Saturday, February 19, 2011
Iraqis wonder if Nouri's government will be toppled
Dar Addustour reports that he declared today that the young people of Iraq need to be aware and prepared to stand up to any attempt to rebel. He claimed his enemies are for dictatorship and against democracy. No word on whether these enemies he 'sees' are seen in a mirror. Alsumaria TV reports that Jalal Talabani, Iraq's President, also warned against violence while the Speaker of Parliament, Ousama Al Nujafi, publicly called for the government to address the problems of the Iraqi people. Today's remarks by Nouri attempted to sell fear after yesterday's attempt at spin fell flat. Al Rafidayn reports he declared yesterday that 2011 would be a harsh year for the country; however, after that, things were going to change and turn around. Al Rafidayn reports that protests calling for better services (electricity, water, food) are increasingly protests that decry directly Nouri al-Maliki.
Protests continued throughout Iraq today. Al Rafidayn reports that, in Baghdad, widows and orphans hit the streets in protest against living conditions and demanding legislation that would ensure their needs. Activist Omar al-Mashhadani stated that the widows and orphans were the victims of the violence in Iraq since the invasion. Widow Sawsan Ismail is responsible for raising five children. Her husband was kidnapped and killed in 2007. She depends upon humanitarian assistance from NGOs and a stipend from the library -- together they total 265,000 dinars a month (212 US dollars) while her monthly rent for the families' apartment is $300,000 dinars (250 US dollars). She wants someone to ask the government how she is supposed to be able to feed her children? Another woman also raising several children by herself declares, "I ask, God, how a family of four people can live on this?"
Al Mada notes that protests went on in Baghdad and Kut today. Political Science professor Abdul Jabbar Ahmed advised that the best way to end the protests is to provide the improved services the protesters are demanding. In Kut, the sit-in that started Thursday disbanded today when the protesters were informed that their demands would be met. Those demands were supposed to include the release of all arrested in the protests. Whether this was more than empty words remains to be seen and it's difficult to picture the governor of the province stepping down (another one of the demands). While the sit-in has ended (and so has the city's curfew), Alsumaria TV reports the protests will continue.
Dar Addustour reports that people protested in Al calling for the country's Constitution to be applied to everyone. Al Rafidayn covers the Sulaymaniyah protest in which fifteen people were injured today when protesters demanded an end to corruption and reform and some demonstraters began hurling stones at the police (who had clashed with protesters Thursday). Mohammed Tawfeeq and Shirko Abdullah (CNN) report, "Witnesses said police used water cannons and fired weapons over the heads of rock-throwing demonstrators in Sulaimaniya, who had taken to the streets to protest the violent response of security forces that killed one demonstrator and injured 57 after they attacked the local offices of ruling Kurdistan Democratic Party." Shwan Mohammed (AFP) adds, "The rally, along with another in the same Kurdish city and others in Baghdad, came after two protests in as many days earlier this week left three people dead and more than 100 wounded." Thursday's protests targeted the KDP headquarters, KRG President Massoud Barzani's political party. Today's protests included many signs and banners decrying Barzani.
Murtaza Hamid (Nasiriyah) reports that there are plans for a march in Dhi Qar today and to call for the governor to step down and protest only having electricity for four hours each day. That article was actually e-mailed by an Iraqi community member who wants to register his offense that the works and sweat of Iraq are ignored by the media. He wants it noted that the western media has repeatedly ignored the protests in that area of Iraq and that they're too scared to come cover that area of Iraq. If you go back to an entry from June 21st of last year, you will find a number of photos of protests taking place that day -- little reported on outside of Arab media -- including the photo below.
We've noted here that Iraqis have repeatedly stated that they were not trying to copy or ape Egypt. The only segment that keeps citing Egypt thus far is the college age segment of Iraq. With his permission, I'll translate his entire e-mail and it will run in Polly's Brew tomorrow.
