| Thursday, April 28, 2011.  Chaos and violence continue, the US military  announces another death, protests take place in Ramadi, Camp Ashraf finds some  new supporters, and more.   AP reports the US military has announced  another death -- this one "in southern Iraq in a non-combat related incident" --  which, no doubt, is currently under investigation.  Meanwhile Mu Xuequan (Xinhua) reports  that a  suicide bomber in Diyala Province targeted a Shi'ite mosque and a police source  counts 12 dead and forty more injured. Chin Zhi (Xinhua) reports  that yesterday in  Kirkuk, Sa'ad Abid Mutlak al-Jubouri, "son of Iraqi former deputy prime  minister," was kidnapped. AFP  reports  "a senior Iraqi general" was shot dead in Baghdad today. Reuters adds  a Hawija car bombing  claimed the lives of 4 police officers, a Baghdad sticky bombing claimed 1 life,  a Baghdad roadside bombing left four people injured, and, dropping back to  yesterday for the last two, a Baghdad roadside bombing claimed 1 life and left  three people injured and a second Baghdad roadside bombing injured four people.  The Hawija car bombing took place near Kirkuk and Aswat al-Iraq notes  twelve people  were wounded in the blast.   Nizar Latif (UAE's National Newspaper)  reports "Demonstrators in Iraq are being tortured and intimidated by the  security services into shopping anti-government protests, political activists  say.  In recent weeks, those organising public rallies claim to have been  targeted in a campaign of repression by security units, carrying out illegal  arrests and abusive interrogations. Among the allegations made by civil-rights  activists are that government forces have beaten, shocked with electrical  devices and fabricated criminal evidence against protesters involved in peaceful  street rallies."    Yesterday's snapshot noted former DNC chair  Howard Dean declared Tuesday of Nouri al-Maliki, "The truth is the prime minister of Iraq is a mass  murderer ." " Dean was referring to the most recent assault on Camp Ashraf.    Following the US invasion, the US made these MEK residents of Camp Ashraf --  Iranian refuees who had been in Iraq for decades -- surrender weapons and also  put them under US protection. They also extracted a 'promise' from Nouri that he  would not move against them. July 28,  2009  the world saw what Nouri's word was actually worth. Since that  Nouri-ordered assault in which at least 11 residents died, he's continued to  bully the residents. April 4th, Iran's Fars News Agency reported  that the  Iraqi military denied allegations that it entered the camp and assaulted  residents. Specifically, Camp Ashraf residents state, "The forces of Iraq's  Fifth Division invaded Camp Ashraf with columns of armored vehicles, occupying  areas inside the camp, since midnight on Saturday." Friday April  8th  saw another attack which the Iraqi government again denied. Thursday April  14th , the United Nations confirmed that 34 people were killed in the  April 8th assault on Camp Ashraf. Barbara Grady  (San Jose Mercury News) reported  that the dead included  journalist Asieh Rakhshani who has family in California.  The British Parliamentary  Committee for Iran Freedom  released the following statement yesterday:   MPs and Peers on Wednesday accused Iraqi Prime Minister Nuri  al-Maliki of committing a 'Gestapo-style massacre' at Camp Ashraf which led to  the death of 35 Iranian dissidents and caused hundreds to  be injured. 
 At a press conference, the British Parliamentary Committee for Iran  Freedom disclosed new video footage of the 8 April attack, showing direct  shooting at camp residents and the various military  weaponry used. 
 Committee chair Lord Corbett of Castle Vale (Labour Peer), said:  'The attack on Camp Ashraf was an organized military massacre on the orders of  Nuri al-Maliki who is publicly committed to erasing the camp from the face of  the earth.' 
