| Thursday, June 2, 2011.  Chaos and violence continue, Adam Kokesh prepares  for the Dance Party this Saturday at the Thomas Jefferson Memorial, the Iraqi  government releases false totals for May (and the press doesn't say a word), the  continued effects of Nancy Pelosi's decision to sell out the peace movement, and  more.   We'll open with this from Feminist Majority:   FOR IMMEDIATE  RELEASE June 2, 2011 Contact: Francesca  Tarant Statement by Eleanor  Smeal, Publisher of Ms. and President of the Feminist Majority: Jill  Abramson Reaches the Pinnacle of the New York  Times The selection of Jill Abramson, an  accomplished feminist, as executive editor of The New York  Times, which is not only the most influential newspaper in the United  States, but also the premier online news platform, smashes a barrier to women's  achievement in print and digital media.This is all  the more important because it comes at a time when women's rights are under  attack in Congress and state legislatures. Additionally, women are still only  one-third of executive editors and one-fifth of presidents, publishers and CEOs  of major U.S. newspapers. Globally, women hold only 27 percent of top news  management positions. Hopefully the elevation of Jill Abramson to the pinnacle  of The New York times will spur the advancement of women in management  throughout the industry.
   No matter what happens, Iraq War veteran Adam Kokesh's DC event opens  tomorrow's snapshot.  The host of RT's Adam vs. the Man was among those  assaulted by DC Parks Police over the weekend discusses his Dance Party this  Saturday at Thomas Jefferson's Memorial starting at noon on yesterday's broadcast (airs Mondays through  Fridays at 7:00 pm EST).  You can refer to Adam's program and to this Facebook page for more on the event. And while Adam's  hosting the DC Dance Party, soldiarty Dance Parties are springing up around the  country to be held at the same time for those who are unable to attend the event  in DC.  Excuse me, all over the country and at places around the world.  Ontario  has announced their Solidarity Dance Party and so has Paris. There's also a  video contest taking place here (winner to be determined by noon tomorrow  based upon which video has the most views).  Adam noted on yesterday's broadcast, "We just  decided that Friday night, at 8:00 pm, for those of you in DC or who are coming  to DC for this event, we are going to be meeting for a pre-party at 8:00 pm  at Dupont Circle and it will be a chance for you to meet, maybe some fellow  dancers, hang out, get to know them, in a slightly more relaxed environment than  what we might see at the Jefferson Memorial on Saturday."     "I think we all can agree that this is one of the most important hearings  that we'll have in this Congress," noted House Veterans Affairs Committee Chair  Jeff Miller yesterday morning. Noting that the unemployment rate for today's  veterans of the Iraq and Afghanistan Wars (young veterans) is "as high as  13.1%," and went on to make remarks that left me confused.  What does Miller  mean when he proclaims "there are legal protections for Guardsmen and Reservists  who left work to fight for our country.  By law, they are entitled to have or  back to their jobs when they come home. We need to be aggressive in enforcement  of this law"?    Yes, it is illegal to fire someone because they're serving in the Guard.   But what is this "we need to be aggressive in enforcement of this law"?   Congress makes laws, it doesn't enforce them.  And on the enforcement side here,  it doesn't exist.  Disclosure, I'm covering legal expenses for a friend in my  state who is suing to get his job back (it was 'filled' while he was overseas).   There's no, "Quick, call San Francisco PD and get an officer out here to arrest  someone!"  There will be no prison time at the end for the employers.  My friend  will get his job back and he'll get some sort of cash settlement.  But there's  no enforcement of this law.  That's a joke and it's insulting to pretend that  there is.  The branch addressing this is the judicial branch.     If Chair Miller would like to legislate some new and more strict laws, that  would be great.  But as they exist currently, let's stop pretending that these  laws are "enforced."  They're not.  That's why so many Guard members and  Reservists are having to turn to the courts. This is not a minor point and it  enraged me yesterday so I held off on this hearing thinking I'd be more laid  back on the issue today.  I'm not.  If Chair Miller was just trying to offer  some meaningless but pleasing words, he needs to be aware that people aren't  stupid enough to applaud those words.  But if he comes up with an actual plan --  he says he's hoping to "introduce a new jobs bill for veterans," great.  We'll  note it, we'll review it here. But if the bill has nothing on protecting the  jobs of those called up (or it has toothless and meaingless words), we'll note  that as well. This is becoming one of the biggest employment issues for  Reservists and Guard members. And prior to recently, I would note, scanning the  papers across the country, at least one regional story each month on a veteran  going through this.  But until a friend of mine faced this problem recently, I  didn't realize how widespread it was.  I think many people are as ignorant of  that as I was.  It's not getting the attention it deserves.   Ranking Member Bob Filner noted in his opening remarks (oral, not the  prepared, written remarks), "I would associate myself with your [Chair Miller]  comments except for one statement.  You -- you start off with the mantra that we  have to reduce taxes on small business which I would agree with and cut  spending.  And then you go on to say how we need more training and this and  that.  Seems to me we have to increase spending in these areas and I'm not  afraid to come out and say it. We've got to increase our spending in these  areas. If we're going to put people back to work, it's going to take some  investment."     Committee Chair Jeff Miller: Thanks to each of you for your  testimony.  I think we've heard a common thread among a lot of what you had to  say.  There are a lot of programs out there and a lot of information out there,  a lot of ways that people can get to it but nobody knows it's there. How do we  do it?  I mean that's -- we've already got the programs in place, the websites  are out there, VA's got it, SHRM's got it.  Who wants to start? And I'd be glad  to hear from anyone of you on a simple way to fix our problem.   Hank Jackson: I'll -- I'll take that simply because SHRM, as a  human resource association, sort of takes its on as one of our responsibilities.  I truly believe that education is what's sorely lacking.  When we go to our  members -- we surveyed our members last year -- 53% of our members indicated  that they were actually attempting to hire veterans but were not sure about how  to go about it, how to target veterans.  We believe that through the programs  with the Dept of Labor Vets, that we are developing a tool kit for veterans and  employers that we hope to roll out sometimes before the end of the year in  conjunction with the Dept of Labor.  