Sauteed Green Beans with Onions and Mushrooms is a recipe Darla e-mailed noting (a) it's vegetarian and (b) she uses canned goods in it. Every few years the canned goods issue comes up. Darla knows that and I thank her for giving me the opportunity to again note: I cook with canned goods. I use fresh in many recipes but I also used canned goods. Canning is, in fact, better for the environment if you're eating any produce that wasn't locally grown. Canned goods do not need to be kept at a cool temperature to transport (therefore needing a fridge car or truck). The reason the issue flares up from time to time is that someone will assume I'm anti-canned goods or I'll make some idiotic remark that provides them with a reason to believe that. If I lived in snowy mountains -- as three readers do -- you can be sure I'd be eating a lot more canned goods than I already do.
1 16 ounce can of green beens french cut
1 small onion chopped or sliced in rings
1 8 ounce can of mushrooms
Salt and pepper
3 tablespoons of olive oil
Bring a pan of water to boil, add salt, add onions, boil for four minutes. In a skillet, heat the olive oil. Add the (drained) onions, Add salt and pepper and stir in the skillet for two minutes. Add mushroons and stir for two more minutes. Add the green beans (drained) and stir for two more minutes.
I like to add cashews or slivers of almonds to the recipe. Instead of pepper, Darla likes to add a dash of garlic powder or garlic salt, whatever she happens to have on hand.
No amount of spices can bring the employment numbers to life. The latest numbers were released this morning and this morning on Morning Edition (NPR -- link is audio and text), David Green spoke with NPR economics reporter Chris Arnold:
GREENE: Chris, let me start with you on the economic side here. A lot of forecasters were expecting something in the range of 160,000 jobs added in the month. What happened?
ARNOLD: Well, we didn't get 160, we got 115,000. So, no matter how you look at it, that's disappointing. And the story behind that is that, look, the economy is adding jobs more slowly than it was a few months ago. We were well above 200,000 jobs a month - a few months ago. And across the board, now, we're seeing less growth. Nothing's really falling off a cliff, there wasn't any sector that had a ton of job losses. Manufacturing gained 16,000 jobs, retailers added 29,000 jobs. It's just slower growth. And we should say, also too, here, that this number's always preliminary. And one economist I was talking to about this the other day was saying, look, this Friday jobs report - he calls it Freaky Friday because so much attention gets paid to this one, latest monthly number, but that number often gets revised. So we might be here next month, saying, oh, it wasn't 115, it was something else.
GREENE: Let me ask you about that - that unemployment number. It ticks down a bit, but - but it's not necessarily suggesting things are getting better.
ARNOLD: That's right. The unemployment rate fell from 8.2 to 8.1 percent, but that's a percentage that involves how many people are actually out in the labor force and looking for work. So, without getting into higher math, there's just fewer people looking for work, that that's going to bring that number down - the unemployment rate down, even though it's not tremendously great news for the economy.
On the fewer people looking for work aspect, the Washington Post provides this perspective, "If the same percentage of adults were in the workforce today as when Barack Obama took office, the unemployment rate would be 11.1 percent. If the percentage was where it was when George W. Bush took office, the unemployment rate would be 13.1 percent."
And the response to the bad news? Emiko Terazono (Financial Times) reports that crude oil "sank to a three-month low on worries about economic growth in the US and Europe" and Bloomberg notes, "US stocks slumped, sending the Standard & Poor's 500 Index to its biggest weekly retreat this year, as data on the American and European labor markets boosted concern the global economy is weakening."
We needed a leader in 2008. We didn't get one. Hillary as president would have focused on the economy. And the same never-stop-for-a-breath attitude she brought to the State Dept? She would have brought that to the Oval Office. She wouldn't be doing pick up games of B-Ball or golfing, she wouldn't have broken Bush's record for golfing while in the White House. She wouldn't be always on a vacation.
We needed Hillary. We got wet behind the ears. He still doesn't know what the hell he's doing and he's got the nerve (try the vanity) to ask for four more years?
Our country is screwed.
This is C.I.'s "Iraq snapshot" for Friday:
Friday,
May 4, 2012. Chaos and violence continue, Iraqis continue to be
targeted in their own country, Nouri's suddenly declaring he's fine with
the call for a national conference, Iraqiya says the Erbil Agreement
must be implemented, Ibrahim al-Jaafari says the conference must take
place next week, Tareq al-Hashemi hold a press conference and more.
