Saturday, February 26, 2011
Nouri's forces arrest and beat 4 journalists in Baghdad
Four journalists who had been released described being rounded up well after they had left a protest at Baghdad's Tahrir Square. They said they were handcuffed, blindfolded, beaten and threatened with execution by soldiers from an army intelligence unit.
"It was like they were dealing with a bunch of al-Qaeda operatives, not a group of journalists," said Hussam al-Ssairi, a journalist and poet, who was among a group and described seeing hundreds of protesters in black hoods at the detention facility. "Yesterday was like a test, like a picture of the new democracy in Iraq."
Though he attempted to stop Friday's protests on Wednesday (after praising them on Sunday), Al Rafidayn reports that Grand Ayatollah Ali al-Sistani declared today that "serious steps" need to be taken to address the demands of the protesters. Khaled Frahan (Reuters) adds al-Sistani called for reform to be fast-tracked.
Mohammed Tawfeeq (CNN) reports that protests continued today with Samarra protesters defying a "curfew to attend the funerals of two people killed during protests" on Friday and that Iraqi forces opened fire on the protesters/mourners leaving eight injured while Basra also saw a funeral for a protester killed on Friday. Hassan Abdul Zahra (AFP) reports of yesterday's protests, "While the majority of Friday's protests were generally peaceful, clashes with police left 16 demonstrators dead and more than 130 injured, according to an AFP tally based on official sources."
At the Iraqi Revolution Facebook page, the following demands are listed:
Ihab
The Iraqi Revolution
“OUR DEMANDS”
For this we revolve...
The following are some of our demands:
FIRST: We demand to take our homeland back
We had been occupied by a great power without an international permission, this power had adopted excuses that its leaders’ them selves confessed that they had been deceived by them, so why are their forces still on our land then..?
It has been eight years since our country became under occupation, during that time we have lost all that our ancestors had built, and we have become living in our homeland with no homeland!.. so what are we waiting for?
Many had died from our generation in order to free this country; hundreds of thousands of our generation had been detained aggressively and unjustly, we will continue with our protests until our brothers in prisons are freed by the will of God and until we take back our homeland.
SECOND: We demand to overthrow the system
This system was imposed on us, we did not choose this system, and it was found on the basis of sectarianism and racism that serves an agenda of foreign powers and does not serve us, we do not want those basis, for it brought us scourges and because of it, parties that do not represent us had appeared on the field, parties that had never thought of our suffering not even for one day, but, they were only seeking gains that boosts their own existence and seeking what makes their members wealthier, to secure their future in isolation from our interests, us the children of the homeland, so under which right a system like this is imposed up on us? This system that we dislike and it have no place among our perception.
We want a system that is Just, which would be found on the basis of citizenship which ensures equality, justice and equal opportunity between the children of the one homeland without religious, racial and/ or sectarian discrimination.
THIRD: We demand services to be provided
We live in a wealthy country, but, we are poor! People of the land of the two rivers can not find drinkable water! The people of the land of oil complain from the lack of gas and kerosene! And the rise of the prices for both!! The numbers of our patients is by the hundreds of thousands because of the war and its woes, and we have no valid hospitals to receive them! Many of our doctors had been murdered; many of them had been displaced. Electricity is almost non-existent despite the announcement of spending 17 billion dollars in order to upgrade the power plants. The buildings in the heart of Baghdad are ruins, the public roads are rugged and in the provinces the situation is much worse and bitterer, as for the residents of the counties and districts, their living conditions became closer to the living conditions of the unknowns of Africa!.
FOURTH: We demand Job opportunities
We are lost between the clutches of leadership of the poles of the political process!! All are after achieving their own goals at the expense of the youth, which had been puzzled over the previous period, not knowing what to do!! We have the ability to develop the country, and we have academic degrees, we have competencies, but, we have no job opportunities, we are living a bitter unemployment situation, some of our youth had started to hang them selves, others burn them selves due to despair and frustration. The highest positions are monopolized by the parties leaderships’ and their relatives even if they had no academic degrees that qualifies them for the position, other job opportunities are reserved for the members and loyalists of the parties even if they were unqualified, as for the Iraqi people they have no hope in getting any jobs, if the parties petty the Iraqi people they give them what is left of the crumbs, which would only happen after bribing them or giving up a salary of a whole year and putting it between their hands as a form of gift!!
