regional elections.Political
bickering, as well as Iraq's laborious electoral procedures, has
delayed the seating of new councils and their subsequent selection of
governors. Many Iraqis had hoped the process would herald a new era of
representative government and kick-start the delivery of urgently
needed services and economic development.Instead,
the steps have been marked so far by walkouts, boycotts and street
protests, highlighting continued sectarian divisions and the frictions
that prevail even between those factions that are reconciled to the
political process.On
Tuesday, all factions in Shiite Muslim-majority Wasit province
boycotted the latest meeting called to choose a governor after street
protests were held the previous day against the leading contender.The following community sites updated last night: The e-mail address for this site is common_ills@yahoo.com. iraqmcclatchy newspapersnancy a. youssefjudy woodruffpbsthe newshourthe new york timesalissa j. rubinthe los angeles timescaesar ahmedliz slylike maria said pazkats kornersex and politics and screeds and attitudethomas friedman is a great mantrinas kitchenthe daily jotcedrics big mixmikey likes itruths reportsickofitradlzoh boy it never ends
Posted at 06:21 am by thecommonills
Permalink
Tuesday, April 14, 2009
Tuesday,
April 14, 2009. Chaos and violence continue, Amnesty International
issues a report on the KRG that is frightening (including a woman whose
husband dumps her and she might get to stay on and see her children if
she's able to be the household servant), an Iraqi
cartoonist talks about the lack of freedom, Col Gary Volesky tells the
press the US may disregard that whole out of Iraq cities on June 30th
issue, and more. Starting with the attacks on Iraq's LGBT community to note some of the press the issue has received. Neal Broverman (The Advocate) covered
it noting US House Rep Jared Polis' visit to Iraq and his calling "on
U.S. and Iraqi officials to launch an investigation into a spate of
recent murders of gay men in Iraq." He quotes Polis stating, "The
United States should not tolerate human rights violations of any kind,
especially by a government that Americans spend billions of taxpayer
dollars each year supporting." Jessica Green (UK's Pink News) covers the story here
and quotes Amnesty International's Niall Couper stating, "The gay
community in Iraq deserves protection and that means their leaders need
to stand up for them. Amnesty International is calling on Nouri
al-Maliki to condemn all attacks on members of the gay community,
publicly, unreservedly and in the strongest terms possible." The Kurdistan Region of Iraq, unlike the rest of the country, has generally been stable since the 2003 US-led invasion. It has witnessed growing prosperity and an expansion of civil society, including the establishment of numerous non-governmental organizations (NGOs) active in the promotion and protection of human rights. The Kurdistan Regional Government (KRG) has made progress in the field of human rights. In mid-2008 it released hundreds of political detainees, many of whom had been held for years without charge or trial. It has improved Iraqi legislation; the Press Law of September 2008, for example, expanded freedom of expression, and amendments to the Personal Status Law passed in October 2008 strengthened women's rights. The authorities have also established several bodies to monitor and prevent violence against women, including specialized police directorates and shelters. Platforms have been established to foster dialogue between the authorities, particularly the Ministry of Human Rights, and civil society organizations on human rights concerns, including violence against women. Despite these positive and encouraging steps, however, serious human rights violations persist and still need to be addressed. In particular, urgent action by the government is required to ensure that the KRG's internal security service, the Asayish, is made fully accountable under the law and in practice, to investigate allegations of torture, enforced disappearances and other serious human rights violations by the Asayish and other security and intelligence forces. As well, more needs to be done to end violence and discrimination against women, building on the progress achieved so far, and to enhance the standing in society and life choices available to women and girls. Thirdly, the KRG must take steps to protect and promote the right to freedom of expression, including media freedom, taking into account the vital role of the media in informing the public and acting as a public watchdog. It is these three areas which form the focus of this report. Since 2000, thousands of people have been detained arbitrarily and held without charge or trial in the Kurdistan Region of Iraq, in some cases for more than seven years. The vast majority were suspected members or supporters of local Islamist organizations, including both armed groups and legal political parties that do not use or advocate violence as part of their political platform. Some were tortured or otherwise ill-treated in detention. Invariably, detentions were carried out by members of the Asayish, without producing an arrest warrant, and those detained were then denied access to legal representation or the opportunity to challenge their continuing detention before a court of law or an independent judicial body, throughout their incarceration. Some detainees were subjected to enforced disappearance, including some whose fate and whereabouts have yet to be disclosed -- typically, following their arrest by the Asayish or the intelligence services of the two main Kurdish
parties, their families were unaware of their fate and whereabouts and
were unable to obtain information about them, or confirmation of their
detention from the authorities. Dozens of other prisoners, meanwhile, are under sentence of death having been convicted in unfair trials. Despite welcome government efforts to address "honour crimes" and other violence against women, it is clear from comparing survey data on violence against women with the number of police recorded cases of violence against women that the vast majority of such incidents remain unreported. Even when women have been killed or survived a killing attempt, many perpetrators have not been brought to justice -- often because investigations have failed to identify the perpetrators or because suspects remain at large. Freedom of expression continues to be severely curtailed in practice, despite the recent abolition of imprisonment for publishing offences. Journalists have been arrested and sometimes beaten, particularly when publishing articles criticizing government policies or highlighting alleged corruption and nepotism within the government and the dominant political parties. Again, the hand of the seemingly all powerful and unaccountable Asayish and other security agencies is alleged to be behind a number of these attacks. One journalist was killed in July 2008 in suspicious circumstances. This report details a wide range of human rights violations committed in the Kurdistan Region of Iraq in recent years. In particular, it sheds light on violations such as arbitrary and prolonged
detention without charge or trial, enforced disappearance, torture and
other ill treatment, the death penalty, unfair trials, discrimination
and violence against women, and attacks on freedom of expression. It includes case studies to illustrate these abuses. The report also puts forward numerous recommendations which, if implemented, would go a long way towards reducing such violations. Much of the information contained in this report is the outcome of a fact-finding visit conducted by Amnesty International in the Kurdistan Region of Iraq from 23 May to 8 June 2008, the first such visit by Amnesty International for several years. Amnesty International submitted its findings, in the form of two memoranda on human rights concerns, to the KRG in August 2008 and sought its response. The responses received in communications from the KRG Ministry of Human Rights at the end of 2008 are reflected in this report.
The
reports notes the issues of difference between the KRG and Nouri
al-Maliki's Baghdad government including oil-rick Kirkuk (which both
want) "and certain towns and villages in the governorates of Diyala,
al-Ta'mim and Ninawa (Mosul)". They note the 2005 Consitution required
a December 2007 referendum was supposed to be held to determine the
fate of Kirkuk but it has still not taken place. The report explains,
"The Iraqi central government and the KRG have also had major
disagreements about control of oil revenues and oil exploration. After
months of negotiation and amendment in various committees, a national
oil and gas draft law is now reported to have been submitted to the
Iraqi Council of Represenatiaves for approval. However, an oil and gas
law has already been introduced in the Kurdistan Region of Iraq and the
KRG has issued oil and gas exploration contracts" for some time now
leading to more tensions between Baghdad and Kirkuk. The
peshmerga is the KRG security force that is most often covered in the
press. In addition there is "the official security agence" for the
KRG, Asayish. Due to intra-ministry conflicts within the KRG, Asayish
was taken out of ministry control and placed under the president --
president of the KRG (Masoud Barzani) not president of Iraq (Kurdish
Jalal Talabani). Conflicts still remain between the two dominant
political parties of the region (KDP and PUK) so "there are still two
separate Asayish entities" and each party controls their own
intelligence agency with the KDP having the Parastin and the PUK having
the Dezgay Zanyari. In addition, the agency spoils are divied up as
well: Jalal's son, Pavel Talabani, heads the Dezgay Zanyair and
Masoud's son, Masrour Barzani. Not only is nepotism practiced, there
is no accountability. Each city and town has an Asayish prison. The
imprisonments have been arbitray and often taken place without either
charges being pressed or trials being held. Responding to Amnesty's
earlier concerns, "the KRG Ministry of Human Rights informed Amnesty
International on 19 October 2008 that the authorities had released more
than 3,000 detainees from the detention centres of the security forces
during 2007 and the first half of 2008." Despite this, when Amnesty
toured "the Kurdistan Region in May - June 2008, hundreds of detainees
were still being held without charge or trial, most of whom had spent
years in prison." Of those Amnesty were told had been released, it
turns out many of the releases can be considered "conditional" and
prisoners are "required to report to the nearest Asayish office every
week." Despite having prisons in every city and town, the imprisoned
are often held in secret prisons. Prisoners are regularly denied
contact with attorneys and with their families. Reports of torture are
common. The study then turns to the disappeared
and specifically notes some of them. 33-year-old Badran Mostafa
Mahmoud had been praying at a mosque when he was seized, never to be
seen again. 35-year-old Hedayat 'Aziz Ahmad Karim was seized Feb. 10,
2007 (apparently by Dezgay Zanyari forces) and he has not been seen
since (one person states he saw Hedayat in a prison). 41-year-old
Wahed Hussain Amin worked at a water treatment plant and is the father
of four children. He was taken outside his home June 28, 2006 (by
Asayish) and has not been heard from since. 33-year-old Farhang Ahmad
'Aziz was taken outside his home August 27, 2003 and not been seen
since. 31-year-old Hoshyar Saleh Hama 'Aref was taken from his home
September 10, 2003 (by Asayish). His family was twice allowed to visit
him in prison, once in March 2004 and again in October of the same year
but not since then and they cannot find out his current location or any
information. Karim Ahmad Mahmoud disappeared after being taken outside
his house May 15, 2000. 'Abd al-Jabbar Qadir Hassan was taken by
Asayish on September 1, 2001 and has not been since. Those
who are imprisoned and are not disappeared share gruesome details.
Aras 'Omar Faqih Farah was held in Erbil at an Asayish prison from 2004
through 2008 and was tortured with "electric shocks on different parts
of the body, especially his back, and left naked while exposed to
extreme heat in the summer and extreme cold in the winter. Najat
'Abdel-Karim Hamad was impsioned by Parastin at Salahuddin from 2004 to
2007, then transfered to Asayish prison until spring 2008. He was
tortued so badly he was left with a broken rib and hearing loss. One
who remains impisoned is Srood Mukarram Fatih Mohammed who is a
journalist with al-Sumarriya: He told
Amnesty International that he was arrested on 17 April 2007 from his
home in Erbil by around 20 people who were armed and wearing uniforms.
The men searched the house, arrested him without an arrest warrant, and
confiscated some books, CDs and a computer. They blindfolded him and
forced him into the boot of one of the cars. For 53 days the familly
did not know his fate and whereabouts. Eventually, his mother received
information that he was being hled at the Asayish prison in Erbil and
then was able to visit him, although Asayish guards watched throughout
and remained within earshot. Srood
Mukarram Faith Mohammad was brought before an investigation judge two
months after his arrest, by which time he had "confessed," under
torture, that he was a member of a terrorist group. During his first
two months in detention, he said, he was kept blindfolded in solitary
confinement, beaten with a cable on different parts of the body and
threatened that his wife would be detained and raped by guards in front
of him. The family engaged a lawyer at the beginning of of 2008 but he
was prevented from visiting Srood Mukarram Fatih Mohammad on several
occasions. Srood Mukarram Faith Mohammad was charged with having
contacts with terrorists and the case was sent to Erbil Criminal Court;
however, the court is reported to have returned the dossier to the
investigative judge on three separate occasions on the grounds that the
information was not complete. Srood Mukarram Fatih Mohammad is said to
be still detained in Erbil. If you
make it through all of that and actually get a hearing, expect new
problems. You may learn you're going a trial less than an hour before
you do. Don't worry though, the court appointed attorney will have
just enough time to shake your hand in the courtroom as you meet before
the trial starts, just enough. And the courtroom? It may be a real
courtroom but, more likely, you may get to 'enjoy' the maze of 'secret'
courtrooms. The report then moves to the issue of violence against women. Hey, remember when 'reporter' Kevin Peraino (Newsweek)
was telling us all about the groovy new trend, the must have for all
Kurdish teen girls of burn scars? (Yes, Kevin Peraino is such an
extreme idiot that he actually wrote a report -- "Why Are Kurdish Women
Dying of Burns?" -- where he floated his theory that setting yourself
on fire was the 'in' thing to do and highly popular.) Over a 12 months
period (July 2007 to June 2008) Amnesty found 102 women and girls
listed as "killed" by "official records". The actual number is
probably much higher and the official records do not note which are
"honor" killings. The report notes, "In addition to the 102, a further
262 women and children died or were severely injured in the same period
due to intentional burning, including suicides. Some women were
reported to have been burned to disguise a killing." 23-year-old Cilan
Muhammad Amin was murdered at the age of 23 (March 8, 2008), apparently
because her brother thought she had a 'secret relationship'. After
which her sister and her sister's husband set Cilan's corpse on fire in
an attempt to hide the fact that she'd been strangled. From the report:
In
May and June 2008 Amnesty International delegates interviewed 16 women
and girls staying in shelters and 16 women and girls held in detention
centres in the Kurdistan Region of Iraq. This random sample included
20 interviewees who were or had been married. Of these, 12 said that
they had been forced to marry, including six who were aged under 15
years when they were married. According to the Iraqi Personal Status
Law, forced marriages (Article 9) and marriages of girls younger than
15 are illegal, but they continue to be conducted in private or
religious ceremonies without those responsible being held to
account. Five of the 12 interviewees
who had never been married were subjected to or at risk of violence
because they had insisted to choose their partner. Some women reported
that they had been raped, includinga 22-year-old woman who expected to
be married to her rapist as his second wife in a settlement that also
involved the rapist's daughter being married to one of her relatives.