Iraq's college-age youth is calling for a huge protest this coming Friday and primarily in Baghdad. Alsumaria TV observes, "It seems that Iraqi leaders are starting to yield to people's pressure. Heads of Iraqi parliamentary parties met with Parliament Speaker Ousama Al Nujafi to settle Iraq's 2011 budget." Meanwhile Dar Addustour and Al Mada both cite National Council sources for their story that Ayad Allawi has rejected the post for a council that would have overseen security. The reasons being given are that Nouri is by-passing Parliament and Allawi objects to that. Why would he object? If he objected, he might have done so because it's not what was agreed to and having Nouri 'create' it gives Nouri the option of 'uncreating' it. Whereas, if it goes through Parliament, Nouri can't gut it in a month or two -- Parliament creating it would mean only they could dissolve it.
The e-mail address for this site is common_ills@yahoo.com.
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al mannarah
dar addustour
al rafidayn
al mada
cnn
mohammed tawfeeq
shirko abdullah
afp
shwan mohammed
nasiriyah
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Another US service member dies in Iraq
In other news of the fallen, WAVE 3 News reports that friends and family of Sgt Joseph Ford gathered in New Albany to remember the Iraq War veteran who died at the age of 23 while serving in Iraq with a display in his honor and they quote his widow Karen Ford explaining, "It's been almost three years now, it's been very difficult. [. . .] It's something that needed to be done because there really hasn't been any memorial put up other than a small brick at the Red Cross in Evansville. It helps with a sense of closure." Jenna Esarey (Louisville Courier-Journal) reports, "Ford's sacrifice was recognized with the dedication of a shadowbox containing a folded American flag, Ford's picture, biography and all of his ribbons, awards and medals from his military career. Approximately 75 people turned out for the dedication, including many members of the HQ & HQ Troop of the 1st Squadron, 152nd Cavalry Regiment based at the armory." Esarey quotes Dalarie Ford, his mother, explaining, "I really can't celebrate Mother's Day anymore" due to her son having died on Mother's Day in 2008.
Louisiana's Town Talk notes this week saw 20 send-off ceremonies for 3,000 of the state's National Guard who are stopping off at Camp Shelby prior to deploying to Iraq. The article offers many service members and their families explaining their feelings about the deployment, some are leaving new borns and young children, one will miss a son's high school graduation, Sean Verrette says, "Sends us packages, no matter how small. Local newspapers are the best thing we can get."
Meanwhile British Iraq War veteran Danny Fitzsimons remains imprisoned and awaits a verdict in Iraq. He served in the British military for eight years and was stationed in Afghanistan and Kosovo as well as Iraq. He returned to Iraq in the fall of 2009 as a British contractor, or mercenary, accused of being the shooter in a Sunday, August 9, 2009 Green Zone incident in which 1 British contractor, Paul McGuigan, and 1 Australian contractor, Darren Hoare, died and one Iraqi, Arkhan Madhi, was injured. The trial has been hold so that the judges could review the psychiatriac evaluation, BBC News reported last month. Tomorrow the verdict is expected. The Manchester Evening News reports, "Danny Fitzsimons could be hanged if found guilty of double murder at an Iraqi hearing tomorrow. His father, Eric, of Whitworth, and younger brother Michael are to visit him in prison in Baghdad before the verdict is delivered."
The following community sites -- plus Tavis Smiley and Jane Fonda -- updated last night and today:
- THIS JUST IN! HOW MUCH DOES HE MAKE?5 hours ago
- A classified chef's salary5 hours ago
- Books and the weekends1 day ago
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- Corn Soup in the Kitchen1 day ago
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- The sexism of the press1 day ago
- Danny The Pig Schechter1 day ago
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David Bacon's latest book is Illegal People -- How Globalization Creates Migration and Criminalizes Immigrants (Beacon Press) which won the CLR James Award. We'll close with this from David Bacon's "Undocumented Immigrants Stand Up To Chipotle" (The Nation):
Last month six hundred workers at the Chipotle fast food chain were fired in Minnesota.
Their crime? Working.