Any citizen that lives under a government has the right to have a roof over his head, and doesn’t have to live with their families due to poverty – as the situation is now – people live in the open fields with no homes or in tin houses or in cemeteries! The right to have an appropriate income in order to live comfortably without the need to extend their hand for anyone begging for food or clothing for their children, The right to live in a sense of security that protects them, their property and honor of their family, so the night visitors and the organized crime gangs can not assault them. The right to have a secured future for their children so they won’t be lost in the streets or get conscripted by the various shapes of gangs, The right to have a health system that protects them and their families, so their child won’t die between their hands because of the lack of medicine or their wife dies giving birth to a child because of the non-existence of medical care. The right to have the freedom that ensures the right of safe movement, travel, trade, freedom of speech, gathering with groups and other activities under a Just law. The right of education that meets the needs, capabilities and job opportunities that stands on the basis of the concept (the right man in the right position), so that a citizen will not be prevented from an opportunity because of their religion, doctrine, race, political views, or because they can not afford a bribery in order to get a job!!.
All our demands were not present under those corrupt governments, despite the fact that our country floats on a sea of petroleum, and God has given it wealth that no other country has.
We demand job opportunities and who ever is incapable of meeting our demands shall leave.
FIFTH: We demand to end the corruption and trial the corrupt individuals
Corruption has reached a limit that makes the noses sneeze, under the consecutive governments since the beginning of the occupation to our land, approximately 400 billion dollars were spent on Iraq, it is an amount of funds that is enough to rebuild Iraq twice to make it the best model and bring wealth to all its citizens young and old without exception, but, where did all this money go?? It went to the pockets of the corrupt. And who are the corrupt?? They are the main staff of the government, from ministers and parties’ leaderships, gang members and militias that the prime minister refuses to open their corruption files to look in to them or to investigate.
In all countries, corruption is practiced secretly, but, in Iraq it is practiced in public! And the latest corruption deal was the disappearance of 45 billion dollars from the development funds, the answer that is heard from officials regarding the question (Where did the money go?) Is with all simplicity: We do not know!!
The corruption files must be revealed, the corrupt individuals must be trialed, and the people must get their stolen funds back, and we will not stop our protests until we see corruption seized from existence in our facilities and corrupt sitting in the depths of prisons.
WE WILL NOT ACCEPT PROMISES AFTER TODAY
- We are fed up with political bids, we are fed up with honeyed promises, we are fed up with prosthetic decisions that some officials use to throw dust in the eyes of the people.
- Empty promises will not satisfy the hungry, and the cheap bids will not put clothes on the naked, and the shinny slogans will not quench the thirst of liver behooves.
- Silence is no longer a choice for any of us, so we will no be silenced after today…
-So how long will the Iraqis be divided into two classes, one that eats the beef, and the other eats the leaf!!
- And how long will a group of people receive multiple salaries, each salary covers a whole tribe, and the other people can’t get a single penny from the wealth of their homeland!!
- And how long will a group will receive warmth from the fire caused by the process of burning the public funds while others are dying because of the cold at the night of winter!!
- And how long will some enjoy the iced water in the heat of summer time while the others quench their thirst with the sewage water!!
AS GOD IS OUR WITNESS.. WE WILL NEVER BE SILENCED
Stephanie McCrummen (Washington Post) reports that Iraq's largest refinery, in the city of Baiji, was attacked today by unknown assailants leaving 1 engineer and 4 security guards dead. Alana Semuels (Los Angeles Times) adds that it is one of three refineries in Iraq and that assailants utilized a bomb. Jack Healy (New York Times) notes that they set off bombs after storming the refinery and that, "Oil Ministry officials were just beginning to investigate the extent of the damage on Saturday, and the acting manager of the refinery said he feared it would take months to repair the pipelines, cables, furnaces and other equipment damaged by the explosions and fires." AP explains, "The refinery processes about 150,000 barrels of oil per day." Dar Addustour reports the assailants used guns with silencers and that an official says 4 engineers were killed and three guards were wounded.
Reuters notes security forces killed 1 protester in Sulaimaniya and left eleven others injured today, a college lecturer was shot dead in Baghdad and a Baghdad roadside bombing injured two Iraqi service members.