The Iraqi Penal Code supports such practice by excusing a rapist from
punishment if he marries the victim (Article 398). Six
of the interviewed women reported that violence they had experienced or
feared was related to allegations of adultery. Whilst the Iraqi Penal
Code crminializes adultry by both husbands and wives (Article 377) such
legislation has a disproportionate impact on women. For example, it
may be used to harass women or to enable their husbands to evade
responsibility for their children. A
27-year-old mother of three children told Amnesty International that
her father had forced her to marry an older man when she was just 13.
Years later, she said, her husband falsely accused her of adultery
because he wanted to divorce her and evade responsibility for
supporting her. She was being detained in Erbil because of her
husband's accusations. She said she had received only minimal
education as a child and, alone, could not support herself and her
children. She now hoped that her husband would allow her to return to
the family home to live as her husband's "servant", if this was waht he
required, so that she could at least be with her children. And
women who are the victims of violence repeatedly find what women
elsewhere in the world do: We're far more likely to be killed by a
'loved' one than by a stranger. Women who have reported violence and
attempted to 'move on' are stabbed to death by family members, murdered
by their ex-husbands . . . The report is alarming but equally alarming
is how much that is the case around the world and not just in the KRG.
Attorneys attempting to help women soon find themselves receiving death
threats. We'll come back to the report in a
bit but let's stay with the topic of Iraqi women and this is women in
all of Iraq, not just the KRG. Rania Abouzeid (Time magazine) reports
that a 2008 US State Dept report ("Trafficking in Persons Report")
shamed Nouri al-Maliki's government and forced it to take some
(limited) action including a proposed law which would hand out "tough
penalties, including life imprisonment and a fine not exceeding 25
million dinars ($21,000) for traffickers if the victim 'is under 15, or
a female, or has special needs.' The same punishment applies if the
crime was committed by kidnapping or force, or if the criminal 'is a
direct or distant relative or the victim's caretaker or husband or
wife,' a tacit acknowledgment that victims are often tarfficked by
people they know." Rania Abouzeid files another report
exploring the victims. Atoor was a 15-year-old widow. Her husband was
a police officer (19-years-old) who was killed in the violence that now
characterizes Iraq: "After the obligatory four-month mourning period
dictated by Islamic Shari'a law, Atoor's mother and two brothers made
it clear that they intended to sell her to a brothel close to their
home in western Baghdad, just as they had sold her older twin sisters.
Frightened, she told a friend in the police force to raid her home and
the nearby brothel. His unit did, and Atoor spent the next two years in
prison. She was not charged with anything, but that's how long it took
for her to come before a judge and be released." We're including that
especially because from time to time, male US correspondents feel the
need to repeat the lie that no one's ever heard of any brothels in
Baghdad. They have always been in Baghdad, under Saddam's rule and
after, they are not a myth and some of the US male correspondents
playing dumb know that for a fact because they've visited them --
especially those males 'reporting' from Iraq in 2003 and 2004. In
terms of selling them outright, Abouzeid explains that 20-year-old
Iraqi women "are too old to fetch a good price" and that eleven and
twelve-year-old girls can be "sold for as much as $30,000". Back to ay Amnesty International's " Hope and Fear: Human Rights In the Kurdistan Region of Iraq."
The final section is entitled "Attacks On Freedom Of Expression" and it
catalogues a variety of abuses and attacks on the press by the
government. In the KRG (as is true throughout Iraq), the bulk of the
media outlets are owned by a political party and "the majority of media
outlets follow the official line and avoid criticizing the KRG, the
Asayish, the intelligence agencies and the two main political
parties." Those who do not follow that unwritten law suffer. Kamal
Said Qadir was imprisoned for reporting on "corruption and nepotism in
the KRG." Mohammed Siyassi Ashkani imprisoned for allegedly "spying for
another political party" (he was released after nearly six months and
he was never charged with anything). Nabaz Goran "reported that a
senior official in the KDP had insulted the Kurdish population of Iraq
during a speech" and was beaten.Naseh 'Abd al-Rahim Rashid Amin
reported critically of the peshmerga, told by Asayish to apologize in
print, he refused and "was arrested and charged with defamation under
Article 433 of the Penal Code (criminalizing defamation)," sentence to
a 10 day imprisonment, his attorney successfuly won an appeal but the
Asayish first beat him and then dumped his body. Aso Jamal Mukhtar
beaten for writing critically of the government and then fired from the
paper he worked for. Rezgar Raza Chouchani reported on the peshmerge
and was imprisoned for six days and then banned from reporting. Souran
Mama Hama reported on the PUK and KDP's corruption and nepotism and was
shot dead. Marwan Tufiq imprisoned for insulting a martyr (you'd think
a genuine martyr would have greater problems to address). Shwan Dawdi
imprisoned for reporting on courthouse issues. Dr. 'Adil Hussain,
imprisoned for reporting on sex "from a medical perspective." Caroline Alexander (Bloomberg News) covers
the report and notes, "Authorities have failed to significantly curb
the powers of the security forces, or Asayish, Amnesty said. They have
also failed to rein in the security arms of the Kurdistan Democratic
Party and the Patriotic Union of Kurdistan, which form the Kurdistan
Regional Government, according to the report." BBC News adds,
"The report, based on research conducted in 2008, said the number of
detainees held without charge or trial had dropped from thousands to
hundreds, but some had been held as long as nine years. It describes
cases where individuals have 'disappeared' and detainees have been
beaten and given electric shocks while in custody." Shamal Aqrawi, Missy Ryan and Giles Elgood (Reuters) observe,
"Iraq is a dangerous country for journalists -- at least 135 have been
killed in the line of duty since 2003 -- but Kurdistan is seen as
especially closed to criticism of the state." xxx Shootings? Sahar Issa and Hussein Kadhim (McClatchy Newspapers) report
Monday a police officer was shot dead and another wounded in a Diyala
Province raid, Monday in Sulaimaniyah 2 women and 1 man were wounded as
police fired "randomly" and "Two civilians were wounded in two
incidents that may have involved U.S. troops in Sulaimaniyah on Monday
midnight." Today at the Pentagon, a press teleconfrence was held with US Col Gary Volesky in Iraq. AFP's
Daphne Benoit asked if, due to recent violence, he was "still confident
that you're going to be able to leave the city by end of June as
planned? And are you concerned it might actually worsen the
situation?" He replied: "The 30 June date -- that's -- that's out
there. We are conducting an assessment right now with our Iraqi
counterparts to determine what the way ahead is for security in Mosul.
And based on that assessment, a decision will be made what we will do
on 30 June. If the Iraqi government believes we should stay in Mosul
to continue the securiy progress, we'll support our Iraqi counterparts
past 30 June and continue to build on the momentum that we've got
here." Stars & Stripes' Jeff Schogol asked when this assessment
would be completed and Volesky didn't have a timeline but "I know that
I'm collecting the data right now". NBC's Courtney Kube returned to
this topic clarifying that Volesky was stating that it's possible "US
combat soldiers will stay in Mosul after June 30th" and Volesky
responded, "If the Iraqi government wants us to stay, we will stay.
And that's correct." Kube followed up with, " What's your understanding of what that would mean for the status of forces? Would
there have to be some kind of a change in the status of forces
agreement that went into effect several months ago? Or is that because
the Iraqis are asking -- would be asking the U.S. to stay -- does it
fall within the guidelines that were established?"
Volesky begged off stating that was "way above my level". Volosky's
remarks echo those of the top US commander in Iraq, General Ray Odierno
(see yesterday's snapshot
for the most recent example) and of Nouri al-Maliki. Kube's question
regarding the security agreement was what's called the Status Of Forces
Agreement. It 'requires' that US troops retreat from Iraqi cities no
later than June 30th of this year. It also 'requires' all US troops to
depart Iraq by the end of 2011. If the cities 'requirement' can be so
easily tossed aside, it underscores how easily it can all be changed. While the US is not leaving Iraq, US service members are being shipping there. In the US, AP reports West Virginia's National Guard is sending 50 Guard members to Iraq (their farewell ceremony is this morning) and the Dunn Daily Record reports
a farewell ceremony in Fayetteville, North Carolina for approximately
4,000 National Gaurd members (30th Heavy Brigade Combat Team brigade).
One not deploying Barbara Barrett (McClatchy Newspapers) reports
"Army Sgt. 1st Class Chad Stephens, who earned a Silver Star for valor
during a Baqubah firefight in 2004, isn't going back this time" due to
a PTSD diagnosis. Fort Bliss will be sending troops to Iraq but one scheduled to depart will not. Lilliam Irizarry (Prensa Asociada) reports
police authorities and military investigators said yesterday that US
Army Spc Nokware Rosado Munoz took his own life (hanging) following
arguments with his wife, Dalises Rosado. Nokware had already served two
years in Iraq and reportedly did not wish to do another tour but was
scheduled to report to Fort Bliss this week for the redeployment.
