Monday, February 6, 2012.  Chaos and violence continue, a judicial effort  is underway to strip an Iraqiya member of immunity, the Iraqi military is said  to be 'infiltrated,'  the National Lawyers Guild calls for all charges to be  dropped against Bradley Manning, Roberta Flack releases her first new album in  almost nine years, and more.
 In the US, an album was released today as a download.  That's news for many  reasons including that albums are released on Tuesday in the US.  So what  album's so special that it alters the street date?  
Let It Be Roberta:  Roberta Flack Sings The Beatles.  Amazon currently is preselling the new  collection 
on sale for $9.99 on disc but you can 
download it right now from Amazon, all 14 tracks  (one is a live track from 1972, all the others are studio tracks recorded for  this album), and if you do it right now, you're getting an amazing bargain  because it's only $3.99. 
Roberta Flack's not just someone I've called a friend for  years, she's also a living legend, one of the all time music greats, a four-time  Grammy winner known for such classics as "The First Time Ever I Saw Your Face,"  "Killing Me Softly With His Song," "Oasis," "Set The Night To Music" (with 
Maxi Priest),  "Where Is The Love?" (with the late Donny Hathaway, we'll link to his daughter  
Lalah  Hathaway), "The Closer I Get To You" (with Donny)," "Feel Like Making Love,"  "Tonight, I Celebrate My Love" (with 
Peabo Bryson), the 
Ashford &  Simpson classic "Uh-Uh-Ooh-Ooh Look Out (Here It Comes)," "Making Love" and  
Janis  Ian's"Jesse."  
Kat will have a review up here tomorrow of the  album.  The songs she covers are "In My Life," "Hey Jude," "We Can Work It Out"  (the first single for the album), "Let It Be," "Oh Darling," "I Should Have  Known Better," "The Long & Winding Road," "Come Together," "Isn't It A  Pity," "If I Fell," "And I Love Him," "Here, There And Everywhere" (this is the  live track, from her 1972 Carnegie Hall concert), "I'm Looking Through You" and  "Yesterday."  
John Lennon collectors take note, the album booklet includes a  little seen photo of 
Yoko Ono, John and Roberta.  It's a great album, it's been  almost 9 years since Roberta put out her last album and, again, right now, it's  $3.99 to download the entire album, all 14 tracks, at Amazon.  That's a sale  price, not a regular price.  The sale won't last forever.
 
 Abdul Aziz al-Talabani is a member of Iraqi President Jalal Talabani's clan  or tribe. 
 Al Rafidayn reports that he states the  clan met in Sulaymaniyah Friday to discuss Tareq al-Hashemi and they are  demanding that the KRG turn al-Hashemi over to Baghdad.
 
 From al-Hashemi to al-Mutlaq, 
Aswat al-Iraq reports, "Deputy Premier  Saleh al-Mutlaq discussed with a delegation from Ahrar Bloc the recent political  situation in Iraq and the importance of unifying ranks to contain the present  crisis, according to a statement issued by his office. The statement, as was  received by Aswat al-Iraq, said that Mutlaq valued the initiatives made by Ahrar  Bloc and the Sadrist Trend to minimize the gaps among political blocs in order  to achieve political stability." 
Al Rafidayn notes the rumors that  al-Mutlaq is expected to put a formal apology to Nouri in writing and that  Sadrist MP Odai Awad explains that they've been working on this for some time  but only now have they had significant results. 
 
 Ali Hussein (Al Mada) contributes a column that  notes some close to Nouri desire for Iraqiya to be hit by an earthquake, the  real question for Iraqis is whether or not it is in the country's interest to  allow some politicians to carry out their plans to rid the country of their  political opponents.  
Dar Addustour reports that it is hoped  today's meeting at Jalal Talabani's Baghdad headquarters of the national  conference prepratory committee will result in some concrete steps to resolve  the political crisis.  However, not only has this been the hope forever but  resolution really wasn't in the air today.  Earlier, 
Aswat al-Iraq was reporting that  Parliament would discuss the 2012 federal budget.  However, 
Ayad al-Tamemi (Al Mada) reports that there was a  lack of a quorum so they recessed without doing so. 
   
  
 While the political crisis continues, the security situation continues to  falter. 
Al Mada notes that the adviser to  the minister on reconciliation noted Saturday that Nouri's government will  'close' the "Awakenings" (Sahwa, Sons Of Iraq) this year. Al Mad had previously  reported on the talk of this taking place, this is a report on the official  announcement having been made. As Sahwa gets phased out, 
Ali al-Saadi (Dar Addustour) reports "military  expert" Abbas al-Awad has declared that Iraq's military has been invaded and  sweeping changes and a review of all the appointments that have been made must  take place to purge it of "terrorist elements." The ease with which car bombs  have made it through checkpoints is something the analyst finds especially  disturbing.  And in more bad news for Iraqi forces, 
Al Mada notes that the Ahmed al-Khafaji, the Ministry  of Interior's Undescretary for Federal Security Affairs, declared today that in  July the Iraqi army will leave the cities and provinces and move to the borders  and the Interoir Ministy will be over security for Iraqi cities and towns.  Why  is that bad news?  As National Alliance MP Uday Awad reminds, "It is worth  noting that the heads of the security ministries remain vacant despite a year  having passed since the current government was formed." 
 