 Medical practitioner Hoda Hosseini pointed to photographic evidence  of the injuries sustained by the wounded which clearly indicated that a targeted  shoot-to-kill policy was used by Iraqi forces. 'Traces left in the bodies of  those killed and the wounded, and a study of the wounds and x-rays show that the  Iraqi forces used automatic Kalashnikov machine guns with live, tracer and  armour-piercing bullets as well as firing sonic grenades directly at the heads  and chests of the civilian population at Camp Ashraf.'  Former Home Secretary Lord Waddington  demanded a UN investigation into the attack  to bring the perpetrators of this crime to justice, while Lord Maginnis of  Drumglass said: 'Prime Minister Cameron and President Barack Obama must use the  appropriate language in describing this attack as a massacre.'
 
 Mark Williams MP (Liberal  Democrat) demanded that Iraqi forces immediately withdraw from Camp Ashraf and  that the United Nations take over protection of the camp as part of  their mandate. 
 Malcolm Fowler, a solicitor and member of the Law Society's human  rights committee, said that the Law Society, which represented more than 130,000  solicitors, had issued a statement urging the UN to help protect the residents. 
 Pointing to video footage evidencing the continued menacing  presence of Iraqi armed forces in and around Camp Ashraf, on behalf of the  Committee Lord Corbett urged the UN to  establish a permanent monitoring team at the camp and take over responsibility  for protection of the residents to prevent a further such  'Gestapo-style massacre'. 
 Camp Ashraf, 60 kilometres northeast of Baghdad, is home to 3,400  members of the main Iranian opposition group, the People's Mojahedin  Organisation of Iran (PMOI), who are  'protected persons' under the 4th Geneva Convention.
 British  Parliamentary Committee for Iran Freedom
 27 April 2011
 
     In addition, Jonathan Rayner (Law Gazette) notes  the  April 8th assault has been condemned by the UK Law Society's human rights  committee whose chair Tony Fisher states, "We call on Iraqi security forces  immediately to cease all violence against the residents of Camp Ashraf and  immediately withdraw from the camp.  Furthermore, the relevant UN bodies,  lawyers and the press must be given immediate access to the residents." Until  the end of last year, James L. Jones, retired US General, was the current US  administration's National Security Advisor until last November.  Paul Taylor (Reuters) reports  he's  declared "he knew of no evidence that the People's Mujahideen were involved in  terrorism" and that they should be removed from the US terror list becase "we  should be more in synch with the Europeans, who have already de-listed them."   Jones also shared his thoughts April 14th at the Near East Human Rights Inititiative  on this issue  where others speaking out against the assault including  retired Gen Wesley Clark, former US Senator Evan Bayh (disclosure, I know Evan),  former US Senator Bill Bradley, for CIA director Porter Goss, Barack's former  DNI Denni Blair, the last spokesperson for the Bush White House Dana Perino,  retired Gen Richard Myers and former AG Michael Mukasey.  We'll quote Wesley  Clark, "When I look at what happened at Camp Ashraf over this past weekend I  find it absolutely deplorable and inexplicable. We did make a promise they would  be protected persons. That's the word of the United States of America. That's  important, it's time. We talk about American credibility, there it is."         Radio Koocheh:  At first I would like to  know about your position about what happened within recent days, as you know,  based on an agreement between Iran and Iraq, there is the chance of extradition  of MKO members to Iran. You have been one of the first to condemn the attack on  Camp Ashraf. According to the policy of the government of the United States   since 2009 that handed the Camp Ashraf to the Iraqi government and their  condition of undecided fate, What kind of problems do you think this extradition  can bring to this Camp members and basically what kind of policy is  followed?           