Edilberto Rivera Santiago, director of the Division of Homicides,
states, "They had a discussion, were having problems because he had
been activated again." Many
of my friends, even fairly well informed people, fell for Obama's charm
and vague promises and collapsed in tears on election night, believing
that we would now get "change" and now had reason to "hope." It is
understandable to want a Daddy figure to come swooping in out of no
where to rescue us, but unfortunately there was never any good reason
to believe that Obama was that person. One
can settle into a movie theatre and be swept away to a land of
make-believe: ancient Japan, 19th century Wyoming, or a gritty story
of inner city Baltimore. We silently exult when the hero escapes the
bad guy and weep when he dies at the end in his lover's arms. But we
won't be shocked when we see him alive and well at the Oscars, for we
know it was just theatre. We know that if we saw him dancing with joy
or sneering with contempt on the silver screen, it wasn't that he was
really feeling those emotions. He was acting. Film
makers use trained actors, costume designers, set designers, makeup and
hair stylists, lighting designers, music composers, cinematographers
and script writers to create a world that seems real, but is 100% a
fantasy. So
why is it that people who well understand the power of theatre have
such a hard time believing that political campaigns use the same
techniques to convey a false sense of reality? Or a false expectation
of "hope" and "change?" |
Posted at 02:57 pm by thecommonills
Permalink
Amnesty International calls out human rights abuses in the KRG
Today Amnesty International released a report [PDF format warning] entitled " Hope and Fear: Human Rights In the Kurdistan Region of Iraq." The report is 46 pages of text which ends with the following recommendations regarding the press: Amnesty International is calling on the KRG to: Respect and protect the right to freedom of expression, including media freedom, in conformity with Iraq’s obligations under international law; End the practice of detaining journalists for exercising legitimately their right to freedom of expression and put an end to other forms of illegitimate official interference in the free operation of the media, such as threats against journalists; Publicly condemn physical attacks, acts of intimidation, threats and other crimes carried out against journalists and other media workers. Ensure that all such acts are promptly, thoroughly and impartially investigated and that those responsible are brought to justice; Investigate the murder of journalist Souran Mama Hama and ensure that those responsible for his death are brought to justice in a fair trial without resort to the death penalty; Suspend all articles in legislation, especially in the Iraqi Penal Code, which criminalize defamation against public officials, and repeal criminal defamation laws replacing them with civil legislation.Pages 42 through 46 address attacks on press freedom. The report covers a wide range of abuses. Amnesty's press release notes: During
a fact-finding mission to the Kurdistan Region in 2008, Amnesty
International researchers found many cases of people arrested and
arbitrarily detained by Asayish (security) officials, including some
who were tortured and others who were forcibly disappeared and whose
fate and whereabouts remain unknown.Torture
methods include electric shocks to different parts of the body;
beatings with fists, cables and metal or wooden batons; suspension by
the wrists or ankles; beating on the soles of the feet (falaqa); sleep
deprivation and kicking.Amnesty
International has called on the Kurdistan Regional Government (KRG) to
hold those responsible for human rights violations to account."The
Kurdistan Region has been spared the bloodletting and violence that
continues to wrack the rest of Iraq and the KRG has made some important
human rights advances," said Malcolm Smart, Director of the Middle East
and North Africa Programme. "Yet real problems - arbitrary detention
and torture, attacks on journalists and freedom of expression, and
violence against women - remain and need urgently to be addressed by
the government."Caroline Alexander (Bloomberg News) covers
the report and notes, "Authorities have failed to significantly curb
the powers of the security forces, or Asayish, Amnesty said. They have
also failed to rein in the security arms of the Kurdistan Democratic
Party and the Patriotic Union of Kurdistan, which form the Kurdistan
Regional Government, according to the report." BBC News adds,
"The report, based on research conducted in 2008, said the number of
detainees held without charge or trial had dropped from thousands to
hundreds, but some had been held as long as nine years. It describes
cases where individuals have 'disappeared' and detainees have been
beaten and given electric shocks while in custody." Along with
covering attacks on press freedom, women, arbitrary imprisonment, the
report also covers torture, disappearances and the judicial system. The
report's introduction explains: The Kurdistan Region of Iraq,1 unlike the rest of the country, has generally been stable since the 2003 US-led invasion. It has witnessed growing prosperity and an expansion of civil society, including the establishment of numerous non-governmental organizations (NGOs) active in the promotion and protection of human rights. The Kurdistan Regional Government (KRG) has made progress in the field of human rights. In mid-2008 it released hundreds of political detainees, many of whom had been held for years without charge or trial. It hasimproved Iraqi legislation; the Press Law of September 2008, for example, expanded freedom of expression, and amendments to the Personal Status Law passed in October 2008 strengthened women's rights. The authorities have also established several bodies to monitor and prevent violence against women, including specialized police directorates and shelters.Platforms have been established to foster dialogue between the authorities, particularly the Ministry of Human Rights, and civil society organizations on human rights concerns, including violence against women.Despite these positive and encouraging steps, however, serious human rights violations persist and still need to be addressed. In particular, urgent action by the government is required to ensure that the KRG’s internal security service, the Asayish, is made fully accountable under the law and in practice, to investigate allegations of torture, enforced disappearances and other serious human rights violations by the Asayish and other security and intelligence forces. As well, more needs to be done to end violence and discrimination against women, building on the progress achieved so far, and to enhance the standing in society and life choices available to women and girls. Thirdly, the KRG must take steps toprotect and promote the right to freedom of expression, including media freedom, taking into account the vital role of the media in informing the public and acting as a public watchdog.It is these three areas which form the focus of this report.Since 2000, thousands of people have been detained arbitrarily and held without charge or trial in the Kurdistan Region of Iraq, in some cases for more than seven years. The vast majority were suspected members or supporters of local Islamist organizations, including both armed groups and legal political parties that do not use or advocate violence as part of their political platform. Some were tortured or otherwise ill-treated in detention.Invariably, detentions were carried out by members of the Asayish , without producing an arrest warrant, and those detained were then denied access to legal representation or the opportunity to challenge their continuing detention before a court of law or an independent judicial body, throughout their incarceration. Some detainees were subjected to enforced disappearance, including some whose fate and whereabouts have yet to be disclosed -- typically, following their arrest by the Asayish or the intelligence services of the two main Kurdish
parties, their families were unaware of their fate and whereabouts and
were unable to obtain information about them, or confirmation of their
detention from the authorities.Dozens of other prisoners, meanwhile, are under sentence of death having been convicted in unfair trials.Despite welcome government efforts to address "honour crimes" and other violence against women, it is clear from comparing survey data on violence against women with the number of police recorded cases of violence against women that the vast majority of such incidents remain unreported. Even when women have been killed or survived a killing attempt, many perpetrators have not been brought to justice -- often because investigations have failed to identify the perpetrators or because suspects remain at large.Freedom of expression continues to be severely curtailed in practice, despite the recent abolition of imprisonment for publishing offences. Journalists have been arrested and sometimes beaten, particularly when publishing articles criticizing government policies or highlighting alleged corruption and nepotism within the government and the dominant political parties. Again, the hand of the seemingly all powerful and unaccountable Asayish and other security agencies is alleged to be behind a number of these attacks. One journalist was killed in July 2008 in suspicious circumstances.This report details a wide range of human rights violations committed in the Kurdistan Region of Iraq in recent years. In particular, it sheds light on violations such as arbitrary and prolonged
detention without charge or trial, enforced disappearance, torture and
other ill treatment, the death penalty, unfair trials, discrimination
and violence against women, and attacks on freedom of expression. It includes case studies to illustrate these abuses. The report also puts forward numerous recommendations which, if implemented, would go a longway towards reducing such violations.Much of the information contained in this report is the outcome of a fact-finding visit conducted by Amnesty International in the Kurdistan Region of Iraq from 23 May to 8 June 2008, the first such visit by Amnesty International for several years. Amnesty International submitted its findings, in the form of two memoranda on human rights concerns, to the KRG in August 2008 and sought its response. The responses received in communications from the KRG Ministry of Human Rights at the end of 2008 are reflected in this report.Meanwhile AP reports West Virginia's National Guard is sending 50 Guard members to Iraq (their farewell ceremony is this morning) and the Dunn Daily Record reports
a farewell ceremony in Fayetteville, North Carolina for approximately
4,000 National Gaurd members (30th Heavy Brigade Combat Team brigade).
One not deploying Barbara Barrett (McClatchy Newspapers) reports
"Army Sgt. 1st Class Chad Stephens, who earned a Silver Star for valor
during a Baqubah firefight in 2004, isn’t going back this time" due to
a PTSD diagnosis. Fort Bliss will be sending troops to Iraq but one scheduled to depart will not. Lilliam Irizarry (Prensa Asociada) reports
police authorities and military investigators said yesterday that US
Army Spc Nokware Rosado Munoz took his own life (hanging) following
arguments with his wife, Dalises Rosado. Nokware had already served two
years in Iraq and reportedly did not wish to do another tour but was
scheduled to report to Fort Bliss this week for the redeployment.
Edilberto Rivera Santiago, director of the Division of Homicides,
states, "They had a discussion, were having problems because he had
been activated again." Here's an excerpt of Lilliam Irizarry's report: Las
autoridades policiales y militares investigan el lunes el suicidio de
un militar tras una discusión con su esposa sobre su regreso a Medio
Oriente.Nokware Rosado
Muñoz, de 28 años, se privó de la vida en una cabaña de un motel en Toa
Baja donde presuntamente había discutido con su esposa, Dalises Rosado,
quien se quejaba de que la dejaría de nuevo sola debido al servicio
militar.Rosado Muñoz ya
había estado en Irak dos años y debía regresar a su base en Fort Bliss
en Texas esta misma semana, según el teniente Edilberto Rivera
Santiago, director de la División de Homicidios de Bayamón."Ellos tuvieron una discusión, estaban teniendo problemas porque él había sido activado de nuevo", expresó Rivera Santiago.El
agente Félix Santiago, encargado de investigaciones criminales del
Ejército estadounidense en Puerto Rico, confirmó que investigan el
suicidio. Corinne Reilly (McClatchy Newspapers) and Ernesto Londono (Washington Post)
have reports on Iraq this morning; however, we aren't keen on SITE and
are aware that when someone lies to the press about their identity, the
press is never supposed to take them at their word again (we don't
highlight Rita or her crazy ass group). We may pick through either or
both reports for the snapshot but aren't interested in the anti-Arab
SITE or its translations. The e-mail address for this site is common_ills@yahoo.com. iraqamnesty internationallilliam irizarrycorinne reillybarbara barrettmcclatchy newspapersthe washington posternesto londonocaroline alexanderbloomberg newsbbc news
Posted at 06:44 am by thecommonills
Permalink
Human trafficking in Iraq
Sunday the US military announced:
"One U.S. Coalition Soldier died of wounds sustained when an improvised
explosive device detonated in Salah-ad Din Province, April 12. The name
of the deceased is being withheld pending notification of next of kin
and release by the Department of Defense." The Dept of Defense identifies the soldier as US Army Spc Michael J. Anaya of Crestview, Florida. In " UPDATE: Panhandle soldier killed in Iraq explosion" (Panama City's News Herald), Wendy Victoria reports the family was enroute to Dover Air Force Base and notes: Michael Anaya was a young man who loved fishing, cooking on the grill and fighting for his country."He
knew the risk, and he said that's what he loved and that's what his
life was meant for," said Katie Rowe, who is engaged to his older
brother, Carmelo Jr. "He has, ever since he was 5 years old, known
that's what he wanted to do."Rowe
said some family members would return Wednesday, but Mike's father
would stay to fly back with his son's body Thursday. He will be buried
locally.The illegal war passed the six year mark last month and 'liberation' and 'democracy' have yet to appear on the horizon. " Will Iraq Crack Down on Sex Trafficking?" wonders Rania Abouzeid ( Time magazine): Ravaged
by rights groups and upbraided by the U.S. for failing to take measures
against human trafficking, the Iraqi government has been quietly
working on a draft law to tackle the scourge. Baghdad was prodded into
action late last year, after the release of the U.S. State Department's
"Trafficking in Persons Report," according to Human Rights Minister
Wijdan Mikhail Salim. "Let's say it was a tough report about the
situation in Iraq, and in so many cases it was right," she says.The
report was damning. Baghdad, it concluded, "offers no protection
services to victims of trafficking, reported no efforts to prevent
trafficking in persons and does not acknowledge trafficking to be a
problem in the country." As a TIME.com story detailed,
trafficking in Iraq is a shadowy underworld where nefarious female
pimps hold sway and impoverished mothers sell their teenage daughters
on the sex market. (See pictures of a women's prison in Baghdad.)The
situation is slowly changing. The draft law, a copy of which was
obtained by TIME, imposes tough penalties, including life imprisonment
and a fine not exceeding 25 million dinars ($21,000) for traffickers if
the victim "is under 15, or a female, or has special needs." The same
punishment applies if the crime was committed by kidnapping or force,
or if the criminal "is a direct or distant relative or the victim's
caretaker or husband or wife," a tacit acknowledgment that victims are
often trafficked by people they know.On the same topic, Rania Abouzeid offers " Iraq's Unspeakable Crime: Mothers Pimping Daughters:" Nobody
knows exactly how many Iraqi women and children have been sold into
sexual slavery since the fall of Saddam Hussein's regime in 2003. There
is no official number because of the shadowy nature of the business.