In the last two years, thousands of others have been fired for the same offense - 2000 young women at Los Angeles sewing machines, 500 apple pickers in eastern Washington, hundreds of janitors in Minnesota and California, and many, many more. They're all victims of the administration's "softer" immigration enforcement strategy.
Its logic is brutal: Make it impossible for 12 million undocumented people in the U.S. to earn a living - to buy food, pay rent, or send money home to their children. Then they'll deport themselves. When their families hear they can't get jobs in the U.S., they won't join those already here.
This inhuman logic convinced Congress to pass the Immigration Reform and Control Act in 1986. For 25 years employers have had to verify workers' immigration status, and cannot legally employ people without papers. The real impact, though, is on workers. It's become a crime to hold a job.
The justification has always been the same. Undocumented immigrants will go home if they can't work. But no one has. Over those 25 years NAFTA and CAFTA, and pro-corporate market reforms in Mexico and other developing countries, profoundly deepened the poverty driving people from their homes. More people came than ever before.
The e-mail address for this site is common_ills@yahoo.com.
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the san antonio express-news
sig christenson
wave 3 news
the louisville courier-journal
jenna esarey
the town talk
the manchester evening news
david bacon
anns mega dub
like maria said paz
kats korner
sex and politics and screeds and attitude
thomas friedman is a great man
trinas kitchen
the daily jot
cedrics big mix
mikey likes it
ruths report
sickofitradlz
oh boy it never ends
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Friday, February 18, 2011
Iraq snapshot
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Nouri threatens 'troublemakers' and false arrests take place
Protests went on and are going on throughout Iraq. Al Mada reports that yesterday in Kut (Wasit Province), demonstrators pitched tents to prepare for a sit-in calling for their demands to be met. Activist Abu Karar lists their demands starting with the governor stepping down and all detainees being immediately released before noting the unemployment situation and the ration card system. And Al Mada notes that protests over those demands and the lack of basic services have taken place in Baghdad, Karbala, Najaf, Maysan, Basra, Mosul, Diwaniya, Kirkuk, Babil and Muthanna. Aslumaria TV notes that protests are going on in Kut today, confirms that the governor fled the city yesterday and notes Nouri al-Maliki is supposed to visit the province. Al Mada notes Nouri has declared that "troublemakers" will be punished. Al Mada also reports a "campaign of arrests" is taking place in Kut.
Al Mannarah reports that the Kurdistan Alliance has issued a warning to Nouri al-Maliki that unless fuel prices are reduced and new power stations set up, the Kut demonstrations will spread throughout the provinces and cities of Iraq. (Wednesday, the protesters were fired upon by guards and Iraqi forces -- after being fired upon, they stormed the provincial government building -- which ended up on fire -- and stormed the home of the governor.) Kitabat (link goes to main page, I'm not able to find an individual link, so scroll down for story) features an essay decrying false arrests on the pretext of inciting riots in Diwaniya, Kut, Nasiriyah and Sulaymaniyah and notes that the Iraqi people have been pushed into fighting for the nobel goals and demanding the gith to live free and that the right to protest is not given by any body or Constitution but is a natural right which does not require government approval or a paper from the Ministry of the Interior (with a sidebar note that Nouri hasn't appointed a minister for the ministry -- sidebar note by Kitabat). The essay argues that if Nouri can't make change happen, then he needs to step down and Parliament needs to provide leadership and follow the model of Jaafar al-Sadr (yesterday he noted his resignation in solidarity with the Iraqi people) because the Iraqi people are the legitimate rulers of Iraq.
Iraq's college-age youth are calling for protest to continue with a large turnout on the 25th of this month, primarily in Baghdad.
