| Monday, April 25, 2011.  Chaos and violence continue, the US military  announces two deaths, protests continue in Iraq, Kurdish forces and the Iraqi  military clash, a governor shuts down all government office today, and  more.    In Iraq, protests continued over the weekend.  They continue today including in Basra and Um Qasr .  Hardi Farukh  died Saturday.  AFP reports  that Hardi was 28-years-old,  worked at a publishing hosue and was engaged to be married but instead, on  Saturday, became the tenth protestor to die in northern Iraq in the last weeks  (Hardi died from wounds received when 'security' forces shot at protesters April  18th in Sulaimaniya).  CPT's Michele Naar-Obed (Ekklesia) reports  from the  KRG: A new song was playing on Iraqi  Kurdistan radio just before Easter, which included the lines, "Don't kill this  generation" and "don't kill the future." While the song played, guns were  blasting and tear gas filled the streets in both Suleimaniya and the KRG capital  city, Hawler (Erbil). Day sixty-one of  Suleimaniya's daily demonstrations against corruption in Iraqi Kurdistan started  earlyon 18 April 2011. The Christian Peacemaker Teams (CPT) group arrived at  11:00. Music was playing from the stage and small groups of people were  gathering. Two CPTers decided to use the quiet time to grab a cup of coffee and  juice in a cafe next to the square. A few of the demonstration organizers were  doing the same. Meanwhile armed  soldiers, the anti-terrorism unit, and police were positioning themselves around  the square., with guns, tear gas, water cannons, and riot gear. When the two CPTers and organizers left the cafe, a  group of about twenty young men were talking about confronting the soldiers and  police. Some were talking about throwing rocks. Others told us them that  soldiers would throw the first round of rocks to provoke a fight. Still others  told them that the government pays some of these young men to throw the first  stones in order to provoke an escalation of violence. The organizers and CPTers  gave an impromptu workshop on nonviolence. Some of the young men decided to stay  in the square. Others were ready to confront the soldiers. One young man said he  needed the money.      Jim Muir: It shouldn't be happening here but it is.  This is Basra  in the south [footage of protesters].  Iraq had its second free general election  only last year. But that hasn't stopped trouble breaking out in almost all parts  of the country. They've been particularly strong in Kurdistan in the north  They've had free elections for nearly 20 years. But there's growing anger there  against the two big Kurdish parties accused of corruption and repression. The  capital of Baghdad has had its share of protests too against what some see as  the emergence of a corrupt political elite which has failed to provide jobs and  services to a growing number of young people.   Yanaar Mohammed (Women's Freedom in Iraq): This is the democracy  that we see in Iraq: arbitrary arrests, torture, beating, joblessness and they  are drowning in a sea of money.  $40 billion are totally lost.  Nobody knows  where it went from the financial budget while the widows are in this square --  the widows and the orphans of the war are startving.   Jim Muir: Despite the fact that they went to the polls only last  year to elect a new Parliament and government, people still feel the need to  come here in their hundreds every week to voice their demands and press their  greivances.  There are small signs that the government may be at least going  through the motions of paying attention to some of those demands.  Prime  Minister Maliki has said he won't stand for a third term in office in three  year's time. He's also given government ministries a hundred days to shape up  and meet government targets. He says he doesn't feel threatened by the protests.     Nouri al-Maliki: The demonstrations here are different from the  protests in other Arab countries.  Here, they are about demands and services  which we respect and try to meet if we can.  We're not afraid of demands and  demonstrations. In fact, we encourage them.   Jim Muir:  Ala Nabil would not agree. He's been detained by  security men after demonstrations twice.  Held for days and beaten for  criticizing the prime minister. He says he's under constant surveilance.     Ala Nabil: We have detentions, abductions from the street.  We're  thrown into secret prisons and some people just disappear and nobody knows where  they are for months or years. People are afraid to talk.  Just like under Saddam  [Hussein].   Jim Muir: And so the protests continue. Not to get rid of the  government, but to get it to live up to its promises and slogans. The message  from Iraq is that even if someone else comes in and gets rid of your dictators,  real democracy does not come easy.  Jim Muir, BBC News, Baghdad.    Nouri's comments about 'respect' are in direct contrast to his repeated  characterization of the protesters as linked to "terrorism" and "Ba'athists."   In the text version of the report , Muir notes that Firas Ali  campaigned for Ala Nabil's release while he was imprisoned for eight days and  that the response was for "armed security operatives" to seize Firas Ali from an  NGO office and that Ala Nabil is attempting to get Firas released.    The people of Mosul continue to demand a functioning government.  Aswat al-Iraq reports , "An Iraqi Army  force has surrounded al-Ahrar (Liberals) Square in central Mosul on Monday to  prevent demonstrators from reaching the square the witnessed a sit-in  demonstration over the past few days, a Ninewa security source said."   They  have attempted this throughout the month.  Last Thursday, Governor Atheel  al-Nujaifi had to break through the military barricade to join protesters -- and  to clear a path for many others to follow him to the protests.  Atheel  al-Nujaifi is the brother of Speaker of Parliament Osama al-Nujaifi. Protests  continued in Mosul over the weekend.  Saturday AFP reported , it was "the 15th day  in a row" for Mosul protests and that "Tribal leaders and members of the  provincial council joined more than 1,000 protesters who vowed to continue their  rallies until US forces leave the country."  