Baghdad-based activists like Hinda and others estimate it to be in the
tens of thousands. Still, it remains a hidden crime, one that the 2008
U.S. State Department's Trafficking in Persons report says the Iraqi
government is not combating. Baghdad, the report says, "offers no
protection services to victims of trafficking, reported no efforts to
prevent trafficking in persons and does not acknowledge trafficking to
be a problem in the country."While
sexual violence has accompanied warfare for millenniums and insecurity
always provides opportunities for criminal elements to profit, what is
happening in Iraq today reveals how far a once progressive country
(relative to its neighbors) has regressed on the issue of women's
rights and how ferociously the seams of a traditional Arab society that
values female virginity have been ripped apart. Baghdad's Minister of
Women's Affairs, Nawal al-Samarraie, resigned last month in protest of
the lack of resources provided to her by the government. "The ministry
is just an empty post," she told TIME. "Why do I come to the office
every day if I don't have any resources?" Yet even al-Samarraie doesn't
think sex-trafficking is an issue. "It's limited," she said, adding
that she believed the girls involved choose to engage in prostitution.That's
a view that infuriates activists like Yanar Mohammed, who heads the
Organization of Women's Freedom in Iraq. "Let me take her to the
nightclubs of Damascus and show her [trafficked] women by the
thousands," she says. To date, the government has not prosecuted any
traffickers. And for the past year it has prevented groups like
Mohammed's from visiting women's prisons, where they have previously
identified victims, many of whom are jailed for acts committed as a
result of being trafficked, such as prostitution or possessing forged
documents.Problems also exist in northern Iraq, in the Kurdistan Regional Government. A new report by Amnesty International, which we'll go into in the next entry) documents problems and offers the following recommendations: RECOMMENDATIONSAmend the law: Review all legislation that discriminates against women, in particular provisions of the Penal Code and Personal Status Law, and abolish or amend any provisions which discriminate, directly or in their impact, against women; Take effective measures to eliminate all violent acts against women, including by banning female genital mutilation and prosecuting those who order or commit such abuse; Take effective measures to ban early marriage and forced marriage, including by reviewing and implementing relevant legislation.Empower women: Take steps to improve education for girls, including by ensuring that all girls receive primary education and by working to ensure that girls and boys are able to access secondary education on an equal basis; Support and promote the economic independence of women, including by increasing employment opportunities for women.Improve protection measures: Ensure that all officials in contact with or aware of women at risk of violence are able and willing to take effective, appropriate and urgent protection measures, including measures that would allow the appropriate and timely implementation of civil protection orders -- based on a judicial decision -- banning a man who threatens to harm a woman from having contact with her; Provide appropriate financial and other support for the running or the establishment of shelters and other facilities run by NGOs or the authorities for women at risk of violence, in consultation with women’s rights advocates and shelter managers; Ensure regular review of protection and security measures at all institutions – in particular shelters - where women at risk of violence reside, in consultation with women's rights organizations, shelter managers and others; Ensure that written standard procedures exist for institutions, including shelters, detention centres, police stations and hospitals, that frequently release women into a potentially unsafe environment; such procedures, drawn up in consultation with women’s rights organizations, should stipulate a range of safety measures, including ensuring that a woman is fully informed about the risks and identifying a responsible body for establishing local back-up systems for protection of a returned woman and regular and appropriate follow-up contact with her; Create opportunities for a safe and empowering living environment for women in need of protection for an indefinite period within and outside shelters, including by providing qualification and job opportunities; Provide or support protection mechanisms for women human rights defenders in consultation with women’s rights organizations.HOPE AND FEARHuman rights in the Kurdistan Region of IraqIndex: MDE 14/006/2009 Amnesty International April 200941Investigate and prosecute: Ensure prompt, effective, independent, impartial and thorough investigations into all reported cases of violence against women, including by conducting separate interviews with all relevant witnesses and conducting all necessary forensic tests; Ensure the availability of suitably trained staff, including female staff, for investigating cases of violence against women; Ensure gender-sensitivity and safety when taking testimony of survivors of violence and witnesses; Ensure protection of witnesses testifying at court; Ensure that where there is sufficient admissible evidence, suspects of violent acts against women are detained and charged, having due regard to their human rights, and that all appropriate efforts are made to apprehend suspects who remain at large; Ensure that all who, after a fair trial, are found to have committed violence against women are given sentences commensurate with the gravity of the crime, but without use of the death penalty.Train officials in gender issues: Provide training in gender issues for all elements of the criminal justice system -- including police officers, forensic medical examiners, prosecutors and judges -- in order to fully equip officials and members of the judiciary to deal with women’s complaints with appropriate sensitivity and competence; Ensure that training in gender issues is made available to officials throughout the area under the administration of the KRG and take steps, as soon as possible, to ensure that there are police officers who have been trained in gender issues in all police stations, including those in rural areas; Ensure the establishment of an effective, independent complaints mechanism into all allegations of police and government officials failing to carry out their legal duty to protect women and prevent violence when clearly required to do so; those failing such legal duty should be subject to disciplinary or penal sanctions.Improve preventive measures: Support and engage directly in public awareness-raising about crimes of violence against women, using new as well as existing approaches, in consultation and collaboration with women’s rights organizations; Compile systematically and maintain comprehensive data on incidents of violence against women, in collaboration with women’s rights organizations and other NGOs, academics and others; and ensure that the information obtained from data collection and analysis is made publicly available and is used to refine official policies and procedures to address violence against women.Don't expect any of the above to get much attention from Panhandle Media.
They've yet to cover the assaults on Iraq's LGBT community. They do
have time for 'experts' and bulls**t topics like the Queen of Beggar
Media Amy Goodman who wants us to understand why pirates are pirates.
Yes, that is a pressing issue . . . in the 1400s. Our calendars show
2009 and anyone who doesn't grasp why pirates exist is more lost than
Amy's worthless Kenyan expert who, in a typical moment of 'expertise,'
responds to a question with "uh - uh -uh - I don't remember right now".
The quality of Beggar Media continues to slide. Speaking of the
crackpot whores of beggar media, a few visitors (with an apparent sense
of humor one hopes) have e-mailed Patrick Cockburn's latest loony
garbage. We're not interested. A close reading will reveal why. Patrick
is in love with Nouri al-Maliki. His hatred for America (which is fine,
I'm not offended by it, he can feel whatever he wants) is so intense
that he's built Nouri up to his uber god or at least his sex god. Well
lots of luck with those fantasies on your many lonely nights, Paddy.
However, you can't write about a crackdown on Sahwa and never mention
Nouri in the entire article . . . unless you've styled yourself the Eva
Braun to his Adolph. Amy Goodman's just America's shame, Patrick
Cockburn is an international embarrassment. While they waste everyone's time and give journalism an ugly name, Rod Nordland and Sam Dagher ( New York Times) offer " Iraqi General Filing Suit to Close Newspaper and TV Channel Over Alleged Misquotes"
which explores the assaults on press freedom in Iraq including the
latest attempt to shut down a newspaper and television station: "[Major
General Qassim] Atta's suit seeks to shut down the two organizations
for 'publishing false reports,' his office said. Al Hayat published a
correction on its Web site, saying the newspaper had confused General
Atta's remarks with those of an unnamed source." They review Iraq's
shaky history of press freedom and they also cover the attack on the
arts: In another development on
Monday, an Iraqi cartoonist demanded an apology from the police in the
Shiite holy city of Karbala for having confiscated two satirical
drawings of Prime Minister Nuri Kamal al-Maliki and other government
officials."What happened
was an offense to freedom," the cartoonist, Salman Abed, said in a
telephone interview. "We want to build a new country on liberal and
democratic foundations."The cartoon is reproduced online but a better example of it can be found in the print version of the article in today's New York Times. Mia highlights Chris Hedges' " Israel's Racist in Chief" ( Information Clearing House): It
was unthinkable, when I was based as a correspondent in Jerusalem two
decades ago, that an Israeli politician who openly advocated ethnically
cleansing the Palestinians from Israeli-controlled territory, as well
as forcing Arabs in Israel to take loyalty oaths or be forcibly
relocated to the West Bank, could sit on the Cabinet. The racist
tirades of Jewish proto-fascists like Meir Kahane stood outside the
law, were vigorously condemned by most Israelis and were prosecuted
accordingly. Kahane's repugnant Kach Party, labeled by the United
States, Canada and the European Union as a terrorist organization, was
outlawed by the Israeli government in 1988 for inciting racism.Israel
has changed. And the racist virus spread by Kahane, whose thugs were
charged with the murders and beatings of dozens of unarmed Palestinians
and whose members held rallies in Jerusalem where they chanted "Death
to Arabs!" has returned to Israel in the figure of Israel's powerful
new foreign minister, Avigdor Lieberman. Lieberman openly calls for an
araberrein Israel-an Israel free of Arabs.There
has been a steady decline from the days of the socialist Labor Party,
which founded Israel in 1948 and held within its ranks many leaders,
such as Yitzhak Rabin, who were serious about peaceful coexistence with
the Palestinians. The moral squalor of Prime Minister Bibi Netanyahu
and Lieberman reflects the country's degeneration. Labor, like Israel,
is a shell of its old self. Lieberman's Yisrael Beiteinu Party, with 15
seats in the Knesset, is likely to bring down the Netanyahu government
the moment his power base is robust enough to move him into the prime
minister's office. He is the new face of the Jewish state.Lieberman,
a former nightclub bouncer who was a member of the Kach Party, has the
personal and political habits of the Islamic goons he opposes. He was
found guilty in 2001 of beating a 12-year-old boy and fined by an
Israeli court. He is being investigated for multimillion-dollar fraud
and money laundering and is rumored to have close ties with the Russian
mafia. He lives, in defiance of international law, in the Jewish
settlement of Nokdim on occupied Palestinian land.The following community sites updated last night: The e-mail address for this site is common_ills@yahoo.com. iraqwendy victoriarania abouzeidtime magazinethe new york timesrod nordlandsam dagheramnesty internationalchris hedgeslike maria said pazkats kornersex and politics and screeds and attitudethomas friedman is a great mantrinas kitchenthe daily jotcedrics big mixmikey likes itruths reportsickofitradlzoh boy it never ends
Posted at 06:41 am by thecommonills
Permalink
Monday, April 13, 2009
Monday, April 13, 2009. Chaos and violence continue, the US military announces deaths, the 5 US soldiers killed in Iraq Friday return to the US, Nouri goes after the press, Iraq's LGBT community remains targeted, Barack's half-brother makes the news, and more.
Today the US military announced: "A Coalition forces Soldier died of injuries sustained during an explosively formed projectile attack on a convoy five kilomenters south of Karbalah, Iraq April 13 at approximately 7:40 a.m. The Soldier's name is being withheld pending notification of next of kin and release by the department of Defense. The incident is currently under investigtion." Yesterday the US military announced: "One U.S. Coalition Soldier died of wounds sustained when an improvised explosive device detonated in Salah-ad Din Province, April 12. The name of the deceased is being withheld pending notification of next of kin and release by the Department of Defense." The total number of US service members killed in Iraq since the start of the illegal war is 4273. Friday 5 US soldiers were announced dead. Cindy Sheehan (Cindy Sheehan's Soapbox) observed, "Today five US soldiers were killed in Iraq and we won't ever know for sure how many Iraqis were killed. The families of the US soldiers will never have a 'normal' Easter again. All of their days will be filled with pain and longing, but holidays, birthdays and other anniversaries will be especially hard. My heart is breaking for the awful and pointless spiral of grief that these families are just embarking upon. Some may not yet know that it was their son, father, brother, uncle, or friend that was murdered today. I saw the report of Casey's death on the news at least five hours before the Army notified us." (Cindy's guest on the audio Cindy Sheehan's Soapbox this week are James Martinez discussing the finacial crisis, housing and more and Annie Garrison on the Blue Angels use of San Francisco to boost recruitment. That episode is posted online already.) It was Good Friday in 2004 when Cindy and her family met her son Casey Sheehan at the airport for the last time. Sunday the 5 US soldiers killed on Friday arrived at Dover Air Force Base. Jeff Montgomery (Delaware's News Journal) observes, "It was the heaviest loss of American lives in Iraq in 13 months, and the largest number of casualties returned to America in full sight of the public since the Defense Department opened the process to news coverage last week, after a 18-year blackout."
The Defense Dept identified the five as: "Staff Sgt. Gary L. Woods Jr., 24, of Lebanon Junction, Ky., Staff Sgt. Bryan E. Hall, 32, of Elk Grove, Calif., Sgt. Edward W. Forrest Jr., 25, of St. Louis, Mo., Cpl. Jason G. Pautsch, 20, of Davenport, Iowa, and PV2 Bryce E. Gautier, 22, of Cypress, Calif." Sheryl Edelen (Courier-Journal) reports on Gary L. Woods Jr., "Woods' father, Gary Woods St., said that his son, who went by his middle name, Lee, was a talented musician who sang and played the trombone, drums, piano and guitar while a student at Bullitt Central High School. He was also a member of the school's football team. But after finding satisifation in ROTC classes, his son entered the military after high school, he said." Bob White (Lebanon Junction News Enterprise) adds, "Woods is surived by his parents, siblings and a wife, Christie, his father said." Tony Bizjak (Sacramento Bee) reports on Bryan Edward Hall, "Hall, 32, had served in the military for 14 years and had been deployed in Iraq since September. . . . Hall had received three Army commendation medals, according to military records, as well as several Army achievement, good conduct and war on terrorism medals." Dave Marquis (Sacramento's News10.net) quotes Debbie Lords, who is a neighbor of the Bryan Edward Hall's parents, stating, "I don't know what I'm thinking. I just really feel for John and Betty right now. It was their oldest son, their oldest child." Paul Hampel (St. Louis Post-Dispatch) reports on Edward Forrest Jr., "Forrest was based at Fort Carson in Colorado and lived near the base with his wife and two sons, ages 2 and one month. Forrest was a 2003 graduate of Rockwood Summit High School. He was on his third tour of duty in Iraq." His sister Melissa Forrest-Pliner tells Hampel, "I asked him not to re-enlist. I told him I didn't want him to be a hero. I just wanted him to be my brother." South County Times adds, "In high school, Sgt. Forrest, known as 'Eddie,' was a long distance runner on the track team, and was also on the wrestling team" and quotes his coach Rolland Garrison stating, "He was a very enthusiastic member of the track and field program here at Rockwood Summit. He was a very good kid with a great smile." Molly Hottle (Des Monies Register) reports on Jason Graham Pautsch, "David Pautsch was informed of his son's death Friday night, just 12 hours after the two had spoken on the phone. 'He believed n what he was doing,' David Pautsch said. 'This is what he wanted to do'." Nicole Murphy (WAQD, link has text and video) spoke with David Pautsch who explained the call he received, "'On behalf of the Secretary of the Army I just want to let you know, give our condolences and notify you that your son was killed in Mosul." Pautsch continues, "You're stunned and you're shocked and you find it hard to believe that it could actually be happening but then it seeps and that's when the emotions hit." Pautsch goes on to explain that he believes his son was protecting the US from the "terrorists" in Iraq and he also shares, "I'm thrilled for Jason that he's in heaven." Eugene W. Fields (Orange County Register) reports on Bryce E. Gautier, "Gauier, a medic, joined the Army in January of 2008 and had been in Iraq since January of this year, according to Army documents. He received the National Defense Service Medal, the Army Service Ribbon and the Global War on Terrorism Service Medal. Gautier graduated in 2005 from Rancho Alamitos High in Garden Grove, according to school district spokesman Alan Trudell." Tom Roeder and Maria St. Louis-Sanchez (Colorado Springs Gazette) note Gauier's MySpace page and add, "His sense of humor is evident from a posting on the site, which Gautier last updated three days before his death. 'Winners make the rules, losers just follow them,' Gautier wrote. 'In the Army now.' Gautier's brother, Even, left a simple eulogy on his Web page: 'My brother Bryce was one of the American soldiers killed in the suicide bombing in Iraq this morning. I love you bro. I will miss you'."