We believe that our members are truly  committed to this cause.  It's a matter of giving them a succinct place to go to  address this issue.   Richard Hobbie:  Mr. Chairman, I agree with Mr. Jackson that  partnerships with employers and federal, state and local agencies is extremely  important and, of course, we've made great progress on that in the last four  years with our partnership with DirectEmployers Association and we continue to  make progress.   Jolene Jefferies: And I can just say, I kicked off -- we did a,  DirectEmployers Association hiring and retaining veterans web in our education  series and that has been keeping me incredibly busy.  There's definitely a  strong interest in this.  And to Mr. Jackson's point, there's a lot of turnover  in these human resource departments and it does require continuous communication  and education.  And we just can't stop that effort.  It's got to be an ongoing  initiative.  So in that spirit, we're providing this education series, recording  it, and it's open to the public, does not cost anything and we've had state work  force agencies, LVERs [Local Veterans Employment Representatives], DVOP  [Disabled Veterans Outreach Program], the VA, the OFCCP [Office of Federal  Contract Compliance Programs] employers all demanding this training so there is  a huge need for that.   Committee Chair Jeff Miller: Finally, Mr. Schmiegel.   Kevin Schmiegel: Thank you, sir. I'd like to make two points. The  first point which is one of the principles we talked about is that the effort  has to be focused on the local community.  In my last assignment as a Marine, I  was the head of Assignment Monitors. I managed 60 human resource specialist in  the Marine Corps that assigned 170,000 Marines worldwide. One of our other  primary responsibilities was to retain Marines. We only retain about 1 out of  every four Marines so when we were doing our interviews to talk to those Marines  about their decision to leave, we often asked them what they were going to do  next.  They never talked about what they were going to do next, they always  talked about where they were going. The fact is, veterans and their families are  returning to local communities every day. So the second point, which talks to  the local community, is efforts have to be better coordinated between the public  and private sector in those local communities. Our approach is simple, we're  going to do a hundred events, a hundred hiring fairs in those local communities  using the local Chambers of Commerce and the relationships that we have formed  nationally with the Dept of Labor Vets and with the employer support of the  Guard and Reserve and Ray Jefferson's state directors [Jefferson is the  Assistant Secretary for the Department of Labor Veterans Emplyment and  Training] and Ron Young's -- Ron Young's team of state directors [Young is the  Executive Direcot of the National Committee for Employer Support of the Guard  and Reserve] in the Guard and Reserve are going to get together in those local  communities and execute events.  If we focus on local communities and we better  coordinate private and public sector efforts, we will be more successful.     Committee Chair Jeff Miller: I salute the Chamber on the 100 jobs  fairs you're talking about holding but I think you just hit on part of your  problem.  If they're all returning to their own home communities, you have tens  of thousands of communities which we need to be penetrating and be able to  communicate with.  So how do we solve that problem?  They all want to go home --  and I certainly understand that -- so I mean we've got small cities of several  thousand to large cities of millions.  Sir?   Kevin Schmiegel: I think there has to be several different models,  several different approaches to this.  So we've conducted what Ray and I refer  to as mega-hiring fairs in cities like Chicago, in cities like New York, in  cities like Los Angeles, that model may have over a hundred, a hundred-and-fifty  employers and a couple of thousand veterans and their spouses attend.  We  generally have high level speakers, we have transitional workshops  to offer in  conjunction with that.  When we go to smaller areas -- We'll be in, we'll be in  Great Falls, Montana on August 13th, the model is different. You have to focus  on fewer number of employees and you have to also take into account that  neighboring states from Montana may have significantly lower rates of  unemployment than Great Falls. So you may ask a big employer like Haliburton,  who has a significant number of jobs in the eastern portion of the state and in  the neighboring state, to offer jobs to veterans and their families to relocate  either in Montana or in a neighboring state. So I think the answer to the  question is the model is different.  You have to start somewhere. A hundred is a  very aggressive number.  The US Chamber of Commerce has over 17,000 local  Chambers of Commerce affiliated with us. Next year, if this campaign is  successful, we hope that the 100 becomes 500.  And the year after that, we hope  the 500 becomes 1,000.  Thank you.   Commitee Chair Jeff Miller: Thank you.  Mr. Filner?   Ranking Member Bob Filner: Thank you, Mr. Chairman.  And I thank  you all for  your testimony and your efforts.  This is obviously a Congressional  hearing and we have oversight of the VA. I haven't heard any suggestions on what  we ought to be doing or what the VA ought to be doing.  Looks like the only guy  who's doing anything in government is Mr. Jefferson over here -- I mean, from  the testimony -- I know you're false modest. But what are we all doing here?  I  mean this ought to be a top priority for everybody.  And I can imagine -- you  guys are the experts -- but if I just thought about it for a few seconds I could  think of what the VA could be doing.  I mean, why isn't every regional office,  for example, putting out a list of veterans and their specialties and what  they're seeking jobs as?  You guys all said we have trouble linking up with who  the veterans are.  Well the VA knows every veteran.  Let's just put out a list  of everybody who's looking for a job.  I mean, it just doesn't seem difficult.   We hear about the transition of skills in the military being hard to translate.   We could deem anybody who's in electronics or a medic or a truck driver -- I  mean, we can give them a certificate that says "For the purposes of hiring, this  serves as" you know "what ever entry level."  And people can be trained  further.  But they have incredible skills.  We've been working on this civilian  certification for, I don't know, decades.  Nobody can seem to solve it.  We've  got guys truck driving all over Iraq or Afghanistan, they come home and they  find out they have to take a six month course to get a commercial driving  license.  They say, "Hey, what do I need that for?" And they get discouraged.   They're truck drivers. They know how to do it and they do it under the most  difficult conditions you can imagine. Let them have a certificate that starts  with a job.  Or electronics people or medics.  I mean, I've watched these  medics.  