 Turning to some of today's reported violence, 
Reuters notes a Balad Ruz mortar attack  which claimed 1 life and left thirteen people injured (the target was a  crumbling building in which homeless Kurds were living), an Abu Saida roadside  bombing which injured one person, a Mahmudiya roadside bombing injured three  people and, late last night, a Jalawla sticky bombing left one police officer  injured.  
KUNA adds a Mosul bombing left four Iraqi  soldiers injured.
 
  
 Iraq is setting records for executions -- over 50 this year so far. 
Al Mada  reported on Thursday that the Iraqi Embassy in Riaydh (Saudi  Arabia) was explaining that although they were carrying out death sentences,  they did not have any Saudi prisoners who were of or worked for the royal family  of Saudi Arabia. Yet Saturday, 
Al  Mada reports, the same Iraqi Embassy announced they were  delaying the execution of Saudis and, oops, they needed to review the list of  names because there may have been an error and the list of names is compiled  from multiple lists from multiple locations in Iraq so the Ministry of Justice  is going to review the list to determine which names are on it and which aren't.  Accuracy on a list of people to be executed is, apparently, only important if  another country objects to your lists. 
Al Rafidayn reports the Iraqi  Central Criminal Court handed down a death sentence today on a man who allegedly  kidnapped two French citizens (brothers) and someone with the Iranian consul.  Allegedly? The man gave a 'confession' (including that he had killed one of the  brothers). Iraq''s 'confessions' tend to result from prolonged torture. This is  made more even more likely when we're discussing crimes from 2004.  
Aswat al-Iraq notes that Bernard Valiro,  spokesperson for France's Foreign Ministry, declared today that France opposes  capital punishment and as to Iraq's "execution of 34 persons on 19 January last,  and 17 on 1st of February, 2012, France denounces the increase resort to  execution verdicts."
In England, a 104-year-old Iraqi male made the news over the weekend.  
The Daily Mail reports, "Taufeek Khanjar  is thought to have become the oldest person to be declared a British citizen  when he took part in a citizenship ceremony in Kingston-upon-Thames, Surrey."  Saturday 
Al Mada reported on Warina Zaya  Bashou, an elderly Iraqi woman, a 111-year-old, born in Ramadi and who lived  with her children and grandchildren in al-Anbar (she immigrated to the US in  2003).  She remembers the Ottoman Empire and the British occupation and all the  governments that followed.  She rated the monarchy highly.  The US Citizenship  and Immigration Services say the woman (who became a naturalized citizen last  month in Detroit) was born in 1900 but the woman maintains she was born July 10,  1885 (which would make her 127) and seems highly likely considering what she  lived through.  Iraqi women in Iraq today are living through a great deal in the  land of orphans and widows.  
Dar Addustour reports that Parliament's  Committee on Women in Childrean has referred to the Minister of State and  Parliamentary affairs a proposed law which would provide interest free loans for  Iraq's widows and divorced women.   Lat 
Friday's snapshot included: 
 
  
 Reuters  notes Halima Dakhil who pays $210 for rent for her  and her children. And that Iraqi widows receive $85 a month from the government  and $13 a month for each child.  This is ridiculous and shameful as Nouri spends  billons on toys for warfare.  Gender-traitor Ibtihal al-Zaidi shows up in the  story to insist, "I agree it is little.  But there is a real plan to increase  these benefits."  Let's hope all the widows and children living in poverty can  afford to wait for al-Zaidi to get around to addressing the "real  plan."  Who is this woman who goes along making excuses?  Now in his second  term as prime minister, Nouri appointed his stooge, Ibtihal al-Zaidi, to be  Minister of the State for Women's Affairs. . She's gotten herself in trouble in  the last weeks in Iraq. She's declared that she doesn't believe in equality,  that Iraqi women need their husband's permission before doing anything  (presumably their son's or father's permission if they're widowed, divorced or  unmarried) and has come up with a little dress code for Iraqi women employed by  the government. Al  Mada reports today that MP Safia al-Suhail is  calling the gender traitor out and asking that al-Zaidi appear before Parliament  to explain this dress code (which bans certain skirts, t-shirts and sneakers  among other items -- but only for women) and al-Suhail points out that  al-Zaidi's remarks are troubling and run contrary to the oath the Minister of  Women's Affairs took when assuming her office.   
 Sunday 
Al Mada reported that MP Safiya al-Suhail stated that  the statements had been confusing and what they were calling for was a meet-up  between al-Zaidi and the women in Parliament.  al-Suhail also again noted that  al-Zaidi's statement of not believing in equality runs counter to Article 14 of  the Constitution.   Article 14 reads: "Iraqis are equal before the law without  discrimination based on gender, race, ethnicity, nationality, origin, color,  religion, sect, belief or opinion, or economic or social status."
 