Reza Pahlavi: At first, allow me to address  my greetings to my compatriots inside and outside of Iran and to your audience  and again thank you for the opportunity of this interview. I can not guess  exactly the details of the policy of the Iraqi government associated with the  members of MKO currently present in Iraq, or have any particular information  about the conditions that you have already expressed. But in general, what I  wanted to say is that from the perspective of human rights issues, today, to no  one, especially to our compatriots, it is not complicated that these people have  rights as humans.   Extradition of anyone who is publicly or  indirectly in a struggle with this regime, will constitute a serious threat of  torture, and a thousand kind of problems or even death. What unfortunately the  Islamic Republic has always done to its own people all these years and still  does. Therefore it is important that in this case, that all the governments  concerned be aware of the terrible and serious consequences of such act. I think  this will have a very negative effect not only on public opinion in the world  but also especially on our compatriots opinion.   Where the freedom fighters, today, in all  the countries of the region are busy fighting for their rights, expect support  and above all protection. We see this today in Libya. If these things are not    respected, it definitely indicates the lack of implementation of a clear policy  and even worse, a kind of political hypocrisy. Especially this fact that goes  back to human rights and protection of the natural rights of individuals  regardless of their political views and thoughts.       Moving to the topic of protests.  Yesterday's  snapshot  included the following: "You pretend to know, Tim Arango,  how the protests started in Iraq -- well they re-started. They were enough last  year to force the Minister of the Electricy out. But you weren't covering Iraq  then and are apparently unfamiliar with that aspect of the protests. " That was  incorrect. I was wrong. My apologies. Tim Arango writes to inform that he  was present in Iraq when the Minister of Electricity resigned following protests  last year. I stand corrected. I was wrong. Arango was present for that.  A community member found this claim by Tim Arango:  "Prior to the Sadrist protest  against the Americans, that issue was not a defining aspect of the  protests ." That was during his exchange with Dan Hind at Hind's  The Return of the Public .  No, that is not correct.  We  noted that this morning and that if he had a comment on it before the snapshot  went up, it would be included.  He replied to Jim 's e-mail, "I don't think i have a further  comment other than to say that the protests that began in february here have  been about a variety of issues: services, corruption, jobs, civil  liberties , Bahrain, detainees (especially in Sunni areas) -- at some of  them you can hear anti-american slogans, and there have been some smaller  gatherings that speak about the american military, but the overall message is  that they want to perfect and improve their fledgling democracy. Of course, the  Sadrists held their big protest on April 9 against the troops, and demanding  that they leave on time."  (Jim and everyone who works the e-mails can write  back or not, that's their decision.  I can't engage in private conversations via  e-mail with writers covered here -- critiqued here -- because that creates a  layer of conflict of interest and we can take that up tonight in "I Hate The  War.)   Again, that's not correct.  The protests in Iraq can be seen a series of  unconnected brush fires starting at the end of January.  By Februray 3rd,  connective tissue is beginning to form with all people-led demonstrations.   People-led?  These are demonstrations by and for the people.  There are no  marching orders (though Nouri will claim they are being led from outside of  Iraq, and he will claim they're backed by 'terrorists' and by 'al Qaeda').   People-led, people-driven.  These are very different from the Moqtada al-Sadr  let-me-order-my-merry-band-of-followers.  February 25th is the first day of  protest where you see real connections between the movements in Baghdad and the  ones in Ninevah Province or elsewhere.  In addition to previous snapshots, I  went over this with 2 protesters in Baghdad this morning on i.m., on the phone  with a community member in Mosul and via e-mail with a protester in Falluja.  February 25th was dubbed "The Day Of Rage." Protests prior to the 25th were not  'national.'  Meaning there might be one in Hawija and one in Baghdad and the two  weren't coordinated for a specific day. The occupation and corruption were key  issues in the protests, however, even when unrelated.  