They have incredible -- they do things that no civilian would ever  think of doing and yet they've got to go through some other certification,  masters and go to this college and that college.  Come on. They have the  training.  And we could just do it. I'd like you to give us some suggestions in  either law, regulation, just executive order that we can help you do the kind of  things you're doing every day.  You are out there. We ought to be helping you in  every way we can and the VA's job is to do that. Give us one thing we could do,  if each of you could do that.   Jolene Jefferies: I think for starters, what would really help  employers and we don't need a list of names necessarily but even just a simple  heat map, for instance, that shows what the talent pools of veterans are, what  their skills are, and where, in terms of geography, where can we find certain  veterans with specific skills.  And that way, we can at least hone down our  recruiting strategy --   Ranking Member Bob Filner: Done.  Let's do it.  Anybody from the VA  here? Where's Ms. Fanning? [VA's Ruth Fanning] Afraid to raise her hand?  Whatever -- she say heat map? [Pointing to VA staff] Whatever a heat map is,  let's do it. I can imagine what it is, but I'm sure it's easy.   This continued with Filner handing out assignements but only Jefferies had  an answer ready on what she needed.  She had to be asked, she did not require  prompting (not true of others).  There's another hearing, one we attended today,  that I'll try to note tomorrow.  There's no room in the snapshot for it  today.   Among the many things we need to cover today is violence.  It's June 2nd,  the month of May is over, so let's look back. May 1st, 4 were reported dead and 17 injured. May 2nd, 4 dead and 21 injured.  May 3rd,  15 dead and 40 injured.  May 4th, 8 dead and 7 injured.  May 5th, 30 dead and 90 injured. May 6th, 3 dead and 7 injured. May 7th, 9  dead and 18 injured.  May 8th, 17 dead and 11 injured. May 9th, 4 dead and 19 injured. May 10th, 2 dead and 8 injured. May 11th, 2 dead and 16 injured.  May 12th, 7 dead.  May 13th, 3 injured.  May 15th,  8 dead and 19 injured.  May 16th, 14 dead and 16 injured. May 17th, 25 dead and 7 injured.  May 18th, 6 dead and 2 injured. May 19th, 37 dead and 102 injured.  May 20th, 7 dead and 14 injured. May 22nd, 23 dead and 47 injured.  May 23rd, 13 and 10.  May 25th, 5 dead and 30 injured.  May 26th, 26 dead and 12 injured. May 27th, 2 dead (we're not counting the young  boy killed by his cousin when they were playing with guns -- though that death  was certainly at the very least 'inspired by the Iraq War'). May 28th, 5 dead. May 29th, 2 dead and 10 injured. May 30th, 4 dead and 6 injured.  May 31st, 2 dead and 3 injured.  Check my math,  that should add up to 284 deaths and 535 wounded.  Iraqi Body Count -- which  does a far better job of tracking than I do -- notes 353 reported deaths.     Xinhua announces that "May's death toll  was the lowest since December 2010, when the authorities announced the death of  151 Iraqis." That might be true . . . if the figures Xinhua uses were accurate.   They announce, using figures by the Ministry of Interior, Defense and  Health, only 171 deaths in Iraq (excluding US soldiers -- we didn't count them  yet either).  That would be a lie.  LIE.  Reuters runs with the same FALSE figures  because, despite reporting daily deaths and injuries, it's just too hard for the  little guys and gals to keep track of what they report -- or, more honestly,  they're as sick of their reporting as so many others are.   Did violence decrease in May?  No.  Drop back to the May 2nd snapshot and you'll see we counted 262 deaths and 598  injured for the month of April. 284 deaths for the month of May would be an  increase. And Iraqi Body Count (refer to the snapshot) found 283 were killed in  April and they find 353 for the month of May.   Increase.   It's a two syllable word and that may be more than many US reporters can  manage but it is, indeed, an "increase" from the month of April.  And just  because three government ministries tell you otherwise doesn't make a lie true.   In fact, it's past time for the press that refuses to keep their own count to  stop repeating what they know each month is a lie.  Each month they run with the  lies.  It's not a mistake, it's not an error. It's deliberate and it should have  stopped long ago.    John Drake is a consultent with AKE and we'll note his Tweets on weekly  violence for the month of May.   John Drake's Twitter feed May 9th:   
   and John Drake's Twitter feed May 16th:           That was not a complete count (and he didn't pretend it was) but his  totals?  228 dead and 722 injured.  Supposedly reputable news outlets are really  going to pretend that the Iraqi government figure of 171 deaths for the month of  May is accurate?  Really?       Since March 2010, a wave of assassinations and assassination attempts have  swept Iraq and the last three months have only seen an increase.  May 26th saw the assassination of Ahmed Chalabi's  boy pal Ali al-Lami.  Responding like a grieving lover, Nouri al-Maliki went on  a rampage to find someone to blame for the death of his beloved.  But many  others died and they got no interest from Nouri.  Ayad Ali Akbar of the Ministry of Defense was  assassinated in Baghdad May 23rd.  And the most high profile assassination  attempt was probably the May 30th one that Nineweh Province Governor Atheel  al-Nujaifi survived -- he is the brother of Osama al-Nujaifi, Speaker of  Parliament.  But there was no agonizing cry from Nouri and State of Law over any  deaths except for Thug Boi Pin Up Ali al-Lami.    And the wave continues today as Aswat al-Iraq reports that Sheikh  Hameed Ahmed was assassinated in Falluja. Laith Hammoudi (McClatchy Newspapers) reports,  "At least five people were killed and 27 others wounded, including 17 policemen,  in a series of coordinated explosions late Thursday that struck the city of  Ramadi, the capital of Anbar province, police said."  Reuters notes a Mosul roadside bombing  injured four, a Baghdad sticky bombing injured two people, a Baghdad roadside  bombing injured five people, a second one injured four people and a third one  left two people injured.   The Great Iraqi Revolution  notes that this Friday's protests will be entitled "Tahrir's Detainee  Friday." Jacques Clement (AFP) observes, " Iraq risks a  return to massive street protests when a 100-day deadline for progress expires  next week, experts say, with no core issues having been addressed and a summer  heatwave coming." The 100 Days was devised by Nouri al-Maliki (and popularized  by Moqtada al-Sadr) in an attempt to defuse the protests. While activists are  gearing up for next week (two Friday's from now), protests will be taking place  tomorrow. And the title for this coming's Friday's protest, Great Iraqi  Revolution explains, was chosen to stand loyal with those who have been wrongly  arrested and held in secret prisons. There has been a steady crackdown on  protesters but Friday and Saturday Nouri al-Maliki's goons took it up another  level.
 Today the pattern of attacking protest is called out by not one  but two major human rights organizations. Human Rights Watch issues the  following:
 