  
 Turning to the US, 
Bradley Manning is in the news as  the US military announced Friday night that they were moving to a court-martial.  
The Bradley Manning Support Network's Jeff  Paterson responded, "This administration owes all Americans an honest  explanation for their extraordinary retaliation against Bradley  Manning."
This move to a court-martial is not a surprise. Last month,  
Josh Gerstein (POLITICO) reported, "Another  military officer has formally recommended that Army Pfc. Bradley Manning face a  full-scale court martial for allegedly leaking thousands of military reports and  diplomatic cables to the online transparency site WikiLeaks." In addition,  Article 32 hearings are almost always rubber stamps. 
Monday April  5th, 
WikiLeaks released US  military video of a July 12, 2007 assault in Iraq. 12 people were  killed in the assault including two 
Reuters journalists Namie Noor-Eldeen and  Saeed Chmagh. 
Monday June 7,  2010, the US military announced that they had arrested Bradley  Manning and he stood accused of being the leaker of the video. 
Leila Fadel  (Washington Post) reported in August 2010 that Manning had  been charged -- "two charges under the Uniform Code of Military Justice. The  first encompasses four counts of violating Army regulations by transferring  classified information to his personal computer between November and May and  adding unauthorized software to a classified computer system. The second  comprises eight counts of violating federal laws governing the handling of  classified information." In March, 
David S. Cloud  (Los Angeles Times) reported  that the military has added 22 additional counts to the charges including one  that could be seen as "aiding the enemy" which could result in the death penalty  if convicted. The Article 32 hearing took place in December.
AP has a  video report on the move to court-martial 
here. 
Luis Martinez (ABC News)  explains, "Manning faces 22 charges, including aiding the enemy,  wrongfully causing intelligence to be published on the Internet knowing that it  is accessible to the enemy, theft of public property or records, and  transmitting defense information. Aiding the enemy is a capital offense that  could bring the death penalty, but Army prosecutors have said they will instead  pursue life in prison if the 24-year old Manning is convicted. Manning could  also face a reduction in rank to the lowest enlisted pay grade, total forfeiture  of all pay and allowances and a dishonorable discharge." 
Matthew Hay Brown (Baltimore Sun) notes, "There was no  word on whether the as-yet-unscheduled court-martial would also be held at Fort  Meade, one of three installations within the military district equipped to host  such a proceeding."
The 
Associated Press offers this  summary of the scattershot defense offered by Bradley's attorneys, "Manning's  lawyers countered that others had access to Manning's workplace computers. They  say he was in emotional turmoil, partly because he was a gay soldier at a time  when homosexuals were barred from serving openly in the U.S. armed forces. The  defense also claims Manning's apparent disregard for security rules during  stateside training and his increasingly violent outbursts after deployment were  red flags that should have prevented him from having access to classified  material. Manning's lawyers also contend that the material WikiLeaks published  did little or no harm to national security." Scattershot? That defense remains  incoherent until it is has a larger statement attached to it such as "And he's  innocent" or "and that's why he did what he did."
The Bradley Manning Support Network has a  number of events planned including:
 
 Olympia, Washington Tuesday, February 7 -- Noon The Evergreen State  College, Lecture Hall 3 Sponsored by SDS and the "Re-Interpreting Liberation"  program Bradley Manning, a 24-year-old Army intelligence analyst, faces life in  prison for allegedly sharing the "Collateral Murder"video of a US helicopter  attack that killed 11 civilians and wounded two children in  Baghdad,…
   
 This evening the 
National Lawyers Guild issued a call for all  charges against Bradley to be dropped:   
Contact: 
 Nathan Tempey,
 Communications  Coordinator,
 212-679-5100, ext. 15
   