The Baghdad protesters  were surprised that there would be a claim that they occupation was not an issue  since banners were present calling for US troops to be out of Iraq. And, in  fact, the whole point of attempting to storm the US-created and occupied Green  Zone had to do with reclaiming that section of Iraq for Iraq.  Opposition to the  US occupation has always been a part of the national protests.   What's going on is Tim Arango isn't present for protests outside of Baghdad  (a comment Iraqi community members make loudly in the community newsletters and  one that's already up here in a Saturday entry from weeks ago) and probably the  paper was not present for most in Baghdad.  That's certainly explains why  Stephanie McCrummen and the Washington Post  were owning the story of  what happened on The Day of Rage (such as here ) and the New York Times  missed it.   The New York Times embarrassed itself as journalistic organizations --  international ones -- and human rights organizations called out what happened on  Feb. 25th but the Times?  Their deference to Nouri al-Maliki is rather sad when you consider that the  paper had a few outstanding reporters in Iraq (including Damien Cave) and now  they're just lackeys. If Tim doesn't like that judgment call on my part, try  explaining why Nouri's trashing of protesters and telling people not to  participate in the Day of Rage receives more prominence than the Day of Rage  actions?  In the article about the Day of Rage -- or allgedly about it -- Jack  Healy and Michael S. Schmidt don't open with the attack on journalists or  attacks on protesters.  They do one setnence and then want to rush to  "high-ranking Iraqi officials." And then it's time for paragraphs on Nouri and  it's paragraph seven before we actually meet a protester -- in a story about the  Day of Rage. Paragraph seven of a 16 paragraph story.  And for some reason, we  still have to meet the US military in the story.  Don't think that the last nine  paragraphs are about the protesters or -- and this goes to Dan Hind's issue --  explaing what brought to protesters out in the streets. Now let's contrast that  with Stephanie McCrummen's article for the  Post  -- which is award-worthy.  Here's the opening:  Iraqi security forces detained hundreds of people, including  prominent journalists, artists and intellectuals, witnesses said Saturday, a day  after nationwide  demonstrations brought tens of thousands of Iraqis  into the streets and ended with soldiers shooting into crowds.   Four journalists who had been released described being rounded up  well after they had left a protest at Baghdad's Tahrir Square. They said they  were handcuffed, blindfolded, beaten and threatened with execution by soldiers  from an army intelligence unit.  "It was like they were dealing with a bunch of al-Qaeda operatives,  not a group of journalists," said Hussam al-Ssairi, a journalist and poet, who  was among a group and described seeing hundreds of protesters in black hoods at  the detention facility. "Yesterday was like a test, like a picture of the new  democracy in Iraq."  Protesters mostly stayed home Saturday, following more than a dozen  demonstrations across the country Friday that killed at least 29 people, as  crowds stormed provincial buildings, forced local officials to resign, freed  prisoners and otherwise demanded more from a government they only recently had a  chance to elect.   And that's just the opening.  And, as we've noted before, the New York  Times editorial board has commented on these events . . . even though the  paper's reporters never filed on it.  Woops. This is what has so many people  outraged about the bad coverage.  In fairness to the reporters for the Times,  the paper wasn't interested at all in Iraq.  They were Cairo-obsessed and  flooding the zone on that -- pushing Iraq right out of the paper during this  very key time (one that you better believe will be in the history books) -- and  then they did a brief withdrawal on Cairo before setting off to Libya. Somewhere  in all of that, they tried to flood the zone on the Japan tsunami but only  demonstrated that they do their best tsunami work when most of the staff is on  vacation (see January 2005).    Show me where the Times took serious what the Post did?   