Starting
in the US with news of the latest faux left move. The Coalition to
Protest at the DNC talked a good game and got some support. We didn't
support it because they were so obviously fake. But they fooled a
number of people. Today the organization posted a statement which
begins: "It is with great enthusiasm that we announce that the Coalition
to Protest at the DNC is changing its name to the Coalition to March on
Wall Street South -- Building People's Power during the DNC. This
decision was made unanimously by the steering committee of the
coalition, made up of representatives from more than 60 organizations."
Michael Cooper (New York Times) reports on the name change and includes this:
"It
shows a real lack of integrity, I think, to let Democrats off the
hook," said Cindy Sheehan, the well-known antiwar protester whose son,
Casey, was killed in Iraq, adding that the name change was making her
rethink her plans to attend protests in Charolotte. "They are as much
the party of war as the Republicans, the party of Wall Street."
Cooper also quotes "veteran antiwar activist" John Penley who wrote "What a sellout!" online. Penely also wrote:
Listen
my OWS friends if you are going to support the Democratic Party and
vote for Obama for president and encourage people not to protest at the
DNC in Charlotte and only protest the Republicans in Tampa well lets
leave as friends I still love ya but please defriend me so I can make
room for those who have not joined team Obama or the GD Republicans.
What
Penely fears is exactly what took place in 2008. Here's a few things
that would-be sell outs on the left should consider in the future.
1)
A Democrat who can't speak up for what's right during the campaign out
of fear that he or she will lose the race is not one that normally ever
speaks up after the race is won. Because there's always another race and
when there's not -- say you've two-termed it out of the White House --
there's still so much corporate dollars to be made.
Right
now in Arizona, there's a ridiculous woman running for public office.
She's a War Hawk and a number of left voters (we were in the state on
Monday and Tuesday) are kidding themselves that, because when Bully Boy
Bush was in office, when she gets into office, she'll suddenly become
Dennis Kucinich. She won't. She was in peace groups in 2003. If she
wanted to be a part of that, she still would be. She left those to
cheer on War Hawk Barack and that's where she's at now. She's not
playing voters for fools and pretending to be something she's not but a
number of voters are willingly playing the fool as they rush to convince
themselves that she's really a secret peace vote.
2)
If you can't hold someone's feet to the fire right now at this moment,
chances are you never will. In 2007 and 2008, Tom Hayden, Laura
Flanders and others made repeated claims that they would hold Barack's
feet to the fire but not yet, you understand, he had to win the primary
first. But, buster, once he did, step back because they were going to
hold his feet to the fire.
It never
happened. And as they look back, I would hope Tom and Laura both now
realize that they were wrong to stay silent when Barack utilized
homophobia in 2007 to solidify the primary vote in South Carolina. (If
you missed this in real time, refer to Kevin Alexander Gray and Marshall
Derks' "Obama's Big Gay and Black Problem.")
If a candidate who wants your vote, who needs your vote, is someone
you're not comfortable pressing on issues that matter today, that's
someone's feet you'll never hold to the fire.
3)
Refusing to make demands and hold accountable someone running for
public office leads not to a stronger spine (for you or your candidate
of choice) but to more craven actions. Doubt that? From 2008's "Editorial: Raw emotions (Ava and C.I.):"
Now
maybe everyone's decided to take Katha Pollitt's stated oath which she
revealed when she felt 'forced' to call out Tom Hayden's latest sexism
last April: "I
want to do my bit for Obama, so I vowed I would give up attacking
Obama-supporting progressives for the duration of the presidential
campaign." Guess what, Katha, we don't do our "bit for" feminism by staying silent. That
was in April that she broke (and announced) her vow -- one she's gone
back to. So, basically, at the start of the year, Pollitt's admitting,
she decided to let sexist attacks from Barack's campaign and his
supporters slide until after the election. Wow.
See
how quickly doing her part went from not calling out a politician to
not calling out his supporters? Here's reality: Free speech is meant
to be used. It's not a snazzy little Chanel number that you hide in the
closet while you wait for just the right occasion to sport it.
4)
Though you're an adult, always grasp that there are people just coming
of age and there are children watching. Remember that when you want to
preach silence and not accountability. And grasp that a large part of
the reason Barack is still not held accountable has to do with the
behavior you moldeled for others.