The U.S. State Department must not stand idly by if the Iraqi government fails to protect basic human rights, even if the persecution stems from traditional cultural or religious beliefs. We applaud Colorado Congressman Jared Polis for his efforts last week to shine the spotlight on the killings of homosexuals in Iraq, and to press the State Department to demand accountability from the Iraqi government. The first openly gay man to be elected to the House, Polis has been investigating the treatment of gays in Iraq for several months, according to The Post's Michael Riley. His research led to the discovery of a transgender Iraqi man who told the congressman he had been arrested, beaten and raped by security forces with Iraq's Ministry of Interior. Human-rights groups have passed information to Polis that claims another man was beaten into confessing he belonged to a gay-rights group and that the man had been sentenced to execution by an Iraqi court.
US House Rep Polis has made his letter to Patricia A. Butenis (Charge d'Affaires ad interim of the US State Dept) [PDF formart warning] here:
Dear Ms. Butenis:
Over the past week, I have become aware of egregious human rights violations against lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender (LGBT) Iraqis being carried out by Iraqi government officials from the Ministry of the Interior called "Magaweer al-Dakhilya." The information I received was derived from two separate testimonials of gay and transgender Iraqi men that were detained, tortured and sentenced to death for being members of an allegedly forbidden organization in Iraq called Iraqi LGBT. One of these invidividuals was able to escape, while the other was subsequently executed by Iraqi Ministry of Interior Security Forces.
While I do not know if these executions are being sanctioned at the highest levels of the Iraqi government, it is nonetheless distrubing that government officials and state-funded security forces are involved in the torturing and execution of LGBT Iraqis.
Even more disturbing was that the United States government appears to be largely unaware that the executions of gay and transgender Iraqis have been able to occur in Iraq given the enormous American presence. After reaching out to State Department officials in Washington, I was disappointed by their unwillingness to seriously consider these allegations and examine the evidence given to our office by international human rights watchdog organizations.
I urge you to use every channel at your disposal to properly and promptly invetigate these grave human rights violations. Please know that I will continue to monitor this situation and hope to be of assistance in this investigation."
At his Congressional website, Polis is quoted stating, "The United States should not tolerate human rights violations of nay kind, especially by a government that Americans spend billions of taxpayer dollars each year supporting. Hopefully my trip and letters to US and Iraqi officials will help bring international attention and investigation to this terrible situation and bring an end to any such offenses."
Last week, we noted the US State Dept and the United Nations have been silent on these and other attacks on the LGBT community in Iraq. The issue gets some attention today. BBC News explains Amnesty International states Nouri al-Maliki's government "must do more to protect" the LGBT community 'in the wak of a reported spate of killings of gay young men" and that they are pressing for "urgent and concerted action." Nigel Morris (Independent of London) explains that no arrests have been made in the recent murders -- he says six, it was seven -- and quotes Ali Hili stating, "Since mid-December we've been getting lots of reports about mass arrests and raids on houses, cafes, barbers shops." Mass arrests? It sounds like round-ups and those were common in Hilter's Germany where the LGBT community was targeted along with the Jewish community. (Iraq's Jewish community has been so targeted and so under assault that it barely exists at present.) Hili continues, "Most of the people who are arrested are found dead, with signs of torture and burns. We believe a war has been launched by the Iraqi Government and its establishment against gay people." As noted in the April 8th snapshot, the United Nations Secretary General issues statements all the time, condemning attacks in Iraq, but there has never been a statement from him on condemning the assaults on Iraq's LGBT community. And since the number reported continues to be in error, we'll drop back to the April 6th snapshot to again note:
In other violence noted over the weekend, Wisam Mohammed and Khalid al-Ansary (Reuters) reported Saturday that gays are being targeted in Baghdad, with four corpses discovered March 25th and 2 gay men murdered Thursday 'after clerics urged a crackdown'." Sunday Mohammed Tawfeeq (CNN) reported the two were first "disowned" (by their homophobic and hateful families) and "The shootings came after a tribal meeting was held and the members decided to go after the victims." Tawfeeq reports the other were also disowned (and gives the date of their deaths as March 26th) and states a cafe in Sadr City was torched when it was said to be an LGBT hangout in Baghdad. The Dallas Morning News wrote a brief on the topic and UPI summarized Tawfeeq's report. AFP reported Sunday that the two corpses discovered Thursday "had pieces of paper attached on which was written the word 'Pervert" and that the two men were aged sixteen and eighteen and had also had "their arms and legs broken". In addition, AFP reports another man presumed to be gay was found on Friday -- which would bring the toll to seven -- and this follows Sheikh Jassem al-Muatairi's 'inspiring' sermon denouncing "new private practices by some men who dress like women, who are effeminate. I call on families to prevent their children from following such a lifestyle."
Seven. Not six. Tomorrow the San Francisco Board of Supervisors meets and among the items on the agenda are a motion "Condemning the persecution and murders of Lesbian Gay Bisexual Transgender (LGBT) Iraqi Citizens": "Resolution calling on the US Department of State to use all diplomatic channels to work with the Iraqi Government to stop the persecution of Iraqi Lesbian Gay Bisexual Transgender (LGBT) citizens and immediately stop the murders of Iraqi LGBT citizens." If that takes place (and it should), the San Francisco Board of Supervisors will be the first governing body elected by any group of people to condemn the killings and assaults.
When my husband was blown up by a roadside bomb in Iraq, shattering my world, it was my sisters who stepped into the void, along with some of my dearest girlfriends. They began the business of filling my shoes while I sat by an ICU bed, praying for signs of life. They lined up food deliveries, kept the curious from the door, organized rides for our kids and paid our bills. They understood the business of ministering.
"This sucks," my one sister said. "You guys don't deserve this." She knew she could tell it like it was. There was no room for sugarcoating, and I didn't want any sunshine blowing up my backside. The reality was grim.
Months later, it was my turn in the hospital, when doctors found a potentially cancerous tumor lurking in my abdomen. I turned to my other sister. "I want to be you," I said simply as I lay in my bed with the catheter, too weak to move.
Lee Woodruff's husband is ABC News' Bob Woodruff who was reporting from Iraq when he and Doug Vogt were injured in a roadside bombing January 29, 2006. The Bob Woodruff Foundation focuses on the physical and psychological wounds of war. While Bob Woodruff survived, Reporters Without Borders counts 223 journalists as having died in the Iraq War. (They actually break that does to media assistants -- we don't. The 'assistants' have long been doing reporting -- as would happen in any war zone but is especially true of the Iraq War.) The two most recent journalists known to have been killed in Iraq are Haidar Hashim Suhail and Suhaib Adnan of Al-Baghdadia TV who were killed March 10th in an Anbar Province bombing. So many reporters, Iraq and foreign, have been wounded and given their lives attempting to report from that country and it's not at all appreciated by thug-meister Nouri al-Maliki. Alsumaria reports: The Iraqi Government decision to detain back prisoners released by US Forces is subject to a political and security hassle. Baghdad Operations spokesman Brigadier Qassem Ata affirmed that the Command has ordered checkpoints to arrest all freed detainees recently released by US Forces. Ata told Al Hayat Newspaper that the operations command has distributed names and photos of released detainees on all checkpoints to detain them after they were involved in recent bombings in Baghdad. He noted that keeping those detainees out of prison will deteriorate the security situation and will threaten stability after US Forces withdraw from the cities to their bases at the end of June. Asked about the possibility of delaying US withdrawal after latest security incidents, Ata said the US military did not notify us about such intentions."The Times" British Newspaper expected yesterday to delay US Forces withdrawal from Iraqi volatile cities. The Newspaper quoted a US Army General as saying that insecurities in Mosul and Baaquba might force US Military to extend their military operations in those cities beyond June 30. This topic is one that upsets Nouri al-Maliki's thug government. Robert H. Reid (AP) reports the thug government is attempting to close a TV station (Al-Sharqiya) and a newspaper (Al-Hayat) over reports that al-Maliki's thugs are arresting the prisoners as the US releases them. Reid explains Nouri's government is bothered by the press explaining that arrests of Sahwa ("Awakening" Council members, "Sons of Iraq") might have been politically motivated. Yesterday Alissa J. Rubin (New York Times) reported on the 12 killed Saturday in the suicide bombing attack in Iskandariyah as they attempted to collect their long overdue pay checks. Rubin explores the continued attacks on the Sahwa and the tensions in the Sunni community as a result. Rubin observes that for all the speculation over the very visible attacks (including arrests), the tensions were always there between the Sahwa movement (Sunni) and the US installed government in Baghdad which is dominated by Shi'ites (and by Iraqis who willingly went into exile and only returned to Iraq after the US invaded). Rubin notes the 27-day imprisonment of Sheik Maher Sarhan Abbas who was arrested "in secret and came to light when The New York Times by chance contacted someone who had seen him in jail." While the US continues to see Abbas as someone to be trusted and while his "Shiite neighbors trusted him" as well, Nouri's foces burst into his home on March 15th, "just after midnight, heavily armed men flung deafening smoke grenades into his home in Hawr Jab, a small village on Baghdad's southern outskirts, his family said. They burst into the bedroom where Sheik Maher and his wife were watching television as their 3-year-old daughter slept in a small bed next to them." Along with Nouri's goons, US forces were present and it's suspceted that they "were probably from a Special Operations unit". The latest hypothesis among "Awakenings" is that their Sunni enemies are telling lies to the Shi'ite government which, loathing the "Awakenings," uses any excuse to arrest them. Rubin includes this: A senior American official in Iraq was also skeptical of the motives for the arrests. "Why is the government doing this?" said the official, who asked not to be named because he is not authorized to speak to the news media. "Every time we said to the government, 'You have to let this guy go,' they do it, which they wouldn't if they thought he was really dangerous," the American said. "I think they have their hand in the sectarian cookie jar."
Today, the city of oatmeal-colored minarets that straddles the Tigris River feels like a military base, with streets tangled by blast walls and checkpoints.
Backed by U.S. troops and advisers, Iraq's mostly Shiite national police and army control the city. They coexist uneasily with the local Sunni police force and the Sons of Iraq -- former Sunni insurgents who turned against the militant group al-Qaeda in Iraq and allied with the U.S. military.
Neither the local police nor the Sons of Iraq are allowed to protect the shrine, which is guarded by an array of mostly Shiite units sent by the central government.
"I don't believe that any people or city feel comfortable when they have an army from outside. The traditions from their areas are different than ours," said Sheik Mudher al-Naisani, a Sunni tribal leader. "That's right, this is one country. But it is better for Iraq that each serve in their own areas."
While most Iraqis believe that al-Qaeda in Iraq insurgents planted the bombs, many Sunni leaders here place the blame on the national police and U.S. troops who were guarding the shrine. Members of Iraq's national police force have committed some of the most horrendous sectarian crimes since the 2003 U.S.-led invasion; to this day there are widespread suspicions of infiltration by Shiite militias.
"It was a conspiracy," said Hussen, the Sunni council leader.