 
 
 (Tunis) - Iraqi  authorities have detained, interrogated, and beaten several protest organizers  in Baghdad in recent days, Human Rights Watch said today. Iraqi authorities  should stop the attacks and charge or release those being held, Human Rights  Watch said.  In Iraqi Kurdistan, a protest organizer, Isma'il Abdullah, was abducted,  stabbed, and beaten on May 27, 2011. The Kurdistan government should make sure  its promised investigation of the episode is thorough, fair, and transparent,  and leads to the prosecution of those responsible, Human Rights Watch said.   "Authorities in Baghdad and in Iraqi-Kurdistan are keeping their citizens  from demonstrating peacefully," said Joe Stork, deputy Middle East director at  Human Rights Watch. "Iraq needs to make sure that security forces and  pro-government gangs stop targeting protest organizers, activists, and  journalists."  Several activists in the capital told Human Rights Watch that they believed  that the increased security at Baghdad's Tahrir Square and the recent arrests  were an attempt to head off reinvigoration of public protests, amid efforts by  various small protest groups to work together. They said that neighborhood  officials had warned them that security forces had made increased inquiries into  the activists' whereabouts and activities over the past two weeks.
 Baghdad Arrests
 On May 28, soldiers in four Humvees  and two other unmarked vehicles approached the offices of the human rights group  Where Are My Rights in Baghdad's Bab al Mu'adham neighborhood, as members met  with fellow protest organizers from the February 25 Group. Members of both  groups told Human Rights Watch that soldiers raided the building with guns  drawn, took away 13 activists in handcuffs and blindfolds, and confiscated  mobile phones, computers and documents.
 
