Monday, September 24, 2012

Iraqi 'justice'

Call it 'Iraqi justice.'  Saturday news emerged that the early morning hours saw a raid on Bashar Mustafa's home and the arrest of the Deputy President of Iraq's Olympic Committee.  He was detained for several hours before he was released.  Al Mada reported yesterday that little is still known about the arrest but that the military forces who arrested Mustafa were for the Office of the Prime Minister and Nouri's spokesperson Ali al-Dabbagh, when the story became a public relations embarrassment, rushed out Sunay morning to declare that Nouri ordered his release.  And did Nouri also, as it appears, order his arrest?  Never ask that question.

And never act surprised by the long delay in the still-not-passed amnesty law.  Al Mada reports today the latest hiccup is counterfeiting.  Should counterfeiters be covered?  It's time to 'debate' and 'explore.  More likely it's time to think of another excuse to derail the position.  A member of Parliament's Integrity Commission who speaks to Al Mada about the bill currently not including counterfeiting quickly launches into a conversation about how people must not be released quickly because there's no rehabilitation in Iraq -- which most likely means no process such as probation and parole and the MP is not insisting that Iraqis lack the ability to learn from actions.

The amnesty bill was supposed to have become a law long, long ago.  Al Mada noted on Sunday that the current bill's being in 'process' since 2008. As the broken down process remains stagnant, Alsumaria reports Iraqiya is stating the very least the government can do is start releasing those people who are innocent from the prisons.

In other 'justice' nws, Mohammad Sabah (Al Mada) reports that the the Nouri al-Maliki controlled juciary is calling on Parliament to lift the immunity of three Iraqiya deputies.  Why?  They want to prosecute them for terrorism.  Strange that they need the immunity to be lifted -- that didn't trouble them when it came to Vice President Tareq al-Hashemi who must be the only sitting vice president in the world who has been sentenced to execution -- yes, Tareq remains a Vice President.  He's not been removed from office. Kitabat notes that there are currently arrest warrants which haven't been served (yet) for MPs, governors, professors and more. Dar Addustour reports its 24 arrest warrants in all.

It's really had to take Iraqi 'justice' seriously when it seems to be little more than a system abused by various officials working out their political grudges.

Al Mada notes that on International Peace Day (Friday), Iraq's Peace and Solidarity Council declared the Iraqi government was responsible for the deterioration in security throughout Iraq.  And why not when government is more focused on devising a new flag and new national anthem? In other 'justice,' All Iraq News reports the Ministry of Electricity has announced that those who do not pay the electric bill within 7 days after September 30th will have their electriticy turned off.  Interesting how electricity is delivered irregularly but payment must be on time.


Earlier this month, Oras Hassem offered "Secret marriages rising in Iraq: and women and children are the losers" (Niqash):

Anecdotal evidence suggests certain types of informal marriage are on the rise in sexually conservative Iraq. Unwilling to enter more formal marriages, young Iraqi couples are entering secret relationships that some critics describe as no better than prostitution. 

Informal marriages – some call them “secret marriages” - have been becoming more popular in Iraq ever since 2003, when US-led forces toppled the regime of former Iraqi leader Saddam Hussein.

In Iraq marriage comes in three basic forms. Firstly the regular, or official, kind of marriage which happens in a more standard way – the husband and wife are seen as a couple in the eyes of the law. The man is also seen as being responsible for his wife and any children they may have and the relationship is ongoing.

Up until 1959, Iraqi family law was governed by religion and tradition. After this, a new, more secular law – albeit based upon religious law and legal precedents – was established in Iraq.   

As the US State Department describes it, as part of information on how to spot a forced marriage (as opposed to an arranged one): “Iraqi law provides two legitimate bases for marriage – mutual life and procreation. There are several necessary conditions that must be fulfilled in order to validate a marriage: offer and acceptance; mutual understanding of the marriage intention; verification of two witnesses; and draft of a condition-free contract.”

And then there are the more controversial, informal forms of marriage. One is called the “mutah” marriage and another is the “misyar” marriage.
While, in practical terms, the various conditions of these informal arrangements are potentially very similar, in reality they are perceived very differently.

The mutah marriage also involves a contract between a man and a woman, with certain conditions set in the contract. A mutah, or pleasure, marriage can last for half an hour or for several years. When the contract ends, so does the marriage. No witnesses, officials or family members need to get involved.



Bonnie reminds that Isaiah's The World Today Just Nuts "The Hollow Man" went up last night.  On this week's Law and Disorder Radio,  an hour long program that airs Monday mornings at 9:00 a.m. EST on WBAI and around the country throughout the week, hosted by attorneys Heidi Boghosian, Michael S. Smith and Michael Ratner (Center for Constitutional Rights) topics addressed include
the NDAA, Palestine (guests are Alice Walker and Dennis Banks) and Debby Pope discusses the Chicago teachers' strike. 