Again, from Stephanie's article:   Ssairi and his three colleagues, one of whom had been on the radio  speaking in support of protesters, said about a dozen soldiers stormed into a  restaurant where they were eating dinner Friday afternoon and began beating them  as other diners looked on in silence. They drove them to a side street and beat  them again.  Then, blindfolded, they were driven to the former Ministry of  Defense building, which houses an intelligence unit of the Iraqi army's 11th  Division, they said. Hadi al-Mahdi, a theater director and radio anchor who has  been calling for reform, said he was blindfolded and beaten repeatedly with  sticks, boots and fists. One soldier put a stick into Hadi's handcuffed hands  and threatened to rape him with it, he said.    Where's the paper's coverage of that?   The Times has never known what was going on -- at least not judging by  what's made it into the paper. (And it's falling back into its habit of  rendering Iraqi women invisible.)  Tim Arango overestimates the influence of  Moqtada al-Sadr in my opinion (see April 19th snapshot  and, as I noted then, that's  in contrast with the State Dept so I will applaud Arango for refusing to go  along with the State Dept's official line -- though I do think the State Dept is  right in this case).  He basically elevates Moqtada to officialdom and there is  no higher status for the New York Times.  So unless it's a small protest ordered  by Moqtada (the April 8th one), the paper's really not interested.  They'll  serve up a ton of quotes from all the people who weren't at the protest and try  to pretend that such an article actually covered the protests.  Or they'll go  ga-ga for Ahmed Chalabi all over again and treat his attempts at deflecting  attention from protests against the Iraqi government as genuine protests.     Real protests are led by the people.  They don't have to be ordered to show  up.  The Iraqi people have shown up for their events.  And those events aren't  connected to Moqtada or Chalabi so the paper's not interested. Real violence  took place on February 25th but, to read the New York Times, it was the  protesters who were violent -- they knocked over two of the barricade walls to  the Green Zone!!!! The kidnapping and torturing of journalists and protesters  never happened to read the New York Times' report.  It's amazing that the paper  not only took sides but took sides against the people.  The paper's done a lousy  job covering the protests.  Dan Hind's criticism actually was on the mark.  You  do not learn about the protesters from the paper of record.  Instead you learn  what Nouri thinks or what some lying flack for the US military thanks -- and the  spokesperson quoted about what a great job the Iraqi military was doing was a  lying flack.   More importantly that's the end of Feburary.  Where's the paper's coverage  of the ongoing assault in Mosul?  Where is that?  Does Moqtada need to call a  protest in Mosul for it to get attention from the New York Times?     These questions go beyond Tim Arango who is a reporter and not an editor  for the paper.  He's pitching ideas and many who covered Iraq for the paper can  share their difficulties -- and many have shared them in e-mails to this site --  in convincing someone with the paper in the US that ____ is a story in Iraq and  needs to be covered.  But a question he should be asking himself is: Where is the humanity?   It took Sabrina Tavernise to bring the humanity onto the pages of the New York  Times (Dexy and Burnsie appeared to see the whole thing as a video game). Others  who followed her managed to keep that alive.  It's gone now.  And it's hard not  to be reminded that this is the paper that reported on the murder (not the  gang-rape) of Abeer in near real time but couldn't name her.  This is the paper  that when the truth came out that 14-year-old Abeer was gang-raped and murdered,  that she was gang-raped as her five-year-old sister and her parents were killed  in the next room, still couldn't name her.  This is the paper that 'reported' on  an Article 32 hearing on the crimes and the conspiracy (the murders and  gang-rape were carried out by US soliders) and still couldn't name her.  By  contrast, Ellen Knickmeyer at the Post was reporting on Abeer from the minute  the news came out that US soldiers might have been responsible for the crimes  (and they were, and they either entered a plea of guilty or were convicted) and  she had no problem providing a name.