In the US, David DeGraw of Amped Status has a new report on the economic crisis focusing on efforts of those responsible to escape/elude accountability.
The e-mail address for this site is common_ills@yahoo.com.
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the washington post
stephanie mccrummen
the los angeles times
alana semuels
the new york times
jack healy
al mada
wael grace
adhem youssef
dar addustour
al rafidayn
reuters
khaled farhan
cnn
mohammed tawfeeq
afp
hassan abdul zahra
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Deployments, excuses, suicides
Meanwhile David S. Cloud (Los Angeles Times) reports Secretary of Defense Robert Gates gave a speech at West Point Friday and declared, "In my opinion, any future Defense secretary who advises the president to again send a big American land army into Asia or into the Middle East or Africa should 'have his head examined,' as General MacArthur so delicately put it." Seriously? What about someone who's been Defense Secretary for over four years now and continues to advocate keeping troops on the ground in both Afghanistan and Iraq? In fact, we just attended, this month, a House Armed Services Committee where you did just that, Robert Gates. If there's anyone flashing more stupidity than Gates it would be Brad Knickerbocker (Christian Science Monitor), "But Gates’s message was clear: The US military services, as well as the elected and appointed civilians who send them to war, need better ways of foreseeing and preparing for national security threats." First off, Iraq was not a national security threat, Knickerbocker. Second, you sure are brave taking on Donny Rumsfeld's out of office. Guess you'll show some of that 'independence' towards Robert Gates when he leaves office as well -- provided you can get your tongue out of his ass by then.
Thursday the Commission on Wartime Contracting in Iraq and Afghanistan released their latest report [PDF format warning] "At what risk? Correcting over-reliance on contractors in contingency operations." Some of the key points:
* Total spending through contracts is correspondingly large. While there is no central federal source for definitive data on contracts and grants regarding contingency operations, the Commission’s conservative estimate is that since October 2001, at least $177 billion has been obligated on contracts and grants to support U.S. operations in Iraq and Afghanistan.
* The Association of Certified Fraud Examiners has reported a survey-based estimate that 7 percent of revenue is lost to fraud. Applying this metric to the $177 billion in contingency contracts and grants suggests the cost of federal failure to control the acquisition process could be as high as $12 billion for fraud, not including contract waste.
* In the current setting of heavy reliance on contractors and clear weaknesses in federal planning and management, the Commission believes the United States has come to over-rely on contractors. This conclusion holds whether judged from the standpoint of preserving the government’s core capabilities and institutional knowledge, protecting mission-critical functions, or balancing mission requirements against the ability to manage and oversee contracts. And the conclusion holds more strongly when all three factors are weighed together.
The report notes the US is using 199,783 contractors in Iraq and Afghanistan -- 144,705 are under the Defense Dept, 19,310 are under the State Dept and 35,768 are under USAID -- those numbers are from Fiscal Year 2010. Charles Keyes (CNN) notes, "Among the proposals to rein in contractors is the creation of special teams of full-time federal workers to be ready to deploy and monitor projects. The report says the government also should restrict reliance on contractors for security by embedding government workers responsible for command and control and oversight." Robert Brodsky (GovExec.com) adds, "Among the most significant recommendations was limiting the government's reliance on armed private security contractors. Touching on arguably the most controversial aspect of wartime contracting, the panel suggested the government embed federal employees with armed private security contractors to ensure command and control of all hostile situations. The commission's final report, due this summer, will more broadly address concerns that the government has relied excessively on private security contractors."
The following community sites -- plus Washington Week and Jane Fonda -- updated last night and today:
- THIS JUST IN! SISTERS UNDER THE SKIN!3 hours ago
- Change?3 hours ago
- An infestation6 hours ago
- Miko6 hours ago
- Iraq20 hours ago
- World Can't Wait -- or maybe it can20 hours ago
- Wisconsin and Iraq20 hours ago
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- It is dead, bury it20 hours ago
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- The Scar20 hours ago
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- DIANA DUNN AND ME22 hours ago
Tuesday the Defense Dept issued the following:
The Army released suicide data today for the month of January. Among active-duty soldiers, there were 15 potential suicides: one has been confirmed as suicide, and 14 remain under investigation. For December 2010, the Army reported 12 potential suicides among active-duty soldiers. Since the release of that report, one has been confirmed as suicide, and 11 remain under investigation.