DPA reminded  that Friday security forces  fired on protesters in Mosul killing at least 1 and leaving forty-four more  wounded.   Jamal al-Badrani (Reuters) reports , "Sunday, around  5,000 people, including provincial council members and tribal leaders, rallied  in the main square against extending the U.S. troops presence beyond the  year-end deadline." Aswat al-Iraq quoted  a security source  stating, "About 6,000 demonstrators have gathered in al-Ahrar Square on Sunday,  calling on non-extension of the U.S. troops presences in Iraq, release of  prisoners and carrying out reforms by the Iraqi government."     Atheel al-Nujaifi is the governor of Nineveh.  The Great Iraqi Revolution reports , ""Atheel Al  Nujaifi has just stopped all work in all government offices as a statement  against the tyrannical and unconstitutional acts that Maliki and Ghannam are  carrying out."  When the governor of a province takes such an action, it is  news.  Where's the western press?  The Iraqi military are basically terrorizing  the people of Mosul.  The governor of the province has protested their actions  and today called an end to work at all the government offices.  Nick Turse (TomDispatch  reposted by Al Jazeera) observes  of the ongoing  protests: The first months of this  year have been grim for free speech in Iraq. As revolts swept across the Middle East and North  Africa, they spread to Iraqi cities and towns, but took on a very different  cast. In February, in places like  Baghdad, Fallujah, Mosul and Tikrit, protesters took to the streets, intent on  reform - focused on ending corruption and the chronic shortages of food, water,  electricity and jobs - but not toppling the government of prime minister Nuri  al-Maliki. The response by government  security forces, who have arrested, beaten, and shot protesters, leaving  hundreds dead or wounded, however, was similar to that of other autocratic  rulers around the region. Attacks by  Iraqi forces on freedom of the press, in the form of harassment, detention, and  assaults on individual journalists, raids of radio stations, the offices of  newspapers and press freedom groups have also shown the dark side of Maliki's  regime. Many journalists have been  prevented from covering protests or have curtailed their reporting in response  to brutality, raising the spectre of a return to the days of Saddam Hussein's  regime when press freedom was a fiction. Maliki's US allies, however, have turned a blind eye  to the violence and repression, with the top spokesman for the US military in  Iraq praising the same Iraqi units which eyewitnesses have identified as key  players in the crackdown while ignoring the outrages attributed to  them.    
 A blind eye also appears to have been turned to corruption for many years  now.  New Sabah reports  that the Iraqi  Office of Financial Supervision has informed the US that they retain the right  to file for compensation over "mismanagement" of Iraqi money by the Coalition  Provisional Authority which ran things immediately after the start of the Iraq  War. Questions remain on the Iraqi side about at least seven billion  dollars. In other corruption news, Al Rafidayn reports  that the  Integrity Commission has announced that the ex-governor of Nineveh Province has  received a sentence of two years in prison for embezzlement and corruption  explaining that in January 0f 2007, he created a number of ficitional people who  received monthly work payments for six months. Meanwhile Dar Addustour adds  that the  Integrity Commission also announced that they were investigating alleged  corruption in muncipalities with some focus on the ration system cards and how  they are administered locally.  The Iraqi Parliament, Aswat al-Iraq reports , held a session  today on human rights within a civil society.  No word on whether Nouri attended  though, goodness knows, he needed to.     Insisting that the Parliament will have the last word, Aswat al-Iraq reports  Speaker Osama  al-Nujeify also confirmed that talks for a continued US military presence beyond  2011 is still being discussed within the government.  Jonathan Steele (Guardian) observes , "As  with so many elements of the geopolitical strategy he inherited from George  Bush, Barack Obama has gone along with it. So it should be no surprise that  Admiral Mike Mullen, chairman of the joint chief of staffs, was in Baghdad on  Friday urging the government to amend the agreement under which all US forces  have to leave Iraq by the end of this year.  Robert Gates, the US defence  secretary, was in the Iraqi capital on a similar mission a few weeks earlier."  (Note, Steele writes of the oil motives exposed by the Independent last week --  via a columnist, the news finally makes it into the Guardian.)  Also noting Mullen's trip to Iraq is  the editorial board of the Delaware County  Times  which applauds Mullen for talking publicly about the  possibility US troops might remain in Iraq past 2011: "And if American forces  remain in Iraq beyond the Dec. 31 deadline for withdrawal, it will be damaging  for President Barack Obama, whose main campaign platform was ending America's  involvement in the war." The Tehran Times  reports  that the Iranian "Grand Ayatollah Seyyed Kazim  Husseini al-Haeri has issued a religious ruling forbidding the extension of the  U.S. military presence in Iraq beyond December 2011." And as talks continue  between the Iraqi and US governments over extending the SOFA, the Iranian  government insists it is not involved.  ISNA quotes  Iran's  Ambassdor to Iraq Hassan Danaei-Far stating, "No Iraqi delegation was dispatched  to Iran by Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki for dialogues on extending the  timetable of the US forces in Iraq. Iran has taken an entirely clear stance on  the issue, we belive that foreign forces should leave Iraq and we believe that  no foreign threat has been posed against Iraq. Iraqi policemen and army are able  to run their own country." Iranian puppets like Moqtada al-Sadr have made their  own noises.  The Khaleej Times editorial board notes ,  "Already certain firebrand political leaders have warned against possible  extension of American soldiers in the country."  That refers to Moqtada  al-Sadr.  Moqtada appears prominently in the latest report for the US Congress.   