Are Sunnis who believe that right or wrong? It doesn't matter because they believe it. And that's a 2006 event and nothing was ever done to ease the tensions. These tensions do not go away, they do not vanish. They may get worked through by the parties involved but an outside power (the US in this case) can never impose anything because it doesn't last. The US has backed, armed and supported the Shi'ites thereby setting the stage for any bloodbaths that follow a US withdrawal. If those bloodbaths come (and they are likely), the withdrawal will not be responsible for them. The culprit will be all the years the US spent propping up a puppet government. Without the propping up, Nouri (or whomever) would have had to have made peace with the Sunnis long ago. They're too big of a population group for a leader to blow off and expect to remain in power unless the only reason the leader remains in power (as is the case with Nouri) is because a foreign government that installed him continued to prop him up. Barack's not promising withdrawal, he's promising a draw down. But at some point in the future the US will withdraw from Iraq. When that happens, any violence that follows is not because of the withdrawal, it is because of everything that came before. And, sidebar, Sudarsan Raghavan's done a wonderful job reporting in the above story; however, he's also done a wonderful job writing it -- so much so that it recalls the best of Rajiv Chandrasekaran.
In the summer of 2006, al-Maliki listed his 'plan' amidst the crackdown on Baghdad and it included attacks on the press. When the January 31st provincial elections took place in 14 of Iraq's 18 provinces, al-Maliki attempted to strong arm the press and force them into signing agreements which would allow them to be punished and penalized if al-Maliki was displeased. His latest attacks on the press and freedoms are nothing news and part of a thug pattern which includes yesterday's news: In Iraq today, a committee in Parliament offered a rebuke of the police. Sameer N. Yacoub (AP) reports the committee was offended that the police raided an art show and seized an illustration "lampooning Iraq's prime minister." No word on whether or not he was in 'Muslim garb' and doing a fist bump. (For those who didn't catch that, it was a reference to the faux outrage over a New Yorker cartoon cover that demonstrated there's more than a little bit of Denmark in the US.)
Part of my job as Public Diplomacy Officer is to share U.S. culture and values with Iraqis, but it's also to support Iraqi efforts to preserve their own culture. We asked the women to bring in examples of their work, and we hung their paintings along the walls of the meeting hall. Very few of the women had had formal art training. Painting was a hobby for all, a creative outlet for some, and an escape for others. Their artwork spanned the spectrum of their life's experiences. Some paintings were colorful and bright, while others were dark and depressing. All documented the lives of women in Muthanna. We chatted with the women about doing a larger gallery showing. Would they be interested in holding a multi-city art exhibition if I could get the funding? They were thrilled with the idea. What began as a meeting with a stoic group of Iraqi women with canvases in hand, ended in a beehive of excitement with ideas flowing freely. Here was a demographic that seldom had the chance to speak out. Their art resonated with me deeply, and I was committed to finding a way to help these women tell their stories. I went back to my office that evening and immediately began to work on a proposal. In no time at all, my proposal was approved (who says the Federal Government moves at a glacial pace?), and I was busy working with an NGO to purchase art supplies and canvases for each of the exhibit participants. The artists would paint submissions for an exhibit that would show in Muthanna's three largest cities, Samawa, Rumaytha, and Khider, sometime in the spring. For the artists, it would be the first time most of them had ever displayed their art publicly. One woman told us that she had painted for years, but feared no one would ever see her work. Another woman, considerably older and pointing to a young woman next to her, proclaimed, "I am here for my daughter-in-law! I told my son, 'he must support her dreams!' So I am here to make sure she has a chance!"
For more, you can refer to Aaron Snipe's second blog post. Meanwhile, Iraq was once a book lover's paradise. Corinne Reilly (McClatchy Newspapers) reports, "The widespread looting that followed the invasion destroyed library collections across Iraq. Booksellers and publishing housing closed as violence spread, and the priorities of many Iraqis shifted from reading and learning to staying alive and finding ways out of the country. In 2007, a series of explosions ripped through Baghdad's Mutanabi Street, shutting down the book market known for decades as Iraq's most popular gathering place for intellectuals and bibliophiles. Many of its shops and cafes have only recently reopened." By the way, returning to the topic of the press, Russell Crowe is outstanding in State of Play and, while discussing the film, Mary Riddell (Telegraph of London) addresses the global problems newspapers are facing -- as opposed to the fairy tales the New York Times served up this morning. (Ben Affleck is also amazing in the film as is Robin Wright Penn. And Helen Mirren is in State of Play. Translation, Helen Mirren is wonderful as always.)
Turning to some of today's other reported violence (we started with some of today's violence) . . .
Bombings?
Shootings?
Corpses?
Yesterday the top US commander in Iraq, Gen Ray Odierno, appeared on CNN and was interviewed by John King (link has text and video). He discussed the treaty masquerading as a Status Of Forces Agreement which supposedly binds the US to leave all Iraqi cities by the end of this June and to leave the country by the end of 2011. Despite that alleged 'binding' agreement, Odierno stated US troops might not leave Iraqi cities at the end of June ("If we believe that we'll need troops to maintain a presence in some of the cities, we'll recommend that, but, ultimately, it will the decision of Prime Minister Maliki"), however , "As you ask me today, I believe it's a 10 -- that we will be gone by 2011." He believes. Not "It's a 10, we will be gone in 2011." Believes. Odierno's not staking his reputation on anyone else's promise and he has always worded very carefully on this topic. Jonathan D. Salant (Bloomberg News) puts it this way, "Odierno said he expects to meet the 2011 deadline. There are 142,000 U.S. troops in Iraq." Deborah Solomon (Wall St. Journal) summarizes it as follows, "The top U.S. general in Iraq said the U.S. is on track to withdraw combat troops from Iraq by August 2010 but could adjust the pace over the next 18 months depending on the stability of the country."
In other news, Abo Obama -- aka Samson Obama -- is in the news and, strangely, while everyone else with a criminal arrest record gets stuck with their birth name, reports continue to call him "Samson Obama." Considering that he gave a phony name at his arrest, maybe they should all stick to his birth name: Abo Obama. He is the half-brother of Barack and they have been photographed together and Barack has written of him. wowOwow reports, "Various news outlets report that British officials denied the U.S. president's half-brother Samson Obama a visa because he was accused of sexual assault last November. And, during that incident, Mr. Obama gave police a false name. He was not arrested or charged for that crime. His fingerprints and other data were stored in a national database and the president's estranged half-brother -- the men have not spoken in 20 years, according to the White House -- went back home to Kenya." Isaiah's The World Today Just Nuts "Brotherly Embarrassment" covered this last night. For the record, it was sexual assault at underage girls with the youngest being a 13-year-old. He is over 40 himself. Strangely, all the reports -- and they're linked in Isaiah's comic -- somehow avoid mentioning his age. I can't remember a time when someone with an arrest record made the news and the press refused to list his age or, for that matter, his birth name. The arrest took place in November, either in the last stages of Barack's campaign or after the election -- the press won't tell us that either. In January, he was enroute to the US -- for the inauguration -- and the UK refused to let him in. No word on whether he made it into the US or not. And let me plub Kat's " Kat's Korner: The LOtUSFLOW3R Blooms ... and rocks" which is her review of Prince's new album LOtUSFLOW3R.
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Posted at 03:51 pm by thecommonills
Permalink
The
U.S. State Department must not stand idly by if the Iraqi government
fails to protect basic human rights, even if the persecution stems from
traditional cultural or religious beliefs.We applaud Colorado Congressman Jared Polis
for his efforts last week to shine the spotlight on the killings of
homosexuals in Iraq, and to press the State Department to demand
accountability from the Iraqi government.The
first openly gay man to be elected to the House, Polis has been
investigating the treatment of gays in Iraq for several months, according to The Post's Michael Riley.
His research led to the discovery of a transgender Iraqi man who told
the congressman he had been arrested, beaten and raped by security
forces with Iraq's Ministry of Interior.Human-rights
groups have passed information to Polis that claims another man was
beaten into confessing he belonged to a gay-rights group and that the
man had been sentenced to execution by an Iraqi court. The above is the opening to the Denver Post's Sunday editorial " Killing
of gay Iraqis shouldn't be ignored: We applaud Rep. Jared Polis for his
efforts last week to shine the spotlight on the killings of homosexuals
in Iraq." For more on the issue, you can see this snapshot, this entry and the roundtable Friday night [" Roundtable on Iraq," " Roundtabling Iraq," " the roundtable," " Iraq," " Iraq in the Kitchen," " Roundtable on Iraq," " Talking Iraq," " Iraq," " Talking Iraq roundtable" and " Iraq roundtable"] -- from the roundtable, we'll note Wally's comments -- actually we'll note an entire section. Ava
and I typed this up (and took the notes during the roundtable) but were
tired and I'm reading over this section this morning and it's fresh and
new to me: Betty: I wanted to talk about Iraq's LGBT population. In the April 2nd snapshot, C.I. noted the reports that they were being executed. No one followed that story this week until we found out, see yesterday's snapshot,
that US House Rep Jared Polis went to Iraq and was given information
about a gay man sentenced to death for being gay. Why isn't anyone
writing about this? Michael Riley (Denver Post) was covering it
but I'm not even sure if he grasped all of what he was reporting and,
if he did grasp it, I think he intentionally downplayed it. Maybe
because he thought if he didn't downplay it, it might be seen as too
explosive for print. But read his article. A member of the US Congress
has been given information that states a gay man is going to be put to
execution because he is gay. The Congress member finds the information
and documentation so convincing that he raises the issue on his Iraq
trip. I'd say this is pretty big news. Cedric:
I'd agree with you Betty and I'd argue that if all the people writing
last week about the executions hadn't been doing that. and that
includes C.I. doing the why-are-we-silent writing, we wouldn't have
gotten Timothy Williams and Tareq Maher's " Iraq's Newly Open Gays Face Scorn and Murder"
in the New York Times this week. That's really the strongest article on
this subject that paper has published. And, speculating, I'm wondering
is it that the paper previously didn't care about the issue, thought
readers didn't care about the issue, thought it wasn't among the
important issues or what? Mike:
Well when they can write that stupid article on the Humvee dealership
in Iraq then if it's that the paper didn't think LGBT was an "important
issue," that's saying a lot. And none of it good about the paper.
Ruth:
I honestly think that there is a 'queasy' aspect to it -- I am talking
about among the press. It happens far too often, an issue involving an
attack on the LGBT community in any country, even our own, never gets
the kind of attention it deserves. Never. I think a large portion of
the press, especially above the reporters' level, are uncomfortable
with LGBT issues and the LGBT community.
Ava:
Well, in terms of the New York Times, they have a shameful history on
AIDS in the eighties and I would argue that's because of the "queasy"
aspect Ruth's talking about. They didn't see gays and lesbians as 'real
human beings' so when a disease that wasknown as the "gay cancer"
struck, they didn't want to devote the kind of attention they would
have if the same disease had targeted red-headed-four-year-old boys,
for example.
Mike:
I don't want to dominate the roundtable but if I can make another
point, and I'll try to be quick, homophobia is out there and it's not
going away. It might get reduced, but it's not going away any time
soon. And if we're not willing to combat it, then I don't know what's
going to happen. I am eager about one thing that's coming up.
Marcia:
I agree with you, Mike, but I want to also say how important it is that
someone like Mike says that and not just me. I'm a lesbian. It's
important that I speak out. But Mike's a straight man and it's really
important that he speak out as well. I think the gay community is
something like one in ten. The LGBT community needs to speak up but we
also need support from the straight community. In terms of what Mike's
talking about coming up, I agree. And I'm excited about it as well.
It's something we're going to be doing at Third. A regular feature. But
I would agree there's a silence and, like Ruth, I would have to say
it's because it makes some straight people uncomfortable.
Betty:
If I can say one more thing on this topic, I'd just like to point out
that gays are being targeted in Iraq. By the clergy, by the police and
apparently by their state government. And the fact that so many --
including Liar Barack -- have taken to tossing around terms like
"democracy" at a time when homophobia is expressed with criminal intent
is appalling. And it's disgusting to see US leaders hail a country
where homophobia and homophobic murders are condoned by the governemtn.
It's disgusting.