 One detained activist who was  released on May 29 told Human Rights Watch that during the raid a commanding  officer introduced himself as "from Brigade 43"of the army's 11th  Division and said another officer was "from Baghdad Operation Command."
 
 "They did not show any arrest warrants and did not tell us why we were  being arrested," this activist said:
 A female activist complained and asked to see warrants, and they  told her to "shut up and get in the car." They blindfolded and handcuffed us,  and while they were doing this, they asked, "Why are you having these meetings?  Do you really think you can bring down the government?" And they asked who was  supporting us. The activist said that the army took the people it arrested to a detention  facility at Division 11 headquarters, where they were interrogated both as a  group and individually. "Once we were there, they hit us with their hands in the  face, neck, chest, and arms while we were still blindfolded," the activist said.  "They kicked us everywhere they could reach. They did not use batons on me, and  they talked to each other about not leaving marks or bruises on us."  The released activist and several members of both organizations said  security forces are still holding nine of the activists and have released four  without any charges. "I asked what crimes we had committed, and asked again  about arrest warrants," said the released activist. "They never answered either  question."  On May 27, men in civilian clothing detained four student protesters -  Jihad Jalil, Ali al-Jaf, Mouyed Faisal, and Ahmed Al-Baghdadi - near a peaceful  protest at Baghdad's Tahrir Square, witnesses said. "When [the protesters]  started to struggle, uniformed security forces joined in to help the abductors,"  one witness told Human Rights Watch. "I saw Jihad [one of the protesters]  dragged across the ground. A soldier pointed an AK-47 against Jihad's head and  cocked it, threatening to shoot him if he moved. People started panicking and  running."  In the confusion that followed, some witnesses said they saw security  forces push the four protesters into an ambulance that sped away, though others  were not sure what happened to them. Members of two of the students' families  told Human Rights Watch that authorities would not tell them where they had been  taken, despite multiple inquiries. The brother of one said, "We talked to  officials from the Interior Ministry, the 11th Division, the Baghdad  Brigade, and other prisons. They all say they do not have him and don't know  anything about him."
 Human Rights Watch received no response from a  government spokesman to requests for information about the four protesters'  whereabouts. On May 31, state-run Iraqiya TV broadcast a Baghdad Operation  Command statement saying security forces had arrested the students for carrying  forged IDs and not for participating in protests.
 
 One of the detained  students, a frequent protest organizer, had been chased by unknown assailants 10  days earlier and had been afraid to sleep at home since, a family member told  Human Rights Watch, "He called us a few times, but would not tell us where he  was staying, because he was convinced that security forces were after him and  would come arrest him if they were tapping the phone line."
 
 According to  witnesses and media reports, there was a significantly larger presence of  government security forces on May 27 than at other weekly Friday demonstrations  that have taken place since February 25 over the chronic lack of basic services  and perceived widespread corruption.
 
 Kurdistan Abduction
 In the Kurdistan  attack, in Sulaimaniya, a group of eight armed masked men, some in military  clothes, grabbed Abdullah, 28, an organizer and frequent speaker at Sulaimaniya  protests, as he was buying a phone card at about 12:05 a.m. on May 27, and  whisked him away in an unmarked Nissan patrol car. Abdullah told Human Rights  Watch that after they drove for a half-hour, the men pulled him out of the  vehicle into a field, where they covered his head, stabbed his arm, and pounded  him with their fists and butts of their pistols and rifles.
 During the beating, he said, when one of the assailants suggested they kill  him, others said they "needed an order from above." One assailant left to make a  phone call and when he returned, he told the others "not to kill me but to do  something very bad to my face." They removed the cover from his head and one of  the gang "beat my face with the Kalashnikov many times until my nose was  broken."
 At about 2 a.m., he said, they dumped him on the outskirt of  the city. Before they left, he said, "they threatened me to never participate in  any protests and I should be thrilled that they didn't kill me this time."
 