From Kenneth Katzman's [PDF format warning] "Iraq: Politics, Governance, and Human Rights :"  As noted above, Sadr was part of the anti-Maliki Shiite coaltion  (Iraqi National Alliance) for the March 2010 national elections.  Sadr sees  himself and his faction as the main spokesman for Iraq's Shiites, causing an  inherent rivalry with Maliki and other more mainstream Shiite leaders in Iraq.   [. . .] After the election, the Sadr faction was extensively involved in  bargaining over composition of the government and, for the first six months  after the election, took the stance that Maliki should be replaced by another  shiite. However, the shift by the faction in late September 2010 was decisive in  Maliki's success in achieving another term as prime minister. In return, as  discussed above, Sadrists now hold several seats in the cabinet Maliki presented  on December 21, 2010, and a Sadrist governor was later installed in Maysan  Province, which includes the Sadrist stronghold of Amarah.   The faction was energized when its leader, Moqtada Al Sadr himself,  returned to Iraq on January 5, 2011. Upon his return, he gave a speech calling  for a full implementation of a planned U.S. withdrawal by the end of 2011, and  issued statements opposing the awarding of Iraqi energy contracts to American  firms. He reportedly returned to Iran on January 22, 2011, but then re-entered  Iraq in mid-February 2011, possibly in connection with the popular unrest [. .  .].  While Sadr has long sought to higlight Maliki's failures to bolster his own  influence, the Sadr faction's extensive participation in the post-2010  government complicates the Sadrist efforts to paint governmental failures as  purely the fault of Maliki and other elites.  Some U.S. officials say they  believe the faction may have instigated some of the unrest to discredt Maliki.     Meanwhile CNN noted  Saturday that the US  military has announced today that 2 US soldiers died in southern Iraq yesterday.  Sunday, DoD released the  following : "The Department of Defense announced today the deaths of  two soldiers who were supporting Operation New Dawn. They died of wounds  suffered April 22, in Numaniyah, Iraq when insurgents attacked their unit with  an improvised explosive device. They were assigned to the 2nd Squadron, 3rd  Armored Cavalry Regiment, Fort Hood, Texas. Killed were: 1st Lt. Omar J.  Vazquez, 25, of Hamilton, N.J.; and Pfc. Antonio G. Stiggins, 25, of Rio Rancho,  N.M. For more information media may contact Fort Hood public affairs at  254-287-0106."  In some of today's reported violence . . .    Bombings?   Reuters notes a Hawija roadside bombing  left one police officer injured and a Baghdad sticky bombing wounded two  people.   Shootings?    Reuters notes armed clashes in Kirkuk  between Kurdish security guards and Iraqi soldiers resulted in 1 Kurdish guard  being killed and five more left injured. Quoting a source at Kirkuk Hospital, Aswat al-Iraq reports  2 Kurds were killed, not  one.   Corpses?     Dropping back to yesterday, Prashant Rao (AFP) reports , "A roadside bomb  explosion wounded four people, including two policemen, near a small church in  the Iraqi capital on Easter Sunday, medical and security officials said. The  bomb went off near the entrance of the Sacred Heart church, which is surrounded  by concrete blast walls, near Tahriart Square in central Baghdad." BBC News reminds , "There were once  about 1.5 million Christians in Iraq, but more than two-thirds are believed to  have fled since the US-led invasion in 2003. Hundreds of families have also  moved to the northern Kurdish region." Mohammed Tawfeeq (CNN) adds  that  two police officers and two bystanders were injured in the bombing. A number of  Iraqi Christians remain in Baghdad though waves of targeting has caused many to  leave. The most recent wave was kicked off October 31st with the assault on Our  Lady of Salvation Church in Baghdad.  Jane Arraf (McClatchy Newspapers, Christian  Science Monitor) reported  Saturday, "At Our Lady of Salvation, where  gunmen and suicide bombers killed 52 worshippers and guards last October, the  church was tightly locked, guarded by Iraqi police who said the doors would be  opened only moments before the Saturday evening mass."Sally Jawdat (Al Mada) reports  from Erbil on  Easter in Kurdistan noting KRG President Masoud Barzani, KRG Parliament  President Kamal Kirkuki and KRG Prime Minister Barham Salih offered their  "congratulations and blessings." Al  Mada also reports  on Basra and speaks with Saher Ezzat who  states that things are better in the KRG but are not what they were and that  Christians ("especially women") cannot dress as they normally would. Another  offers that Christians suffer the same problems in terms of security and freedom  as other Iraqis. Linda Jalil states that Iraqi Christians have left the country  in large number due to the lack of safety but that Basra is one of the safest  provinces for Christians.      I guess I must be a  glutton for punishment because I just snapped off CiaNN in frustration and anger  for about the 5000th time. Yesterday, I was  treated to Candy ("I never met a warmonger I didn't love") Crowley fairly  gushing with bloodlust over her three warmonger, kill Qaddafi, bomb the s**t out  of the Libyan people, guests -- Republican Senators: Lindsey Graham (R-Closet);  John McCain (R-Mordor) and Joseph Lieberman (R-Tel Aviv {okay, I know that  Lieberman is technically an "I," but he out Republicans Ronald Reagan in every  instance}). (Wow, even I got lost in that last round of parenthetical  statements.) Anyway -- if one has an  insatiable thirst for institutional violence on a massive and very extravagant  scale -- like Miss Crowley -- then whom else would you have on your program to  talk about the US/British/NATO war crimes in Libya? Certainly not Cindy Sheehan,  Cynthia McKinney or Dennis Kucinich? Heck no, if one of us were interviewed on  CiaNN, we may actually tell the truth about what's really happening in Libya and  the tiny cat's paw of doubt may begin to creep into the minds of the average  consumer of CiaNN's "All war, All the time,"  news-o-tainment.   For  Immediate Release  Cindy  Sheehan, cindy@cindysheehanssoapbox.com
 Gregory  Vickrey, gregory@gregoryvickrey.com, 202.487.1201
 