Think of the above as guidelines. There will always be exceptions. As Betty noted last night, one of the loudest members of the Cult of St. Barack was able to break free. David Lindorff most recently has compiled a list of the crimes for which Barack should be impeached. Again, those who self-censor to 'help' candidates create the climate in which hypocrisy regins supreme. As Glenn Greenwald notes:
One
last point: for the full eight years of the Bush administration, Bush,
Cheney and scores of other political and media supporters of their
militarism who had not served in the military were routinely derided by Democrats and progressives as "chickenhawks" (an accusation, which, with some caveats and modifications, I supported).
What happened to that? Now we have a President whom Bergen hails as
"one of the most militarily aggressive American leaders in decades"
despite having not served a day in the military, and hordes of
non-military-serving Democrats who cheer him as he does so. Similarly,
George Bush was mercilessly mocked for declaring himself
a "war President," yet here is Bergen -- writing under the headline
"Warrior in Chief" -- twice christening the non-serving Obama as our
"Warrior President." Did the concept of chickenhawkism, like so many
other ostensible political beliefs, cease to exist on January 20, 2009?
Early today, AFP's Prashant Rao Tweeted that Tareq al-Hashemi had announced a press conference in Turkey for later in the day. When he faced the reporters, AFP reports,
he declared he had "no faith in the Iraqi justice system and fears for
his life." Nouri has been calling for al-Hashemi to be tried on charges
of terrorism. Nouri al-Maliki's political slate State of Law came in
second to al-Hashemi's Iraqiya.
The political
crisis was already in effect when December 2011 rolled around. Iraqiya
announced a boycott of the council and the Parliament, that's in the December 16th snapshot and again in a December 17th entry.
Tareq al-Hashemi is a member of Iraqiya but he's not in the news at
that point. Later, we'll learn that Nouri -- just returned from DC
where he met with Barack Obama -- has ordered tanks to surround the
homes of high ranking members of Iraqiya. Saturday, December 17th, Liz Sly (Washington Post) reported,
"In recent days, the homes of top Sunni politicians in the fortified
Green Zone have been ringed by tanks and armored personnel carriers, and
rumors are flying that arrest warrants will be issued for other Sunni
leaders." December 18th
is when al-Hashemi and Deputy Prime Minister Saleh al-Mutlaq are pulled
from a Baghdad flight to the KRG but then allowed to reboard the plane.
December 19th
is when the arrest warrant is issued for Tareq al-Hashemi by Nouri
al-Maliki who claims the vice president is a 'terrorist.' . With the
permission and blessing of Iraqi President Jalal Talabani and KRG
President Massoud Barzani, al-Hashemi remained in the KRG. At the start
of April, he left the KRG on a diplomatic tour that took him to Qatar,
then Saudi Arabia and finally Turkey where he remains currently.
The Journal of Turkish Weekly quotes
him stating today, "I booked a ticket to retun to Irbil last Tuesday
after completing my schedule in Turkey, but a colleague called in the
last minute and asked me to delay my return for a few days and wait for a
more suitable dialogue atmosphere in Iraq." This delay may have
something to do with the current push for a national conference in
Iraq. What is known is that his trial -- in absentia -- was supposed to
start yesterday in Baghdad; however, it was delayed until next
Thursday. al-Hashemi believes he can't receive a fair trial in
Baghdad. He's right.
This was demonstrated February 16th though the press wanted to play dumb. From that day's snapshot, this is where we take the various details and demonstrate how the press could have reported it:
IRAQI VICE PRESIDENT PROVEN CORRECT
After many claims that he could not receive a fair trial, Tareq al-Hashemi's
assertions were backed up today by the Iraqi judiciary.
BAGHDAD
-- Today a nine-member Iraqi judiciary panel released results of an
investigation they conducted which found the Sunni Vice President of
Iraq was guilty of terrorism. Monday, December 19th, Iraqi Prime
Minister Nouri al-Maliki swore out an arrest warrant for Vice President
Tareq al-Hashemi who had arrived in the KRG the previous day. Mr.
al-Hashemi refused to return to Baghdad insisting he would not receive a
fair trial. Instead, he was the guest of Iraqi President Jalal
Talabani and KRG President Massoud Barzani.