During January 2011, among reserve component soldiers who were not on active duty, there were seven potential suicides: two have been confirmed as suicides, and five remain under investigation. For December 2010, among that same group, there were 17 total suicides. Of those, six were confirmed as suicides and 11 are pending determination of the manner of death.
“Army wide efforts implemented during 2010 to improve the health of the force and enhance our overall resiliency will continue to be a focus for all members of the Army family in 2011,” said Col. Chris Philbrick, deputy director, Army Health Promotion, Risk Reduction Task Force. “We must continue to examine our risk reduction and health promotion programs to ensure that in every instance they are readily available and accessible to those in need. Informed and engaged leaders are vital to these efforts and continue to be the most effective resource in this endeavor,” Philbrick said.
Soldiers and families in need of crisis assistance can contact the National Suicide Prevention Lifeline. Trained consultants are available 24 hours a day, seven days a week, 365 days a year and can be contacted by dialing 1-800-273-TALK (8255) or by visiting their website at http://www.suicidepreventionlifeline.org.
The Army’s comprehensive list of Suicide Prevention Program information is located at http://www.preventsuicide.army.mil.
Army leaders can access current health promotion guidance in newly revised Army Regulation 600-63 (Health Promotion) at: http://www.army.mil/usapa/epubs/pdf/r600_63.pdf and Army Pamphlet 600-24 (Health Promotion, Risk Reduction and Suicide Prevention) at http://www.army.mil/usapa/epubs/pdf/p600_24.pdf.
Suicide prevention training resources for Army families can be accessed at http://www.armyg1.army.mil/hr/suicide/training_sub.asp?sub_cat=20 (requires Army Knowledge Online access to download materials).
Information about Military OneSource is located at http://www.militaryonesource.com or by dialing the toll-free number 1-800-342-9647 for those residing in the continental U.S. Overseas personnel should refer to the Military OneSource website for dialing instructions for their specific location.
Information about the Army’s Comprehensive Soldier Fitness Program is located at http://www.army.mil/csf.
The Defense Center for Excellence for Psychological Health and Traumatic Brain Injury Outreach Center can be contacted at 1-866-966-1020, via electronic mail at Resources@DCoEOutreach.org and at http://www.dcoe.health.mil.
The website for the American Foundation for Suicide Prevention is http://www.afsp.org, and the Suicide Prevention Resource Council site is found at http://www.sprc.org/index.asp.
The website for the Tragedy Assistance Program for Survivors is http://www.TAPS.org, and they can be reached at -1-800-959-TAPS (8277).
The e-mail address for this site is common_ills@yahoo.com.
iraq
the richmond times-dispatch
the aegis
the maumelle monitor
bill lawson
the los angeles times
david s. cloud
the christian science monitor
brad knickerbocker
cnn
charles keyes
robert brodsky
govexec.com
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 25, 2011
Iraq snapshot
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Overcoming fear mongering, curfews and much more, Iraqis march in the streets
Al Rafidayn reports Baghdad saw thousands congregate at Tahrir Square with the army and the police surrounding the area. Activist Lina Ali, who stood holding flowers while protesting in Tahrir Square, explains that electricity and potable water are not available. Al Mada adds comments from various people -- including some Iraqis -- about how the internet has changed things and offers, as one example, that Saudis twenty years ago didn't learn that Iraq had invaded Kuwait until three days after due to a media blackout; however, now the information travels. Ahmad Ezzeddine, Microsoft's director in Iraq, is quoted (from an interview with Alsumaria TV) stating that at one point Iraq's internet was a series of network connected to Dubai, England or Germany but today it is far greater and it's not as simple to block or censor. Iraq also now has over 45 satellite channels.
Ben Lando (Wall St. Journal) notes military helicopters flew over Baghdad -- he doesn't note whose military: "As well as criticizing the demonstrators, the government has strictly limited freedom of movement across the capital in an attempt to curb Friday's protests. There has been an increase in military helicopter traffic and heightened security at checkpoints in the capital on Friday. In Baghdad's commercial district of Karrada, police and army officials are stopping and questioning pedestrians." Stephanie McCrummen (Washington Post) explains Baghdad "was virtually locked down" last night with a curfew imposed: "Near midnight Thursday, a red banner flashed across state television broadcasts announcing the curfew, a draconian measure more often deployed to deal with insurgent attacks."