 March,  Strike, Occupation Set for Sacramento
 
 Vacaville,  Calif. - Citizens and activists of all stripes plan to descend on Sacramento,  Calif., May 9, 2011, for a prolonged strike and occupation of State Capitol  grounds in response to budget proposals promoted by Governor Jerry Brown and  California legislators.
 
 The  strike and occupation will follow a march from numerous parts of the state to  Sacramento beginning May 1, highlighted by a thematic mass march from San  Francisco to the capital led by prominent peace activist Cindy Sheehan, national  organization Peace of the Action, Bay Area Code Pink, California Alliance for  Retired Americans, Peace & Freedom Party, Veterans for Peace chapters, and  several other entities.
 
 To  date, the action has been endorsed by more than 20 organizations around the  globe representing a variety of fronts, including United Progressives, Canadians  for Action on Climate Change, Women's International League for Peace &  Freedom, and the Arab American Union Members Council.
 
 Cindy  Sheehan states, "The savage austerity measures proposed by Democratic Governor  Jerry Brown are an attack on the vulnerable people of this state, and no amount  of partisan politicking can hide that fact. Taxes should instead target  California's 650,000 millionaire households. Cuts should include moneys the  state hands over to the feds for shipping our California National Guard Units to  foreign wars of aggression. Since 2001, the illegal wars of occupation have cost  Californians almost 150 billion dollars and US military recruiters are still  allowed to prey upon our most vulnerable youth on high school and college  campuses--save our economy and lives by no longer supporting  war!"
 
 The  coalition of forces descending on Sacramento May 9 believes there is a better  way to approach productive change for California and beyond. Those measures  include steps to:
 
 
 Close  Corporate Tax Loopholes & Incentives  Fully  Fund Education & Other Social Programs  End  State Funding for National Guard Units Leaving California  Raise  Taxes (Employ Austerity) on California's 650,000 Millionaire Households  Employ  Massive Prison Reform & Drastically Alter Criminalization Codes  Bring  Single-Payer Health Care for All to California  Mandate  and Create a Zero Carbon Economy to Mitigate Climate Change 
 
 Bay  Area Code Pink activist and march organizer Xan Joi adds, "We will not allow the  budget to be 'balanced' by continuing tax breaks for the rich while depriving  poor and vulnerable people our basic rights and needs."
 
 Peace  of the Action's Gregory Vickrey concludes, "There are meaningful fixes for  California's budget crisis. Governor Brown's budget proposal doesn't include a  single one."
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