In other news, Anna Mulrine (Christian Science Monitor) observes, "It is looking increasingly likely that American troops will stay in Iraq beyond December 2011 scheduled date of withdrawal for the US military – a prospect that appears to be gaining bipartisan support in Congress." A morning where we had more time would allow more on the article but it's built around Gates in the Wednesday hearing (that's covered in that day's snapshot with a full transcript of the exchange between Gates and Duncan Hunter) and yesterday's announcement by US House Rep Adam Smith (Democrat) that he thought Iraq would be asking the US to extend their military agreement. (The article also reflects a development which the editorial board noted months ago though few seemed to pay attention at the time.) The news isn't pretty. From the Democratic Party, there is silence. From the Republicans, there is silence. From the Green Party? Silence. At the libertarian think tank Cato Institute, Christopher Preble weighs in and his observations include:
This assumes that, first, U.S. troops can provide this stability, and second that our strategic interests in Iraq are on par with those in other parts of the world. But leaving U.S. troops in Iraq for another two, five, or seven years will not advance American security. It is not now, and should never have been, the responsibility of U.S. troops to create a functioning state in Iraq. That is the responsibility of the Iraqi people and their government. Likewise, our troops should not serve as Iraq's police force.
There is no doubt that there are political and security challenges in Iraq, but these concerns should not delay the withdrawal. There will always be excuses, especially from those who favored the war at the outset, for a continued presence. And these risks will persist no matter how long U.S. troops stay. The future of Iraq lies with the people of Iraq, and it is well past the time when they must take the reins.
A handover of security responsibilities to the Iraqi people is in America's strategic interest. As we are currently seeing with European defense budgets, the United States has been in the business of doing for other governments what they should be doing for themselves. Now would be a good time to start to change this pattern.
The Spark
Bob Simon reports from Tunisia, where protests against the repressive government not only toppled its autocratic ruler, but sparked the uprising in Egypt that forced President Hosni Mubarak to resign.
Scott Brown: Against All Odds
The Massachusetts senator describes his traumatic childhood, including revelations of sexual and physical abuse. Lesley Stahl reports.
The King's Speech
"60 Minutes" talks to its starring actor, Colin Firth, and reports on the historic find in an attic that helped make the "The King's Speech" an Oscar favorite. Scott Pelley reports.
"60 Minutes," Sunday, Feb. 20, at 7 p.m. ET/PT.
Radio. The Diane Rehm Show begins broadcasting on most NPR stations (and streaming live online) at 10:00 am EST. The first hour (domestic) features panelists John Dickerson (CBS News and Slate), Susan Page (USA Today) and Jerry Seib (Wall St. Journal). The second hour (international) features panelists Abderrahim Foukara (Al Jazeera), Susan Glasser (Foreign Policy) and David E. Sanger (New York Times).
The e-mail address for this site is common_ills@yahoo.com.
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al mada
al mannarah
aljazeera
al arabiya news channel
alsumaria tv
kitabat
the christian science monitor
anna mulrine
christopher preble
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The fallen (Shawn Evans), the embarrasment (Bob Gates)
That's the photo of him currently at his Facebook Page. Judi Gaston has a different photo (he's not flipping the bird) that she got from his Facebook page. I debated about the photo but he posed for it and someone posted it. Someone? That photo may or may not have been there when Gaston wrote her report. It's the only one there now. Information she notes (including quoting him on the number of days before he's back home) has now been deleted. Someone (presumably a friend or family member) with his password has changed up the look of his site and they chose that photo for a reason. (I do not believe the photo was chosen to disrespect him.) Along with capturing what Shawn Evans felt at the moment the photo was taken, the photo apparently reflects some anger and grief over his death.
In other violence, the Committee to Protect Journalists notes:
In Iraq, Hemin Latif, a journalist working for the Sulaimaniya-based Destur news website, was shot and injured today while covering against unemployment and corruption, Mariwan Hama-Saeed, director of local press freedom group Metro Center, told CPJ. Dozens of protesters attacked the building of the Kurdistan Democratic Party (KDP). Local journalists told CPJ that the guards for the building shot Latif while he was taking photos. Latif was briefly hospitalized and one of his fingers was broken. Guards also beat Rahman Gharib, who reports for Metro Center and Al-Sumaria News website, while he was covering the demonstration, Gharib told CPJ. He said three men from KDP's security forces in military uniforms beat him. "I demand an official apology from KDP and an investigation into what had happened," Gharib said.