During
the weeks since the arrest warrant was issued, Mr. al-Hashemi has
repeatedly attempted to get the trial moved to another venue stating
that Prime Minister al-Maliki controlled the Baghdad judiciary. Mr.
al-Maliki insisted that the vice president return and that he would get a
fair trial.
Today's events demonstrate
that Mr. al-Hashemi was correct and there is no chance of a fair trial
in Iraq. This was made clear by the judiciary's announcement today.
A
judiciary hears charges in a trial and determines guilt; however, what
the Baghdad judiciary did today was to declare Tareq al-Hashemi guilt of
the charges and to do so before a trial was held.
Not
only do the events offer a frightening glimpse at the realities of the
Iraqi legal system, they also back up the claims Mr. al-Hashemi has long
made.
That is not how the Iraqi
courts work, not according to the country's Constitution. Judges are
impartial. Judges do not declare guilt outside of a courtroom and no
one is guilty in Iraq until convicted in a courtroom. The fact that the
judges felt no need to follow the Constitution, the fact that they held
a press conference to announce the guilt of someone in a case they knew
wouldn't appear on their docket until May goes to the fact that they
are not impartial and that Tareq al-Hashemi would not have received a
fair trial.
In addition, it appears that one of his bodyguards who 'confessed' was tortured to death. March 21st, al-Hashemi made that charge publicly. From the March 22nd snapshot:
Since December, those working for Tareq al-Hashemi have been rounded up by Nouri's forces. At the end of January, Amnesty International was calling
for the Baghdad government "to reveal the whereabouts of two women
arrested earlier this month, apparently for their connection to the
country's vice-president. Rasha Nameer Jaafer al-Hussain and Bassima
Saleem Kiryakos were arrested by security forces at their homes on 1
January. Both women work in the media team of Iraqi Vice-President
Tareq al-Hashemi, who is wanted by the Iraqi authorities on
terrorism-related charges." Yesterday, al-Hashemi noted that his
bodyguard had died and stated that it appeared he had died as a result
of torture.
Alsumaria notes
Vice President Tareq al-Hashemi is calling for the international
community to call out the death of his bodyguard, Amer Sarbut Zeidan
al-Batawi, who died after being imprisoned for three months. al-Hashemi
has stated the man was tortured to death. The photo Alsumaria runs of
the man's legs (only the man's legs) appear to indicate he was tortured,
welts and bruises and scars.
March 23rd, Human Rights Watch is calling for an investigation into the death:
(Beirut)
– Iraqi authorities should order a criminal investigation into
allegations that security forces tortured to death a bodyguard of Vice
President Tareq al-Hashemi, Human Rights Watch said today.
Iraqi authorities released Amir Sarbut Zaidan al-Batawi's body to his family on March 20, 2012, about three months after arresting him for terrorism. His family told Human Rights Watch that his body displayed signs of torture, including in several sensitive areas. Photographs taken by the family and seen by Human Rights Watch show what appear to be a burn mark and wounds on various parts of his body.
"The statements we heard and photos we saw indicate that Iraqi security officers may have tortured Amir Sarbut Zaidan al-Batawi to death while he was in their custody," said Joe Stork, deputy Middle East director at Human Rights Watch. "It's essential for the Iraqi government to investigate his death and report publicly what they find."
The family said that al-Batawi's death certificate listed no cause of death. They said that before his arrest, the 33-year-old married father of three was in excellent health.
"I could barely recognize him," a close relative told Human Rights Watch on March 22. "There were horrible marks and signs of torture all over his body. He had lost about 17 kilos [37.5 pounds] from the day they arrested him."
Iraqi authorities have denied the torture allegations. On March 22, Lt. Gen. Hassan al-Baydhani, chief of staff of Baghdad's security command center and a judicial spokesman, said al-Batawi died of kidney failure and other conditions after refusing treatment. When asked by reporters about the photographic evidence that al-Batawi had been tortured, Baydhani replied, "It is easy for Photoshop to show anything," referring to a digital photo-editing software.
As the United States was pulling its last remaining troops from Iraq in December 2011, Iraqi authorities issued an arrest warrant for al-Hashemi on charges he was running death squads. Al-Hashemi has taken refuge in Iraqi Kurdistan and refused to return to Baghdad, saying he cannot receive a fair trial. Kurdistan Regional Government authorities have so far declined to hand him over.