 Abdullah said that after he filed a police complaint the following day,  government and security officials called him and promised to investigate.
 On May 29, Hakim Qadir Hamajan, director of Sulaimaniya's security forces,  told Human Rights Watch, "We condemn all such acts of violence. The  investigation is ongoing, and no information can be released yet, but we are  working to find whoever is responsible and bring them before the courts to be  prosecuted."
 Abdullah had gone into hiding in mid-April after receiving  threatening phone calls and text messages because of his protest involvement. He  said he had re-emerged six weeks later because he believed he was no longer at  risk after hearing that officials and opposition parties would be discussing  Kurdistan's political crisis.
 
 Background
 Iraqi  authorities have taken several steps to eliminate protests in the capital from  public view. On April 13, officials issued new regulations  barring street protests and allowing them only at three soccer stadiums.
 
 In late February, Iraqi police allowed dozens of  assailants to beat and stab peaceful protesters in Baghdad. In the  early hours of February 21, dozens of men, some wielding knives and clubs,  attacked about 50 protesters who had set up two tents in Tahrir Square. During  nationwide February 25 protests, security forces killed at least 12 protesters  across the country and injured more than 100. On that day, Human Rights Watch  observed Baghdad security forces beating unarmed journalists and protesters,  smashing cameras, and confiscating memory cards.
 Security forces of the Kurdistan Regional Government (KRG) and its ruling  parties have used repressive measures against journalists and demonstrators since  the start of the daily protests in Sulaimaniya on February 17 seeking an end to  widespread corruption and greater civil and political rights. On March 6, masked  men attacked demonstrators  and set their tents on fire in Sulaimaniya. On April 18, security forces seized  control of Sara Square, the center of Sulaimaniya's protests, and have prevented  further demonstrations.
 On April 27, the KRG issued a 19-page report of  its investigation into the violence during the previous 60 days of  demonstrations. It concluded that violence was committed by both security forces  and protesters, and that "the police and security forces were poorly trained in  handling it appropriately."
 Iraq's constitution guarantees "freedom of assembly and peaceful  demonstration." As a state party to the International Covenant on Civil and  Political Rights, Iraq is obligated to protect the right to life and security of  the person, and the right to freedom of expression, association, and peaceful  assembly.   Amnesty International has called on the Iraqi authorities to end their  clampdown on peaceful protests following the arrest of 15 pro-reform activists  in Baghdad in recent days.
 Four protesters were arrested by  plain-clothed security forces last Friday morning during a peaceful  demonstration in Baghdad's Tahrir Square. They are still being held and are  reported to be facing trial on charges of possessing fake ID cards.
 
 Eleven other activists were arrested when security forces raided the  Baghdad headquarters of 'Ayna Haqqi' (Where is my right), a local NGO, on  Saturday. Four were later released but the others, including the NGO's  secretary-general, Ahmed Mohammad Ahmed, are still being held, apparently  because they are suspected of involvement in organizing demonstrations in Tahrir  Square.
 
 "These arrests provide further evidence of the Iraqi  authorities' intolerance of peaceful dissent and are very worrying," said  Malcolm Smart, Amnesty International's director for the Middle East and North  Africa.
 
 "If they are being held solely for their peaceful exercise of  the rights to freedom of expression or assembly they must be released  immediately and unconditionally."
 
 "Rather than clamping down on  protests, the Iraqi authorities should be upholding and protecting the right of  Iraqis to engage in peaceful protests in support of calls for political and  economic reform. Iraqis should be free to express their opinions without fear of  arrest or harassment by the security forces."
 
 All 11 detainees are  currently held at al-Muthanna Prison in Baghdad. They have been denied access to  their families and lawyers, raising fears that they could be subject to torture  or other ill-treatment.
 
 "The Iraqi authorities must ensure that these  detainees are protected against such abuse, including by being allowed immediate  access to their lawyers and families," said Malcolm Smart.
 
 Protests  first erupted in Iraq in mid-2010 over the federal government's failure to  provide basic services such as water and electricity. They then gathered  momentum, inspired by the popular protests in Tunisia and Egypt, and culminated  in a "Day of Rage" on 25 February, when tens of thousands of demonstrators  marched in cities across Iraq.
 
 The Iraqi and Kurdistan Regional  governments responded by issuing regulations giving the authorities virtually  unlimited discretion to determine who can demonstrate, but many Iraqis have  continued to protest in defiance of official restrictions.
 