Two other journalists have been injured, according to the independent biweekly Hawlati. One of them is Alan Mohamed, a photographer with the local photo agency Metrography. The newspaper did not identify the second journalist.
Two people were killed and 57 injured in the protests, according to local news reports.
In addition, BBC reports 13 people died and over thirty were wounded in a Muqdadiyah car bombing. Mu Xuequan (Xinhua) quotes police sources, "The attack occurred when a suicide bomber drove his explosive- laden car into a police checkpoint near the town of al-Maqdadiyah, some 100 km northeast of Baghdad, he said."
Turning to the weaponization of the State Dept, Walter Pincus (Washington Post) reports on Robert Gates' Congressional appearance yesterday: "In an impassioned plea during a Senate Armed Services Committee hearing on next year's Pentagon budget, Gates cited the loss of more than 4,000 American lives in Iraq and the expenditure of some $900 billion. He said it is 'a critically urgent concern' that a planned $5.2 billion allocation for fiscal 2012 be approved, so that the State Department can carry on the training of Iraqi police and other programs once handled by the Pentagon."
Robert Gates' sense of entitlement is a sure sign that he needs to leave government immediately. Asked in an opening hearing by a Republican Congress member on Wednesday about whether his Department had broken the law, Gates plead ignorance of the matter. Provided with documents in the hearing, Gates insisted he would need time to review them.
If you're so damn stupid that you don't know if the department you headed broke the law, you've got problems. And maybe part of them is that you're looking over the State Dept's shoulder when you should be doing your own damn job. Robert Gates is not the liason for the White House to the State Dept. He is the Secretary of Defense and should confine himself to those issues. You can't plead something is above your pay grade and then start playing expert on a department you don't head and you're not a part of.
Will we next get Robert Gates offering his 'expert' opinion on Health and Human Services?
The economy remains in the toilet. Gates showed no awareness of that when begging Congress for money for his department. Now he thinks he can play expert on State as well?
He needs to be instructed to close his mouth and to do immediately. Joe Biden is the person Barack Obama has placed in charge of overseeing Iraq. Biden can make the case that the State Dept needs the money. I'll still disagree and I will argue Joe is wrong; however, I will not argue that Joe has no business making the argument.
Robert Gates was asked about the Defense Dept's inability to prevent sexual assaults and he played dumb. He was asked about the lawsuit and he issued a self-serving statement. But now he thinks he can go before Congress and present himself as an expert on what the State Dept needs?
Clearly, he has time to do everything but the job he was given. Clearly, it's time his tired ass retired.
If the Secretary of Agriculture appeared before Congress and argued that another Department didn't need funds, we would all be offended. Our attitude would be that the Secretary needed to confine his or her testimony to his or her own department. Pretending Gates has a right to testify about another department's needs opens the door for the day when a Secretary has the right to testify that another department doesn't need funding. He needs to fccus on his own department. Since he's currently been named in a military sexual assault lawsuit, he should have plenty on his plate already.
The following community sites -- plus Military Families Speak Out, War News Radio and Watching America -- updated last night and this morning:
- THIS JUST IN! THE NON-APOLOGY APOLOGY!2 hours ago
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- Nir Rosen (Blog post)3 hours ago
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- A flunky scorned4 hours ago
- @warnewsradio Daily Tweet Digest5 hours ago
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- He doesn't apologize6 hours ago
- Daniel Luben's an idiot (at best)9 hours ago
- Thank you to Joan and to Anderson9 hours ago
- Can you bake a cherry pie, Nir Rosen?9 hours ago
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The e-mail address for this site is common_ills@yahoo.com.
iraq
wistv
judi gaston
the committee to protect journalists
xinhua
mu xuequan
the washington post
walter pincus
anns mega dub
like maria said paz
kats korner
sex and politics and screeds and attitude
thomas friedman is a great man
trinas kitchen
the daily jot
cedrics big mix
mikey likes it
ruths report
sickofitradlz
oh boy it never ends
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