An unknown number of other members of al- Hashemi's security and office staff have been arrested since late December and are also in custody, including two women. On March 22, al-Hashemi told Human Rights Watch, "I have made repeated requests to the government to find out who else in my staff has been arrested and where they are being held, but they have not responded."
Human Rights Watch called on the Iraqi government to release the names of all those detained and the charges against them, and to ensure that they have access to lawyers and medical care.
Iraqi authorities released Amir Sarbut Zaidan al-Batawi's body to his family on March 20, 2012, about three months after arresting him for terrorism. His family told Human Rights Watch that his body displayed signs of torture, including in several sensitive areas. Photographs taken by the family and seen by Human Rights Watch show what appear to be a burn mark and wounds on various parts of his body.
"The statements we heard and photos we saw indicate that Iraqi security officers may have tortured Amir Sarbut Zaidan al-Batawi to death while he was in their custody," said Joe Stork, deputy Middle East director at Human Rights Watch. "It's essential for the Iraqi government to investigate his death and report publicly what they find."
The family said that al-Batawi's death certificate listed no cause of death. They said that before his arrest, the 33-year-old married father of three was in excellent health.
"I could barely recognize him," a close relative told Human Rights Watch on March 22. "There were horrible marks and signs of torture all over his body. He had lost about 17 kilos [37.5 pounds] from the day they arrested him."
Iraqi authorities have denied the torture allegations. On March 22, Lt. Gen. Hassan al-Baydhani, chief of staff of Baghdad's security command center and a judicial spokesman, said al-Batawi died of kidney failure and other conditions after refusing treatment. When asked by reporters about the photographic evidence that al-Batawi had been tortured, Baydhani replied, "It is easy for Photoshop to show anything," referring to a digital photo-editing software.
As the United States was pulling its last remaining troops from Iraq in December 2011, Iraqi authorities issued an arrest warrant for al-Hashemi on charges he was running death squads. Al-Hashemi has taken refuge in Iraqi Kurdistan and refused to return to Baghdad, saying he cannot receive a fair trial. Kurdistan Regional Government authorities have so far declined to hand him over.
An unknown number of other members of al- Hashemi's security and office staff have been arrested since late December and are also in custody, including two women. On March 22, al-Hashemi told Human Rights Watch, "I have made repeated requests to the government to find out who else in my staff has been arrested and where they are being held, but they have not responded."
Human Rights Watch called on the Iraqi government to release the names of all those detained and the charges against them, and to ensure that they have access to lawyers and medical care.
Nouri's shown no concern about any of that.
Marina Ottaway and Danial Kaysi's [PDF format warning] "The State Of Iraq" (Carnegie Endowment for International Peace) notes the events since mid-December:
Within
days of the official ceremonies marking the end of the U.S. mission in
Iraq, Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki moved to indict Vice President
Tariq al-Hashemi on terrorism charges and sought to remove Deputy Prime
Minister Saleh al-Mutlaq from his position, triggering a major political
crisis that fully revealed Iraq as an unstable, undemocractic country
governed by raw competition for power and barely affected by
institutional arrangements. Large-scale violence immediately flared up
again, with a series of terrorist attacks against mostly Shi'i targets
reminiscent of the worst days of 2006.
But there is
more to the crisis than an escalation of violence. The tenuous
political agreement among parties and factions reached at the end of
2010 has collapsed. The government of national unity has stopped
functioning, and provinces that want to become regions with autonomous
power comparable to Kurdistan's are putting increasing pressure on the
central government. Unless a new political agreement is reached soon,
Iraq may plunge into civil war or split apart.
That potential may -- the fear of it -- may be prompting some efforts at action. Though, as usual, Jalal Talabani tries to wall paper over it. Today he tells Jane Arraf (Christian Science Monitor), "We Iraqis had experiences many times on the brink of civil war -- we retreated from that and we came back to dialogue and national unity." Al Rafidayn reports that National Alliance leader Ibrahim al-Jaafari stated today that it's important to hold the national conference within a week and for all political blocs to participate. Yesterday, Ipek Yezdani (Hurriyet) reported that Kurdistan Democratic Party spokesperson Cafer Ibrahim states that if things can't be worked out with Nouri, Ibrahim al-Jaafari becomes the choice for the new nominee. Dar Addustour notes that Nouri is now echoing the cry for all political blocs to participate. Al Mada notes that Nouri released that statement after meeting with Ammar al-Hakim, leader of the Islamic Supreme Council of Iraq. Alsumaria explains that the statement also included accusations by Nouri that unnamed others were attempting to break up the National Alliance.