 Published  last month, Amnesty International's report Days of Rage:  Protests and Repression in Iraq describes how Iraqi and  Kurdish forces have shot and killed protesters, including three teenage boys,  and threatened, detained and tortured political activists, and targeted  journalists covering the protests.
   If you're  wondering what the US State Dept added and thinking you must  have missed their 2:00 AM press release earlier this morning, take a breath,  relax, you didn't miss it. The State Dept has no statement on it. And the White  House? Barack will give mealy mouthed speeches about 'supporting' protests and  protesters in the 'Arab Spring' while repeatedly and intentionally ignoring the  human rights abuses in Iraq carried out by the US installed puppet government.  John Glaser (Antiwar.com) observes, "The  consequences protestors have faced elsewhere could be vastly more calamitous in  Iraq. Hence the very reason Iraq should be constantly in the headlines. The  media are having a tough enough time keeping U.S. support for Arab dictatorships  on the down low. With[out] the suppression of Iraqi democracy on the front  pages, it'd be too difficult to avoid making U.S. imperialism a primary inquiry  in the news on the Arab Spring. But suppressing Iraqi democracy is precisely  what Operation Iraqi Freedom has brought."   At The National Interest, Teg Glaen  Carpenter sketches out realities of Iraq:     Aside from periodic elections with competing parties, the new Iraq  is beginning to resemble the old Iraq under Saddam Hussein. Maliki's bureaucrats  routinely harass both foreign and domestic media outlets that dare to expose his  administration's abuses.  Disturbing evidence of such repression has been building for at  least the past two years, but matters escalated dramatically in February with  the regime's shocking brutality. As with many other countries in the Middle  East, demonstrations broke out in Iraq demanding, among other things, an end to  the Maliki government's rampant corruption. Those demonstrations culminated with  a "Day of Rage." Although the demonstrations even on that day were mostly  peaceful, security forces killed at least twenty-nine  participants. They also rounded up dozens of journalists, writers, photographers,  and intellectuals who had been involved in organizing the rallies. The Aldiyar  Television station, which had telecast footage of the demonstrations, reported  that security forces arrested seven employees, including a director and an  anchorman, and closed the studio. One of the many other journalists arrested in Baghdad was Hadi  al-Mahdi, who told Washington Post  reporter Stephanie McCrummen what happened after soldiers detained him and  several colleagues while they were sitting at an outdoor cafe. The soldiers  loaded al-Mahdi and the others into Humvees and drove them to a side street,  where they beat them severely. Then they took them to a former defense ministry  building that now houses a unit of the army's increasingly feared intelligence  unit. Mahdi was taken to a room alone, where he was beaten again with clubs,  boots and fists. Not satisfied with such garden-variety brutality, they took his  shoes off, wet his feet, and administered electric shocks. This is the new Iraqi democracy for which the United States has  spent more than $800 billion and sacrificed some 4,500 American lives. It is an  Iraq in which regime opponents are arrested and tortured, in which more than a  third of the terrorized Christian community has fled, and in which religious  zealots are forcing more and more women back under the veil.         Meanwhile Bloomberg News and the San Francisco Chronicle report,  "The U.S. is failing to meet "key milestones" leading up to the planned handover  of responsibilities in Iraq from the U.S. military to the State Department on  Oct. 1, according to a report being issued tomorrow by State Department's  Inspector General."  They're not meeting the needed deadlines (US government  isn't). It's not as if the White House isn't pushing to extend the SOFA. The  real surprise is the Iraq benchmarks.  Remember those? Barack should have no say  in extending or not extending the US presence in Iraq -- via DoD or state Dept.  Why?
 Because continued monies given to Iraq by the US tax payer were  dependent upon the benchmarks. The (Bush) White House wrote the benchmarks. But  it was the (Democratically-controlled) Congressthat insisted on  them.
 
 Back then, you may remember, Democrats in Congress pretended to  want the Iraq War over and want it over immediately. So they gave a lot of "Mr.  President . . ." speeches including noting that there was no progress. The White  House would insist there was. The benchmarks were supposed to provide the  Congress and the American people with a means to measure what was taking place  in Iraq.
 
 The GAO hasn't bothered to examine the benchmarks since 2008.  However, it should also be noted that the GAO is an arm of Congress and only  researches and studies what it's instructed to by Congress. How interesting that  Congress lost interest in measuring 'progress' in Iraq as soon as they believed  a Democrat would win the 2008 elections.
 