 
 The National Lawyers Guild  (NLG) calls for the dismissal of all charges against Bradley Manning. The Army  announced on Friday that Manning will face a general court martial for allegedly  leaking classified information about U.S. policy and practices relating to,  among other things, the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan
  NLG President David Gespass, said, "Manning's prosecution is  calculated to distract us from the real problem, that the U.S. government is  once again hiding from the public proof of crimes committed in our  name."
 Manning is a U.S. Army soldier accused of transferring classified  data to his personal computer and sending it to the whistleblowing website  Wikileaks. He faces 22 charges including "aiding the enemy," a capital  offense.
  Kathleen Gilberd, executive director of the NLG's Military Law Task  Force (MLTF) said, "Manning is being prosecuted for patriotic acts akin to the  release of the Pentagon Papers in 1971. His prosecution highlights both the way  that military proceedings subvert fundamental due process rights and the dangers  of government secrecy to a free society."
  The potential for prosecutorial abuse stems from the power that  commanding officers have as the convening authorities over court martial  hearings. The convening authority selects the officer who first investigates a  case, recommends charges against the accused, and then selects the "members" of  the court martial, who form the jury. Particularly in a high profile case such  as this, where the government has already indicated its determination to convict  and punish Manning, the ability of the convening authority to control the  process and the outcome is overwhelming.
   "The court martial system is fraught from beginning to end with the  danger of command influence," noted MLTF Chair James Branum. "It has permeated  this case from the beginning and emanated from the Commander-in-Chief on down,  making due process impossible. In this situation, dismissal of all charges is  the only just option."
   The Military Law Task Force grew out of the National Lawyers  Guild's Military Law Offices, which provided counsel for GIs in Asia during the  Vietnam War. The MLTF includes attorneys, legal workers, law students and  "barracks lawyers" interested in draft, military and veterans issues. It is an  active committee of the National Lawyers Guild and has been providing  representation and advice to service members for decades.
 The National Lawyers Guild was founded in 1937 and is the oldest  and largest public interest/human rights bar organization in the United States.  Its headquarters are in New York and it has chapters in every  state.
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 Michael Ratner: Heidi, we know over the last few weeks we've been  covering what's happening with Mumia.  We know that he got taken off death row,  that he got his death sentence removed, that he's now serving a life sentence,  then got moved into a medium security prison but got put into very  bad conditions, into solitare in that prison and we've been asking people to  write about that, to protest about it and now we have an update and I think it's  a good one but I want to hear from you, Heidi.
  
 Heidi Boghosian: I think this is an example, Michael, in which  pressure from the public -- and there was enormous pressure on the Dept of  Corrections in Pennsylvania -- to move Mumia out of the hole, solitary  confinement, administrative custody, where he was for 50 days after leaving  death row at SCI Greene, and if finally worked.
  
 Michael Ratner: Now the hole is 24 hours --
  
 Heidi Boghosian: 23 hours --
  
 Michael Ratner: 23 hours of walls.
  
 Heidi Boghosian: It's been likened to spending time alone in a  small bathroom.
  
 Michael Ratner: Oh my gosh.
  
 Heidi Boghosian: Over 5,000 signatures on a petition were gathered,  in a matter of days, calling for the DoC to move him into General Population.   As of this airing, last week, he finally was moved into General  Population.
  
 Michael Ratner: That's really wonderful news and a very heroic  struggle.  I mean, we still have to get him out.  But this has been remarkable  to finally have that achieved is amazing.  When's your next visit,  Heidi?
  
 Heidi Boghosian: As we tape this, the next day to see him in  General Population for the first time.  So I look forward to reporting on that  visit.
  
 Michael Ratner: Oh, that's very exiciting.
  
 Heidi Boghosian: It will be a contact visit.
  
 Michael Ratner: A contact visit.  Unbelievable.  That's really  great.
  
 Heidi Boghosian: Yes.
  
 Michael: Well that's really incredible and we'll report on it next  week.  Thank you, Heidi.
  
 Heidi is one of Mumia's attorneys and has been for years.  For those that  don't know what a contact visit is, you and the prisoner sit in the same area  with no divider.  Usually, it's one open area where all the prisoners who can  have contact visits are gathered and visiting with their friends, family and  attorneys.  On the Law & Disorder that began airing January 23rd,  Heidi explained what the visits with Mumia had been like:
  
  
  Michael Ratner: Let me ask, and I want you to go on, when you visit  him, he comes into the room or where ever you visit him in  shackles?
 
   
Heidi Boghosian: Yes. And it's noteworthy that years ago at SCI Greene,  he also was in shackles until [Bishop] Desmond Tutu visited him a few years ago  and complained that this was inhumane treatment because essentially he's behind  thick plexi-glass in a small 4 by 6 roughly foot holding unit and there are  little perforated holes on the side so you can hear each other. But, so now he's  back in the shackles. His phone call privileges have been --
 
  
 Michael Ratner: Wait a second. You talk to him through a  wall?
 
 
 
 Heidi Boghosian: Yes, you're sitting on one side of a thick plexi-glass  partition. So you're in the same room but it's divided in half by plexi-glass.  
   
  
 So they won't have pleix-glass between them in a contact visit.  In a  perfect world, we'd have time to note the Guantanamo update this week.  I'd like  to.  I have a feeling we won't have time this week and that I'll have to grab a  different segment from the updates.