Wally:
Well the silence goes beyond the press and it also includes our own
State Dept which has never condemened the murders. It didn't condemn
under the homophobe Colin Powell, it didn't condemn then under Condi
Rice and it's not condemning them under Hillary Clinton. Now I happen
to like Hillary and, as most people reading this will know, from
something like January through the primary in Puerto Rico, I was on the
road campaigning for her. I ended up taking off the semester to do
that. I believed in her campaign that much. She's being silent. Now I
could be an Obot and say, "She needs more time to speak! She needs to
get comfortable!" I could offer a million excuses but the reality is
she has not spoken out against it and that's not right, and there's no
excuse for it, and I'm embarrassed and ashamed for Hillary. And I'll
tell you one more thing, I'd be talking about that like her if she was
president. Because I don't believe in hero worship. Unlike the Cult of
St. Barack, I don't offer excuses. And I believe Hillary would make a
great president. But I believe that because I think she's smart. So
when someone that smart and that wise doesn't speak out against the
murders, it is appalling and I will call out. I will repeat, Hillary
Clinton, I am ashamed and embarrassed by your silence. I am fully aware
that there are issues that are policy and that come above Hillary. That
would include the Israel situtation, for example. There she's merely
executing policy. However, in terms of this issue, in terms of
condemning any murders in any country -- I'm talking warfare, supposed
or otherwise -- she has the power, due to the office she holds, to
issue a state condemning the murders. She hasn't done it. I'm appalled.
Shame on you, Hillary, you know better. And Kat I knew Betty's topic,
Rebecca, which is why we were holding off on talking.
Kat:
Right. And it is an important topic but just to back up a second, I
agree with Wally and if Hillary had gotten the nomination, she would be
president, we all know that, we all know she got more votes than Barack
in the primaries and we all know she would have done better than he did
in the general. But if she was president, we wouldn't be playing fan
club to Hillary. We'd be doing what Wally just did right now. And Wally
gave his all to getting the word out on Hillary. He dropped out of
college because he took some weeks off and ended up deciding that it
was more important that he campaign for her. The original plan was just
to campaign for her for a few weeks, he ended up dropping out to
campaign for her. And he still believes she would make a wonderful
president but that didn't prevent him from calling her out on her
silence and doing so strongly. And if she were president and going back
on her word to withdraw one brigade a month from Iraq, we'd all be
calling her out. The Obots aren't politically educated or smart. They
needed a crush, an empty vessel upon which they could impose their
dreams of love and romance. It and they are disgusting. Now in terms of
the LGBT community in Iraq, I don't want to hear any garbage about
Muslim religion or any of that other s**t. We don't use "Muslim
religion" or "Muslim culture" to hide behind murdering Jews or
Christians. Murder's wrong. That's not open to debate. That the US has
installed a regime in Iraq which thinks it's okay to murder gays and
lesbians -- and even if the government is not executing them, they are
turning a blind eye to their murders -- explains how sick and perverted
this illegal war really was. And to be clear "Muslim religion" or
"Muslim culture," gays and lesbians still were in Iraq. They are
Iraqis. And they had acceptance before the illegal war. They are a part
of Muslim culture whether fundamentalists want to accept it or not. And
they are a part of Iraq and they should have been protected. I
loved Wally's comments and told him that after the roundtable Friday
night but I really love them reading over it and I'm going to make it a
truest -- there will be three at Third
now -- retroactively. I don't think anyone will have a problem with
that. I'll probably include Kat's remarks because I think they are
pertinent to the calling out Wally's doing. Last week, we noted the US
State Dept and the United Nations have been silent on these and other
attacks on the LGBT community in Iraq. The issue gets some attention
today. BBC News offers " Fears over Iraq gay killing spate:" The
Iraqi government must do more to protect homosexuals in the wake of a
reported spate of killings of gay young men, Amnesty International has
urged.In the last few
weeks, 25 boys and men are reported to have been killed in Baghdad
because they were, or were perceived to be, gay, Amnesty said.In a letter to Prime Minister Nouri Maliki, the rights organisation called for "urgent and concerted action".It also criticised the government's failure to condemn the killings.Nigel Morris' " Iraqi leaders attacked over spate of homophobic murders" ( Independent of London) explains Amnesty hasn't yet released the letter to al-Maliki and he notes: The
bodies of four gay men, each bearing a sign with the Arabic word for
"pervert" on their chests, were discovered in Sadr City three weeks
ago. Following the discovery of another two corpses six days later, an
unnamed official in the city told Reuters: "They were sexual deviants.
Their tribes killed them to restore their family honour."No
arrests have been made. Ali Hili, the London spokesman for Iraqi LGBT
(Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transgender) said it had received reports of
at least 63 killings in the last four months. He told The Independent:
"Since mid-December we've been getting lots of reports about mass
arrests and raids on houses, cafes, barbers shops." He claimed police
and the Ministry of the Interior were behind some of the murders."Most
of the people who are arrested are found dead, with signs of torture
and burns. We believe a war has been launched by the Iraqi Government
and its establishment against gay people."Mr
Hili said homosexuals in the country were forced to live in hiding for
fear of abduction and death. Some had managed to escape to the west,
with another 20 preparing to flee Iraq.He
said: "It's impossible to be gay and out ... It's the most difficult
thing to be in Iraq. People visit each other's houses, they meet in
places where it's safe ... for the most effeminate cases, we advise
them not to go out at all." The Telegraph of London covers the issue here. Meanwhile Alsumaria reports: The
Iraqi Government decision to detain back prisoners released by US
Forces is subject to a political and security hassle. Baghdad
Operations spokesman Brigadier Qassem Ata affirmed that the Command has
ordered checkpoints to arrest all freed detainees recently released by
US Forces.Ata told Al Hayat
Newspaper that the operations command has distributed names and photos
of released detainees on all checkpoints to detain them after they were
involved in recent bombings in Baghdad.He
noted that keeping those detainees out of prison will deteriorate the
security situation and will threaten stability after US Forces withdraw
from the cities to their bases at the end of June.Asked
about the possibility of delaying US withdrawal after latest security
incidents, Ata said the US military did not notify us about such
intentions."The Times"
British Newspaper expected yesterday to delay US Forces withdrawal from
Iraqi volatile cities. The Newspaper quoted a US Army General as saying
that insecurities in Mosul and Baaquba might force US Military to
extend their military operations in those cities beyond June 30.This
topic is one that upsets Nouri al-Maliki's thug government. Qassim
Abdul-Zahra (AP) reports the thug government is attempting to close a
TV station (Al-Sharqiya) and a newspaper (Al-Hayat) over reports that
al-Maliki's thugs are arresting the prisoners as the US releases them.
In the summer of 2006, al-Maliki listed his 'plan' amidst the crackdown
on Baghdad and it included attacks on the press. When the January 31st
provincial elections took place in 14 of Iraq's 18 provinces, al-Maliki
attempted to strong arm the press and force them into signing
agreements which would allow them to be punished and penalized if
al-Maliki was displeased. His attacks on the press and freedoms are
nothing news and part of a thug pattern which includes yesterday's news: In Iraq today, a committee in Parliament offered a rebuke of the police. Sameer N. Yacoub (AP) reports
the committee was offended that the police raided an art show and
seized an illustration "lampooning Iraq's prime minister." No word on
whether or not he was in 'Muslim garb' and doing a fist bump. (For
those who didn't catch that, it was a reference to the faux outrage
over a New Yorker cartoon cover that demonstrated there's more than a
little bit of Denmark in the US.)Germany's DPA reports
Mosul saw "hundreds of Kurds" protest today as they demanded to be
included in the Kurdistan Regional Government. Unrelated in terms of
Mosul but the KRG notes: Fact sheets about the Kurdistan Region Some
essential fact sheets about the Kurdistan Region. Please click the
links below to view, download and save the files in PDF format. The Kurdistan Region in brief About the Kurdistan Regional Government Travelling to the Kurdistan RegionA guide to flights, hotels, communications, currency, national holidays, places of interest and specialist travel agencies. Doing business in the Kurdistan RegionAn overview of direct investment, chambers of commerce, company registration, trade missions, visas, and trade shows. See also Economy and business Natural resources: Oil & gas Kurdistan Region Investment Law Kurdistan Region Oil and Gas Law Travel information Investment guide, The Kurdistan Region: Invest in the Future
Noam Chomsky is on Democracy Now!
this morning. It's the interview that aired two Friday's ago on WBAI
during the fundraising. The one that had many saying, "Wow, what
bravery . . . after the election." Expect a lot more of that now that
it's easy to criticize. In fairness to Noam, he didn't endorse Barack.
Howard Zinn would like everyone to remember (that cares about politics)
that he did not endorse Barack. Of course, he did endorse Barack. He
endorsed him and then the outrage was so loud and so clear, he turned around and endorsed Ralph. Or pretended to. Speaking to SewerNet
March 19th (we don't link to sites that may be sexual predators and why
else would they e-mail various people in attempts to gather information
on a 14-year-old boy?), he was asked about his endorsement of Barack
and he replied: Endorsed Obama?
(Laughs.) Yes -- I endorsed Obama, I wanted him to win. I wanted Bush
and Cheney out of there. I wanted change -- and the truth is I didn't
have much choice. It was Bush or Obama. I chose Obama.So now he's a Barack endorser yet again. I don't need to hear from Coward Zinn's Defense. I'm not Jim,
I won't be nice. Coward went on to 'host' a Barack ball in DC and then
realized how shameful and embarrassing that was so he and his defense
decided not to attend. When called on it, at Third, the defense railed
that Coward and he weren't participating. Yes, you were. You allowed
your names to be used as sponsors -- allowed it even after you decided
not to attend. You were hosting that ball and so was Coward Zinn. It's
not our fault that he chose 2008 to remove his spine. It's not our
fault that he chose 2008 to sell out his integrity and his life's work. Again,
Noam should have said what's broadcast today on Democracy Now! back in
2008. But, to his credit, he didn't endorse Barack (he endorsed Cynthia
McKinney) and he didn't schill for Barack and he certainly didn't host
an inauguration party for Barack. Noam could have spoken out
more (and loudly) but he didn't disgrace himself. He's off on his
assessment of Palin and his remarks about learning about 'parts of
America' ("flyover country" -- he says using an apparent GOP term) via
right-wing talk radio is rather sad. Noam's not able to mix with the
people? Did he puchase Neverland from Michael Jackson? In terms of
populist anger and what might happen, that was noted here long ago and
we didn't have to distort Sarah Palin (intentionally or not) in order
to do so. On populist rage, here's an example of it, from ETAN:Tax Day Protests Against the War Economy and Paying for War
For Immediate Release
Contact: Ruth Benn, Coordinator National War Tax Resistance Coordinating Committee (NWTRCC) Brooklyn, New York 800-269-7464 (718-768-3420) or nwtrcc@nwtrcc.org
Brooklyn,
NY On Wednesday, April 15, at post offices, federal buildings, and
public squares around the country, last minute taxpayers and passers by
will be met with signs demanding “Taxes for Peace Not War!” Handouts
will explain what the government tries to obscure: the obscene amount
of U.S. tax dollars being spent on war at the expense of jobs,
infrastructure, human needs programseven a healthy economy.
“It
is often believed that wars and military spending increases are good
for the economy. In fact, most economic models show that military
spending diverts resources from productive uses, such as consumption
and investment, and ultimately slows economic growth and reduces
employment,” according to economist Dean Baker in a 2007 study by the Center for Economic and Policy Research.
The
Obama administration’s promises to end the war in Iraqeventuallybut
leaving 50,000 “advisers” in the country sounds more like continued
occupation of a sovereign country. The expansion of war in Afghanistan
and into Pakistan brings daily reports of more civilian deaths piled
onto the thousands already killed by U.S. actions in the region.
Obama’s 2010 budget includes further increases for the Pentagon, which
is already funded at levels higher than any time since World War
IIhardly an indication that the U.S. is on the road to peace.
Tax
day protesters hope to bring attention to the connection between
wasteful war spending and the budget crises of states, cities, and
towns that are slashing essential programs.
Conscientious
objectors to paying for war will be among those making a visible
protest on tax day. “Haven’t Paid Federal Taxes Since 1998” is a sign
carried by Lincoln Rice in Milwaukee. Don Schrader of Albuquerque
carries his “I Refuse to Pay Federal Income Tax for War” sign wherever
he goes. Many of these war tax resisters keep their income low to avoid
federal taxes; others pay their tax due to charities rather than the
IRS, despite the potential consequences. On tax day Boston activists
will be among the groups publicly presenting grants from redirected tax
dollars to peace, justice, and humanitarian groups.
Similar
events will take place around the country. See the listing below,
collected by National War Tax Resistance Coordinating Committee, or on
the internet at http://www.nwtrcc.org/taxday2009.htm.
The
National War Tax Resistance Coordinating Committee (NWTRCC), founded in
1982, is a coalition of local, regional and national groups providing
information and support to people who are conscientious objectors to
paying taxes for war. NWTRCC initiated the War Tax Boycottin 2008,
which includes a list of public war tax refusers at wartaxboycott.org.
-- 30 –
War tax resisters are available for interviews. Please contact NWTRCC if you need contacts in your area.
LIST OF TAX DAY ACTIONS FOR WEDNESDAY, APRIL 15, 2009
List in formation. Updated at http://www.nwtrcc.org/taxday2009.htm.