While some outlets see the news as Iraqis overcoming a great deal to turn out and protest, Jack Healy and Michael S. Schmidt (New York Times) play angry old man on the block making the lede about violence even though they struggle to be clear on where the violence was. If that's not clear: When the first sentence of your article is about burning buildings and shots exchanged, your second paragraph should build on that, not do a dining tour of Iraq name checking various cities. And I'm sorry, but guess damn what, this is your lede: "Rock-throwing demonstrators clashed with security forces who, in turn, beat many of the protesters and kept them from crossing the bridge." If you're headline's violence and especially if some officials in Baghdad are claiming that Iraqi police and military were so peaceful and restrained with the protesters in Baghdad, that sentence doesn't pop up in paragraph seven. It pops up at the top of the story. Were all the editors at the New York Times on a smoke break when the article was submitted?
Al Rafidayn notes 5 Mosul protesters were killed (seveteen more injured), 1 police officer was killed in Hawja, etc. And they don't write an opening paragraph about violence and then hem and haw for four paragraphs before remembering their topic, they tick it off one by one.
In fairness to Healy and Schmidt, the article was written quickly and by the time it makes it into the paper, it may be edited. Right now, it's a mess. But it's a raw article.
I don't see the violence as the main story. I see the main story as Iraqis overcame a number of obstacles to take to the street and they did take to the street. If you're not getting that point, BBC News reports, "Soldiers blocked every road leading into Baghdad to try to stop protesters from carrying out their planned day of rage, says the BBC's Jonathan Head in the Iraqi capital. No vehicles were allowed into the city centre and thousands of riot police took up position in and around Baghdad Tahrir Square." But if the violence is your angle -- maybe you're the New York Post -- if that's the primary message of today for you, you can certainly work on your presentation. In terms of an English language report focusing on the violence, you can refer to Mohammed Tawfeeq's CNN report. Violence is part of the story, we'll note in today's snapshot. I don't believe it is the story. I think the story is the Iraqi people's refusal to be bullied or silenced.
The e-mail address for this site is common_ills@yahoo.com.
iraq
a rafidayn
al mada
the wall st. journal
ben lando
the washington post
stephanie mccrummen
the new york times
jack healy
michael s. schmidt
cnn
mohammed tawfeeq
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Those waves of propaganda and the Original Propagandist himself
And you can't have propaganda waves without the propagandist. Look who crawled out from under the wet spot, Dexy Filkins. Dexy "US officers check my copy and watch we me wait for days and days until I have your okay before it runs in the paper" Filkins. Dexy will probably get cheers from some idiots because he has some harsh words about Afghanistan in a book review. He also lies about counter-insurgency which is war on a native people.
The showcase for COIN came in Iraq, where after years of trying to kill and capture their way to victory, the Americans finally turned the tide by befriending the locals and striking peace deals with a vast array of insurgents. In 2007 and 2008, violence dropped dramatically. The relative stability in Iraq has allowed Americans to come home. As a result, counterinsurgency has become the American military’s new creed, the antidote not just in Iraq but Afghanistan too.
By befriending? Well I guess if you've already lied about what went down in Falluja, you'll stoop to whitewashing anything.
". . . allowed Americans to come home." He's such an ugly little liar, isn't he. AP, today, reports the Virginia National Guard is deploying 400 to Iraq.
The following community sites -- plus Jane Fonda, Peace Mom Cindy Sheehan and Iraq Inquiry Digest -- updated last night and this morning:
- Don't call that the Motor City3 hours ago
- I sought regime change – Blair3 hours ago
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- Psy-ops and Spyware10 hours ago
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- Spineless10 hours ago
- Talk of the Nation10 hours ago
- Oil10 hours ago
- Chris Hedges10 hours ago
- Sexist Ray McGovern can't stop lying10 hours ago
- know the enemy10 hours ago
- Blog post10 hours ago
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- Tweets on 2011-02-2511 hours ago
The e-mail address for this site is common_ills@yahoo.com.
iraq
the new york times
dexter filkins
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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