The National Alliance is a Shi'ite grouping which includes Nouri's State of Law, Moqtada al-Sadr's bloc, ISCI and others. Iraqiya, the political slate that came in first in the March 2010 elections, is a mixed sect political slate led by Shi'ite Ayad Allawi. Other prominent members include Sunnis Osama al-Nujaifi, Vice President Tareq al-Hashemi and Deputy Prime Minister Saleh al-Mutlaq. Alsumaria reports Iraqiya announced today that they will not attend the national conference unless it is agreed that the Erbil Agreement will be implemented. Saturday, Allawi, KRG President Massoud Barzani, Osama al-Nujaifi, Moqtada al-Sadr and others met in Erbil and one of the things they all agreed to was that the Erbil Agreement would be re-instated.
Iraqiya states that if Nouri is serious about resolving the political crisis, he will implement the Erbil Agreement. Their spokesperson Haider Mulla further notes that they are used to Nouri's promises but they are frustrated by his inability to follow words with actions.
Meanwhile Ammar al-Hakim has released a statement. Al Mada notes that he states that Iraq needs a strategic vision that all can agree to, that they need to commit to implementing agreementts , that there needs to be successful soltions that serve the citizens; and that there needs to be transparency.
How serious is Nouri? He's
given 'support' before. For example, at the end of February 2011, he
gave lip service to the protests and the Iraqi people being important
and, give him 100 days, and he'd clean up corruption and meet the
protesters demands. He was given 100 days and did nothing. He's now
been given over 400 days and still done nothing. Ali Issa (Jadaliyya -- links is text and audio) interviews
Hashmey Muhsin al-Saadawi who is the Electrical Workers Union in Iraq
and "the first woman vice-president of the General Federation of Iraqi
Workers in Basra." (IVAW's Executive Director Jose Vasquez noted the interview.) Excerpt:
AI:
What is your opinion of the Arab uprising-style movement in Iraq that
started 25 February 2011, and has been called by some " the forgotten uprising
?" Did unions participate in the mobilizations? Since recently they
have been smaller in number do you think they will come back? Finally,
do you have any explanation for the lack of media coverage, even in the
Arabic-language media?
HMS: Iraq has seen successive waves of sit-ins, demonstrations, and protest activities. They have been the result of the continued hardships in daily life and lack of services for people, as well as the deterioration of security since April 2003 that I described. On top of all that, are the efforts to limit civil liberties and silence people, while cementing the hated ethno-sectarian-quota system; we consider all this an open and direct violation of the constitution. Many sectors of society have participated in these protests: youth, women, civil society groups, unions, and the newer pro-democracy formations.
The right of citizens to demonstrate, express opinions and take positions is a constitutional right, and the government and its apparatuses should provide the necessary amount of security to whoever is exercising it. It should also listen closely to people's legal demands and seek to satisfy them. As well as pay attention to their calls for reform of the political process, and correct its course on the path to building a civil, democratic state, based on the text of the constitution that citizens voted for in October 2005.
It should be obvious that our Iraq is not isolated from what is happening, in the countries of the region, though it might differ in its internal dynamics and specifics. The storms of change around us have also energized our people to break the wall of silence and take the streets. The role of the youth in this movement has been especially key, with them taking advantage of new social media technology.
But the way the Iraqi government and its apparatuses have treated the protest movements is a serious violation of the constitutional right to freedom of expression and peaceful protest, and an attempt to stifle the citizens' practicing of that right. That is when the people understood that the first and last concern of influential ruling political blocs is to look after their own interests, struggle with each other over power, and divide the pie among themselves, without any regard for ordinary people living under cruel conditions in a country whose yearly budget exceeds 100 billion dollars.
The protest actions of 25 February 2011 were a great success, as were the actions preceding and following, in expressing the clear and just demands of the people, despite being exposed to attempts to distort the depth of the movement and its goals. Then there has been the intrusion of the Prime Minister's cabinet, with all its influence, to try to stop it, the attempts of the government as a whole to abort it, and all the surveillance and incarceration that followed.