CALIFORNIA Bay Area – Northern California War Tax Resistance, http://www.nowartax.org.
April 14, 7 - 8 pm: In front of Herbst Theater, where Amy Goodman will
be speaking about “Standing Up to the Madness” to help show attendees
one way they can stand up. April 15: 6 - 9 am at Glen Park BART, where
we will attract the early morning media, and then educate the commuter
foot traffic with our display and hand-outs. April 15th, 11 am – 1 pm,
at Civic Center Plaza, where we’ll join the “Tea Party” protesters
against government waste and pork, while reminding them that the worst
examples are found in the military budget. 4 - 6 pm at Balboa Park
BART, showing off our new federal spending banner and educating
taxpayers about government spending priorities
COLORADO Colorado Springs – Citizens for Peace in Space. Leafleting with tax pie charts and other information at the Post Office. Time TBA.
DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA Washington – Washington Area War Tax Resistance. Vigil and leafleting at IRS headquarters, 1111 Constitution NW. Noon.
KANSAS Newton – Heartland Peace Tax Fund.
Articles, survey with collection of testimonies from Mennonite war tax
resisters, mailings with income tax pie chart, and more.
KENTUCKY Louisville Fellowship of Reconciliation-Louisville chapter. (502) 458-8056 or . Leafleting and penny poll at corner of Fifth & Market. Noon.
INDIANA South Bend – Michiana War Tax Refusers. (574) 289-2126, Peter Smith or http://www.michianapeacejustice.org. Vigil and leafleting at the Main Post Office. 5 pm–9 pm.
IOWA Dubuque–Citizens’
Tax Moratorium. (563) 583-2586. Vigil and leafleting downtown at
Federal Building, 6th and Locust. 5:30 pm–7:30 pm. (Also every Monday,
5:30 pm–6:30 pm.)
MAINE Across the State – Maine War Tax Resistance Resource Center and
other groups. (207) 525-7776. Leafleting with flyers about war taxes,
budget priorities, and related issues at post offices and busy places.
Before or on April 15. Bangor: Jane Livingston, 947-4117, or Gerald Oleson, 947-2970 Belfast: Larry Dansinger, 525-7776 Bath/Brunswick: Mary Beth Sullivan, 443-9502 Ellsworth: Frank Donnelly, 461-5080 Farmington: Eileen Liddy, 645-4755 Kennebunk: Jamilla El Shafei Portland: Peace Action Maine, 772-0680 or Bill Slavick, 773-6562 Damariscotta: Suzanne Hedrick, 563-7041
MASSACHUSETTS Boston - New England War Tax Resistance, (781) 237-4690 or Larry Rosenwald.
A festive event including presentation of grants from redirected tax
dollars to three Peace and Justice groups. Outside the South Postal
Annex near South Station. 8:30 PM
Greenfield - Pioneer Valley War Tax Refusers, Email
or (413) 774-2640. Picket with leaflets and placards along Main St.,
urging non-payment of Federal Income tax.. Printed matter will be
offered at a sidewalk table by the Food Co-op, with the hope of opening
a friendly exchange of views on this vital concern. 9 am until noon.
MISSOURI St. Louis - St. Louis Covenant Community of War Tax Resisters,
(314) 725-5303 . Actions in collaboration with Women in Black, WILPF,
the Instead of War Coalition. Tuesday, April 14: 11:30 am Gather and
vigil in the Delmar Loop Plaza (6635 Delmar). Noon, process and leaflet
through a restaurant district with the pie chart and the leaflet that
the U.S. Committee to End the Israeli Occupation on taxes and U.S.
military aid to Israel. 12:30 Procession ends at Sen. Claire McCaskill
Office's (5850 Delmar). Vigil in front of the office till 1 pm and then
turn in tax resistance letters to the Senator's staff.
NEW HAMPSHIRE Across the State – New Hampshire Peace Action or Ginny Schneider.
The call is out for people to set up tables with penny polls,
educational materials, a petition to deliver to members of Congress,
and a bookmark to give out in towns across the state at schools, post
offices and town squares.
NEW YORK New York City – NYC War Resisters League, NYC People’s Life Fund, and the Rude Mechanical Orchestra. (718) 768-7306 or http://www.warresisters.org.
Meet and leaflet at Manhattan IRS office,110W. 44th Street, at 4 pm,
then at 5:30 pm march to main post office at 8th Ave. and 34th St. for
vigil, leafleting, redirection ceremony.
New City - Rockland Coalition for Peace & Justice, http://www.rocklandaction.org . Annual Tax Day vigil on the steps of the Rockland County courthouse. 11:30 am - 12:30 pm.
NORTH CAROLINA Asheville – Ashville Area War Tax Resistance.
828-242-5610. Banners and flyer distribution in front of the downtown
public library, visible throughout town from the Library to the Federal
Building to the Post Office on Coxe Avenue. 3-5 pm, followed by potluck
and discussion with Veterans for Peace and War Resisters League.
OREGON Eugene Community Action of Lane County. (541) 485-1755. Penny poll and literature distribution at downtown Eugene post office.
Portland – Oregon Community for War Tax Resistance/WRL.
(503) 238-0605. April 11: redirection of tax dollars at the public
library. April 15: Holding “Burma Shave” signs on the local bridges
during morning rush hours
PENNSYLVANIA Bethlehem – LEPOCO. (610) 691-8730 or http://www.lepoco.org. Contact the office to get leaflets and connect with others for leafleting at area post offices.
Newtown, Bucks County - Coalition for Peace Action and Penn Action. http://www.cfpabuxmont.org, http://www.pennaction.org
or 215-380-6804. Tax Day Vigil Silver Lake Park next to Lockheed
Martin, Route 413 bypass in Newtown, Bucks County, PA. Invest our Tax
Dollars in a Peace Economy! NOT in Lockheed Martin. 4:30-5:30 pm. More
protests at Lockheed Martin April 23, http://www.brandywinepeace.com.
VERMONT Burlington – Bread and Roses Committee. (802) 355-2977. Leafleting at Post Office.
WASHINGTON Olympia - Olympia Movement for Justice & Peace, http://www.omjp.org, Olympia Fellowship of Reconciliation, http://www.olyfor.org.
Annual protest vigil against the self-destructive madness of paying for
U.S. wars, occupations, and continued imperialism around the globe.
Main Post Office at 9th & Jefferson. 10 am into the evening.
Seattle NACC. (206) 547-0952, http://seanacc.org. Leafleting at several post offices from 4 to 5 pm (and other times).
WISCONSIN Milwaukee – Milwaukee War Tax Resistance and Casa Maria Catholic Worker. Lincoln Rice or 414-344-5745. Hold signs and pass our leaflets on at Milwaukee's main post office located at 345 W St. Paul Ave. 5 pm–6 pm.Bonnie reminds that Kat's " Kat's Korner: The LOtUSFLOW3R Blooms ... and rocks" and Isaiah's The World Today Just Nuts "Brotherly Embarrassment." The e-mail address for this site is common_ills@yahoo.com. iraqthe denver postmichael rileybbc newsnigel morrisqassim abdul-zahraalsumariademocracy nownoam chomskyetanthe world today just nutsthe third estate sunday reviewkats kornerlike maria said pazkats kornersex and politics and screeds and attitudethomas friedman is a great mantrinas kitchenthe daily jotcedrics big mixmikey likes itruths reportsickofitradlzoh boy it never ends
Posted at 06:44 am by thecommonills
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Washington Post front pages Iraq, NYT whines
Fifteen
feet tall, half a mile long, the walls wind like a concrete ribbon
through the heart of this scarred holy city, the cradle of Iraq's
sectarian war. Shiite pilgrims flow alongside them toward the shattered
al-Askari mosque, a symbol of a resuscitating Iraq. Shiite national
security forces -- and not a single local Sunni policeman -- patrol the
area. On the other side of the walls, shops lie shuttered; alleys
are blanketed by silence. Padlocked red doors, built into the
partition, prevent Shiite visitors from mixing with the city's mostly
Sunni citizens. Here, Mohammed al-Saeed, a Sunni shopkeeper, fumes. "This wall is a sectarian wall," he said. "They don't trust us." Though the New York Times can't file a thing in the print version of today's paper (national edition) from Iraq, the Washington Post features Sudarsan Raghavan's " An Iraqi City Divided by Walls, by Sect, By Bitterness"
on the front page. That's the opening to Raghavan's article and we'll
discuss it in today's snapshot. Consider it the must-read today and you
can pair it with Alissa J. Rubin offers " Arrests of a Council's Members Deepens the Bitterness of Sunnis in Iraq" ( New York Times) from yesterday. R.M. Schneiderman's " Commander Says U.S. Still on Schedule to Leave Iraq" is the closet thing to Iraq filed by the New York Times
today and it doesn't make the paper. RM pulled pajama duty and reports
on the Sunday morning chat and chews -- apparently to provide some of
that 'journalism excellence' the paper of little to no record can't
shut up about in today's business pages. As much as RM's 'report' is
junk so is the garbage in the business pages about state-of-the-press. The Associated Press, how it works, where its revenues come from, is all lost on the New York Times
this morning and it's hard to believe Docker Boy David Carr and all the
rest are so stupid (but maybe they are) as they serve up half-baked
revisionary garbage in which the only problem for newspapers or the AP
was in being late to the party. For the New York Times,
any article on the lack of newsprint being the first and last stop
should include the names: Jayson Blair and Judith Miller. Among many,
many others. But keep pretending the problem is everyone else,
kids. Pretend you didn't market an illegal war and see it blow up in
your faces. Pretend you do actual reporting. It's good to know the
paper's staff can keep pretending . . . even if the public can't. If
people don't trust you, they won't pay for your services. And why
should they trust you as you and every other outlet refused to call out
the lie of "sandstorm" and "dust storm" last week? Best of all is seeing the New York Times' pampered Docker Boys play the victim (it's like a newsprint version of Dislcosure, Fatal Attraction or any other Michael Douglas film) at the same time that the paper is threatening to shut down the Boston Globe.
Let's all pretend they're not doing that. (Yes, the business section
mentions that but refuses to explore that NYT is responsible. The
Docker Boys couldn't be on their high horses about what 'victims' they
were while also holding NYT accountable. Their days on the unemployment
line will come.) An article by James Glanz made the New York Times'
edition on Saturday. I didn't see it in the national edition (not the
one I purchased in Boston before we left Saturday morning, nor the one
delivered to the house). " Contractor Must Pay in Iraq Fraud, Court Rules"
addressed the Fourth Circuit's decision that if Custer Battles
committed fraud (this was fraud committed on the US tax payers, fraud
with their money, a point Glanz can't come out and admit), the argument
that "We weren't in the US, we were in Iraq" is not a protection from
liability. In non-progress news, Alsumaria reported
Saturday: "A number of Iraqi lawmakers affirmed that the Parliament
Presidency has switched from the legal framework to the political
framework mainly after the Federal Court delayed decision regarding the
legitimacy of Accordance Front candidate Iyad Al Samirrai to head the
Parliament. Iraqi politicians affirmed that the Council will decide
about this issue the first week after resuming sessions pointing out to
the possibility of agreeing on Al Samirrai as Parliament Speaker." Bonnie reminds that Kat's " Kat's Korner: The LOtUSFLOW3R Blooms ... and rocks" and Isaiah's The World Today Just Nuts "Brotherly Embarrassment." Iraq's Foreign Ministry notes: Foreign Minister Visits Italian Embassy to Offer Condolence
Foreign
Minister Hoshyar Zebari visited Italian Embassy in Baghdad on the 8th.
Apr .2009 to offer condolences on behalf of the Iraqi Government and
his name to the people and Government of Italy and to the families of
the victims of the region L'Aquila which struck by the earthquake and
hoping patience and speedy recovery for the injured.
Minister
Zebari was received by Mr. Maurizio Milan , the Italian Ambassador in
Baghdad and Embassy staff members who expressed their appreciation for
his Excellency's condolence on this painful incident.
The
condolences ceremony was attended by Dr. Soroud Najeeb Director of
Minister's Office, Ambassador Hussain Moala'a Head of Europe Department
and Mr. Tahseen Enna, Chief of Protocol Department in the Ministry. The e-mail address for this site is common_ills@yahoo.com. iraqthe new york timesalissa j. rubinjames glanzr.m. schneidermanthe washington postsudarsan raghavanalsumariathe world today just nutskats korner
Posted at 06:40 am by thecommonills
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Sunday, April 12, 2009
Isaiah's The World Today Just Nuts "Brotherly Embarrassment"
Posted at 09:25 pm by thecommonills
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