 The benchmarks were not only  signed off on by the White House and the US Congress, they were also signed off  on by Nouri al-Maliki. As Barack attempts to extend the US military presence in  Iraq, as Democratic House Rep Adam Smith insists he's okay (and he says other  Dems are as well) with 10 to 20,000 US troops remaining in Iraq, the American  tax payer should be pointing out that the benchmarks were supposed to be met and  that the Congress said if they weren't met the funding for the Iraq War  stopped.
   What were the Iraq benchmarks?  Not what was the list and how much partial  success did they meet, what were they really?   They were Nancy Pelosi's sell out of the peace movement.  Nancy Pelosi  flipping the middle finger at all Americans and thinking everyone was too stupid  to ever catch on.  In 2006, the Democrats had control of which house of  Congress? None.  Republicans had control of both houses.  Give us a house, Nancy  said in the lead up to the 2006 mid-term elections, and we'll end the Iraq War.   With control of just one house, we'll have the power to end the war.     And Americans believed the lie.  They turned out, they showed up to vote  and they gave the Democrats control of both houses of Congress.  When Democrats  got control of the House, Nancy Pelosi became Speaker of the House -- the most  powerful position in the House. Instead of using her position to end the Iraq  War, she used it to continue it. That's not an assertion that can be questioned  at this point.  It is fact. Her actions, her sellout of the peace movement,  allowed the Iraq War to continue.    May 22, 2007, CNN reported, "Speaker Nancy Pelosi will present  a plan to House Democrats for a war funding bill that won't include a timeline  for withdrawing U.S. troops from Iraq but will feature benchmarks with  consequences, according to Democratic leadership aides. [. . .] They said  Democrats won't give up on a deadline for pulling troops out of Iraq, hoping to  write language into defense appropriations and defense authorization bills over  the summer. Some prominent antiwar Democrats denounced the compromise, and even  Pelosi said she was unsure of her vote." The two-faced Pelosi had been quoted  shortly before (May 11, 2007) by Jonathan Weisman (Washington Post)  insisting, "He has grown accustomed to the free hand on Iraq he had before  January 4. Those days are over."  No,  what was over was the peace movement.  Nancy Pelois either lied flat  out or she's too damn ignorant to know what she was being sold.     She failed Americans.  She failed Iraqis.  She failed Iraqis not only by  continuing the illegal war, Nancy Pelosi failed them by refusing to uphold the  benchmarks she insisted on (as Speaker she could have killed them).  We see the  results of Nancy Pelosi's 'leadership' in Iraq today.  Al Rafidayn reports on a bill that Nouri  pushed through his Cabinet (and which he wants the Parliament to turn into a  law).  The bill calls for prison sentences for those who were Ba'athists prior  to the start of the Iraq War.  Prior to the start of the Iraq War, many Iraqis  were Ba'athists.  Whether they were Sunni, Shi'ite or what have you.  It was a  political party in Iraq and part of a political movement in the Arab world.  Dar Addustour reports that Nouri's  Cabinet claims this proposal is just to prevent Ba'athist from taking control of  the country again.  Dar Addustour notes it's a five-year  prison sentence for those who were 'just' members but ten years for those  promoted the party as well.   "Wait! What does that have to do with Nancy?"  The 18 benchmarks?  One of  the benchmarks was de-de-Ba'athification.  One conclusion the Iraq Inquiry will  offer is that Paul Bremer's decision to institute de-Ba'athification -- purging  the government and military of Ba'athists -- after the US invaded Iraq did more  than anything else to increase the conflict.  Government officials and military  officials were all in agreement on that in their testimonies to the London-based  Inquiry led by John Chilcot.  And one of the benchmarks was to do away with this  policy and to find reconciliation.   It never took place. It never took place.  And the law Nancy pushed through  said if the benchmarks weren't met, the funding was cut.  Nancy didn't her job  and Iraqis suffer to this day.    Yesterday, Iraqiya  pulled out of the government/went on strike/however you want to word it. Reading  this morning's US papers, it's amazing to find no coverage of this. Especially  from outlets such as the New York Times which has obsessed in print repeatedly  over Moqtada al-Sadr's threat to pull his small bloc out of the government.  Moqtada has 39 seats in Parliament (40 if you're genereous). Iraqiya has how  many?
 Well it won the most seats of any competing slate and that number  is 91. Iraqiya has seen a splintering with a small number of members spinning  off into White Iraqiya. Whether they would followthe decision or not is an  actual news story. (My guess is they would not.) But even without them, Iraqiya  still controls far more seats than Moqtada.
 
 Should Iraqiya and it's  splinter stick together on this issue, they could force Nouri to give into other  major blocs (such as al-Hakim's) and could force him to court MPs representing  the religious minorities because he would need every vote possible to pass  legislation.
 
 That's a news story.
 
 And Ayad Allawi, leader of  Iraqiya, did not just suddenly wake up yesterday and decide, "I feel like  departing the government today." This threat has been floated for months now. It  was made implicit early in May with Allawi speaking of it freely. Last week, the  Arab media was filled with various columns and reports attempting to assess how  serious Allawi was and what the chances were that Iraqiya would walk?
 
 So  there's no excuse for the New York Times of "We were taken by  surprise!"
 
 There silence on the issue also demonstrates that they're  really not interested in whether people leave Nouri's government, they're just  interested in All Things Moqtada. Repeating, Iraqiya has far more seats in  Parliament than does Moqtada's bloc. The bloc the Times can't shut up  about.
 
 Why did Iraqiya walk? The Erbil Agreement not being implemented  and, yes, that's a hard news story as well. Dar Addustour obviously agrees.  Alsumaria TV notes,  "State of Law Coalition senior official Kamal Al Saidi accused Al Iraqiya List  of trying to sap the political regime and complicate the situation in Iraq. Some  of Al Iraqiya's demands are alarming and unconstitutional mainly regarding the  demand to cancel the Justice and Accountability Commission, Al Saidi  argued."
 
 So what today really reveals about the US press is that we have  a lot of people fascinated with Moqtada, a lot of fans, just not a whole lot of  reporters.
 |