Whether to expect the return of the protests depends on the reasons that lead to them breaking out. To this day, none of the protesters' demands have been met, so if the government continues on its present path, disregarding people's rights, it is very likely the protests will return.
As for media coverage, there had been coverage from several TV stations, but the government put pressure on them, and shut down some of their offices. In addition, a good number of journalists were beaten by infiltrators at the protests—thugs--while others were arrested and detained. And of course there have been assassinations of journalists – those brave, honorable people– including the writer and poet, Hadi al-Mahdi.
HMS: Iraq has seen successive waves of sit-ins, demonstrations, and protest activities. They have been the result of the continued hardships in daily life and lack of services for people, as well as the deterioration of security since April 2003 that I described. On top of all that, are the efforts to limit civil liberties and silence people, while cementing the hated ethno-sectarian-quota system; we consider all this an open and direct violation of the constitution. Many sectors of society have participated in these protests: youth, women, civil society groups, unions, and the newer pro-democracy formations.
The right of citizens to demonstrate, express opinions and take positions is a constitutional right, and the government and its apparatuses should provide the necessary amount of security to whoever is exercising it. It should also listen closely to people's legal demands and seek to satisfy them. As well as pay attention to their calls for reform of the political process, and correct its course on the path to building a civil, democratic state, based on the text of the constitution that citizens voted for in October 2005.
It should be obvious that our Iraq is not isolated from what is happening, in the countries of the region, though it might differ in its internal dynamics and specifics. The storms of change around us have also energized our people to break the wall of silence and take the streets. The role of the youth in this movement has been especially key, with them taking advantage of new social media technology.
But the way the Iraqi government and its apparatuses have treated the protest movements is a serious violation of the constitutional right to freedom of expression and peaceful protest, and an attempt to stifle the citizens' practicing of that right. That is when the people understood that the first and last concern of influential ruling political blocs is to look after their own interests, struggle with each other over power, and divide the pie among themselves, without any regard for ordinary people living under cruel conditions in a country whose yearly budget exceeds 100 billion dollars.
The protest actions of 25 February 2011 were a great success, as were the actions preceding and following, in expressing the clear and just demands of the people, despite being exposed to attempts to distort the depth of the movement and its goals. Then there has been the intrusion of the Prime Minister's cabinet, with all its influence, to try to stop it, the attempts of the government as a whole to abort it, and all the surveillance and incarceration that followed.
Whether to expect the return of the protests depends on the reasons that lead to them breaking out. To this day, none of the protesters' demands have been met, so if the government continues on its present path, disregarding people's rights, it is very likely the protests will return.
As for media coverage, there had been coverage from several TV stations, but the government put pressure on them, and shut down some of their offices. In addition, a good number of journalists were beaten by infiltrators at the protests—thugs--while others were arrested and detained. And of course there have been assassinations of journalists – those brave, honorable people– including the writer and poet, Hadi al-Mahdi.
Hadi al-Mahdi is among the targeted in Iraq. The journalist was assassinated in his home September 7, 2011. He was shot in the head in his home. No sign of a break in. And the killer has still not been found. Earlier this week, The Journalistic Freedoms Observatory released the report
covering the last twelve months and they've found an increase in
violence and restrictions and attempted restrictions on journalists.
They note an American journalist was arrested and held for five days
without any legal justification while Iraqi journalists were detained in
various ways and also attacked and kidnapped by armed groups. At
least 3 journalists were killed in the 12 months and at least 31 were
beaten -- usually by military and security forces who were sometimes in
civilian clothes. 65 journalists were arrested.
As
bad as that is, journalists aren't the only ones targeted. In
February, Iraqi youth began to be targeted for being or being thought to
be gay or Emo. Alana Marchant (UCA Journalism News) provides this summary:
Iraq's
Moral Police have targeted the 'phenomenon', releasing a statement on
the interior ministry's website declaring their intent to 'eliminate'
the trend. This has resulted in over 100 young people being stoned to
death, simply for their appearance and the music they listen to. In
Iraq, he 'emo phenomenon' is being linked to devil worshipping,
homosexuality, even being a vampire. In a country that is overwhelmingly
Muslim, wearing 'strange, tight clothes with skulls on' and having nose
and tongue piercings is being viewed as a danger to society, and signs
of 'satanism'.