The e-mail address for this site is common_ills@yahoo.com.


 


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Sunday, September 23, 2012

Isaiah's The World Today Just Nuts "The Hollow Man"

the hollow man 1


Isaiah's latest The World Today Just Nuts "The Hollow Man."  Canadian Prime Minister Stephen Harper notes, "People say, 'Stephen Harper, how could you be so heartless to deport Kim Rivera?'" And then, opening the door to his hollow chest, he explains, "Got your answer right here.  I'm the hollow man."  Indeed he is and the shame of North America.      Isaiah archives his comics at The World Today Just Nuts.







the common ills

Hejira

Well AFP deserves thanks.  For what?  For demonstrating that people are paying so little attention to Iraq that the press thinks they can write just about anything and call it a report.

"Iraq aims to unite with new national anthem, flag" is the title and the report tells you that, to unify the country, Iraq wants to replace their national anthem which became the national anthem in 2004.  They pin that one on Paul Bremer ("Iraq's cutten national anthem, 'Mawtini' ('My Homeland'), was adopted in 2004 on the order of Coalition Provisional Authority chief Paul Bremer, who admired the song when he heard it at a concert.") because, as we all know, all Bremer did in Iraq was dust off old vinyl and seek out a national anthem.  (Point?  Bremer could have cared less.  He declared that as the national anthem because that's what high ranking Iraqi exiles were pushing for.) 

There are so many things to blame on Bremer but when you use him as the scapegoat for everything, you really help to create a backlash.

But that's not the big problem with the article.

The big problem isn't even their failure to really emphasize (a sentence in passing is not emphasizing) that there are many important issues -- including security, including the electoral commission,  including the oil disputes between Baghdad and the KRG -- that need to be addressed right now so why waste time on the issue of the national anthem?

Why waste time is where AFP demonstrates they just phoned it in.

Iraq was fine with the national anthem last year, they were fine with it mid-year. 

What changed?

Since AFP can't find their thinking caps, we'll have to supply that information.

What changed was Iraqi officials and Iraqi citizens felt insulted this summer during the Olympics.


We covered it July 28thWe covered it  July 30th.

If you've forgotten (hopefully AFP just forgot in their rush) or if you never knew, the Telegraph of London felt nothing said "good host" better than to write a bitchy little piece ranking the worst national anthems from the various countries competing in the Olympics.  Iraq came in number seven out of the ten.  The story was picked up by Iraqi media further upsetting Iraqis.

Myself, I didn't find anything upsetting or troubling about the Iraqi national anthem which seemed to have character.  They're more than welcome to change it but you'd think they'd focus on other more pressing issues first.  (They also should keep in mind that no country's anthem is perfect.  Most rip off another song.. Of course the big problem the US has with "The Star Spangled Banner" is that the very visual lyrics are tied to a melody requiring notes that most Americans will never be able to hit.)

While they ponder a new national anthem [either adopting an existing song or commissioning a new one to be written -- Press TV says six have been commissioned already including: "Salam ala Hadhabat al-Iraq" (Peace on the Hills of Iraq), "Ghareeb ala al-Khaleej" (A Stranger on the Gulf), and "Watani al-Haq Yuaiduhu" (My Country is Supported by Right)], violence continues.  Alsumaria notes there were 20 mass arrests today, a Baghdad attack left the Ministry of Interior's Maj Gen Nayef Mohammed al-Samarrai and his driver dead, a Babylon roadside bombing claimed the life of 1 child and left another injured, a Kirkuk roadside bombing injured at least one police officer ("patrol" is what's used) and in Wasit Province 2 brothers died at a military checkpoint.  Through yesterday, Iraq Body Count counts 243 people killed this month in Iraq from violence. 


In addition, (Sinan Salaheddin (AP) notes that there have been at least 96 government executions in Iraq this year and that "observers worry that the legal process is faulty and that some trials are politically motivated" -- it mentions Iraq's Vice President Tareq al-Hashemi's absentia trial but it doesn't note the recent prison riot when prisoners were moved to Baghdad's death row.  Nor does the article note the forever delayed but always promised amnesty law -- the National Alliance was swearing they were close to it just Friday -- been swearing that for weeks now.  You can click here for the full article (Financial Times of London only runs the first fourth of the article -- the full article doesn't have the amnesty law or the prison riot in it either).








I'm traveling in some vehicle
I'm sitting in some cafe
A defector from the petty wars
That shell shock love away
-- "Hejira," written by Joni Mitchell, first appears on her album of the same name

 The number of US service members the Dept of Defense states died in the Iraq War is [PDF format warning] 4488.



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Isaiah's latest goes up after this.  The e-mail address for this site is common_ills@yahoo.com.