After being granted approval
by the Ministry of Education, Iraq's Moral Police entered schools in
Baghdad and pinpointed students with 'emo' appearances, according to the
interior ministry's statement.
'A group
armed men dressed in civilian clothing led dozens of teenagers to
secluded areas…stoned them to death, and then disposed their bodies on
garbage dumpsters…' is what activists told the Cairo-based al-Akhbar
website. These armed men are said to be 'one of the most extremist
religious groups' in Iraq.
LGBT campaign group AllOut and the Iraqi Refugee Assistance Project (IRAP) have made an emergency appeal for cash to save the lives of gay Iraqis.
The organizations say they want to help 30 Iraqis 'marked for death' because they are 'perceived to be gay'.
Lastly, this week Snorre Lindquist published an interview (at CounterCurrents) with Dr. Mohammad Bashir al-Faidhi of the Association of Muslim Scholars in Iraq. The interview took place a few months ago. Excerpt.
QUESTION:
In Stockholm, according to my memorandas, you answered on a question
from me: "I promise you, if the USA left Iraq, the Iranians and their
militias in the police and the army will directly do the same!" Now,
when the United States of America nearly has left Iraq, and Iran's
influens in Iraq augments day after day, will your promise hold?
ANSWER:
I still hold to my promise, but I said "If the United States of America
left Iraq", and in truth it has not left. Should the collapse that
happened to America in Vietnam happen to America in Iraq, all its allies
and agents would have collapsed with it, and at their forefront, Iran.
But the situation in Iraq differs for USA. When the troops sensed the dangers of its situation, words from Bush was leaked, expressing the size of their fears:
"we
promoted claims of victory in order to capture the spirit of fears of
defeat in the hearts of our soldiers, and when Bush realized that the
end in Iraq may be the same as that in Vietnam, he proceeded to withdraw
from Iraq in a novel manner, a quiet, slow and unannounced withdrawal."
The withdrawal of most of its troops has taken nearly two years.
In
order to avoid the bitterness of defeat to split the American psyche,
America came up with the so called Strategic Framework Agreement with
its client authority, that enables it to maintain a concentrated and
capabel presence.
According
to confirmed information available to us, there are now 6 American
bases with air and missile forces; armed security companies made up of
nearly 50,000 personnel, and a giant embassy and consulates with no less
than 13,000 officials and security. In addition there is the
government's police and security services that are still subject to the
will and orders of the Occupier through the latter's domination of Iraqi
senior officers and officials who receive orders directly from the
Americans.
To all
this comes the presence of the allied Iranian influence and queues of
its agents, spies and traitors, gangs and militias.
The
New York Times mentioned that the special extended period for the
presence of the American Army in Iraq will be prolonged onwards into the
unknown, pointing to the existence of a secret agreement between the
government of PM Nourie Maliki and American officials for the presence
of American Forces beyond the specified time limit.
By
the way, in spite of America's concern to convince world public opinion
of its withdrawal, as well as its strict observance of secrecy
concerning its soldier`s and security companie`s activities, some
accidents and incidents took place that exposed their activities and
embarrassed the Americans.
For
example, the forced emergency landing of an American army helicopter
near the Tigris River in Baghdad on 26.1.2012, and the positioning of
several checkpoints by the Americans on 18. 1. 2012, carrying out
questioning of ordinary citizens in the Shomali District, south of Babil
Province, as well as the Drones (the unmanned spying aircraft) that
roam Iraqi airspace all the time. All this has been written about by the
American press such as The Washington Post, Los Angeles Times and New
York Times, after the supposed withdrawal. They also reported about
American military aircraft that inspected and secured Iraq's air space
during the Arab Summit Meeting in Baghdad on 29.4.2012.
The
coming days will reveal even more in this respect, because of
observer`s preliminary estimations concerning the size of remaining
American troops. They will point to the fact that there is no less than a
quarter of their original size before the announcement for their
withdrawal.
So who
so ever states that the American Occupation has gone is very much
mistaken, and the Association of Muslim Scholars in the person of its
Secretary General had warned the Iraqi People in an open letter, after
Obama's announcement of the withdrawal, that the Americans are
untruthful and that they have not completely withdrawn and that they
continue to occupy Iraq.