   Sabrina Tavernise provided Iraqi people with the dignity they deserve and  gave them life on the pages of the New York Times.  It's really sad that this  accomplishment which Cara Buckley, Alissa J. Rubin, Damien Cave and so many  others kept alive is now disappearing.  That may be due to the fact that  articles that do make the paper (as opposed to the ones that only show up on the  paper's blog) have to be shorter and shorter and shorter.  (It's always  surprising when a paper comes to the conclusion that they're selling to  non-readers.) But it's happening.       To the President of  Iraqi Parliament Greeting we condemns in  our name and the name of all the  civil society  activists and Iraqi bloggers and  on behalf of every Iraqi citizen  who tries to    exercise his  the rights  within   Iraqi constitution, which went out to vote  for  under the threats of terrorism,  we raise your condemnation of the ongoing  attacks against demonstrators in tahreer Square and the failure of troops to  secure their safety  , but on the contrary troops supported     the infiltrators who tries to sabotage the  demonstrations Today one of the  founding member of our site and civil society  activists and  free Iraqi citizen suffered brutal  attack  and was severely  beaten in front of the eyes of army troops  without your security forces try to   move  , is this our new and this democracy that we fight for it? We invite you to stand and condemn  and questions the security  forces and to demands from  the Government to implement the demands of  demonstrators into  a realistic, real way  and  to stop putting obstacles in  front of them and trying to sabotage their free demonstrations , they are  exercising their right to expression, and we remind you  that their voices are  the tools that got you    today to power ,  and it will remove of  any institution Governor that can not  fulfill     its duty to serve the nation, democracy requires a national army and a Governor to serve the  citizen wither they support or opposite their views ,  it is your responsibility either you fulfill it or leave it to  those who canprotecting
 media and the protesters and activists are part of the duty of any  democratic institution plays its role effectively and freely is the  responsibility and obligation   your job to follow  who performs them and  guarantee to secure for all For Iraq and for freedom and the Constitution Condemn and call Iraqi streets web site collation of  activists and bloggers from Iraq    Iraqis go up against outrageous odds and circumstances to protest and make  their voices heard.  Front Line notes :  Front Line expresses concern regarding the attack against Iraqi  human rights defender and blogger Mr Hayder Hamzoz on 22 April as he was taking  part in a regular Friday protest in Sahat Al -Tahrir, a public square in  Baghdad. Hayder Hamzoz attends the protests at Al-Tahrir square every Friday and  uses his mobile phone to record the events to put up on Twitter and Facebook.   On 22 April he was approached by young men who asked him about his  Qalaxy mobile phone (a type of mobile that facilitates connection to social  media networks) and then took the phone away. It is reported that he managed to  take back his phone, but the group was then joined by more than 9 people at  which point Hayder Hamzoz ran to escape the assault. The men reportedly grabbed  him and beat him up using their hands and feet, causing him to bleed and almost  faint. His phone was confiscated.  
 The security forces who were around at the time reportedly stopped  protesters and friends of Hayder Hamzoz from rendering assistance to him. The  attackers then made away with the phone under the watchful eye of the security  forces who did not interfere. Following the attack, Hayder Hamzoz, along with  human rights defender Hanaa Adwar, went to the army officer who was in charge of  the surrounding area but he refused to listen to their story. Later that night  the attackers called him on another number and told him not to record or post  anything anymore. Hayder Hamzoz was the only protester to be attacked by the  assailants, a matter which casts doubt as to their real motives. It is suspected  that the assailants are security men in plainclothes who apparently attacked him  as a reprisal against his peaceful cyberactivism. Hayder Hamzoz, aged in his early twenties, is a prominent blogger  and documentalist who runs a popular blog titled Iraqi Streets 4 Change. He also  organises the coverage of peaceful Iraqi protests over the internet and has set  up along with others a short messaging service which does not require  subscription to the internet. Along with his colleagues, he also utilises social  media networks to mobilise and document peaceful mass protests to encourage the  Iraqi government to expedite democratic reforms. It is believed that the attack  on Hayder Hamzoz is related to his peaceful and legitimate work as a  blogger.     And to the thug who encourages thuggery in Iraq, New Sabaah reports  on Nouri's plan  to turn failure into a take over. As noted yesterday, Nouri is claiming the  right to call for new elections at the end of the 100 days to fix corruption.  New Sabaah notes today that Nouri's talk of a majority government does not  include Ayad Allawi, head of Iraqiya. Iraqiya, of course, won the most seats in  Parliament in the March 2010 elections. Nouri is eager to cut out his opponents  and that's why he's threatening the new elections. He hopes this could also get  rid of the Speaker of Parliament (Osama al-Nujaifi). New elections called by  Nouri do not include the possibility of his stepping down but, hey, the March  2010 elections didn't either, now did they? The Parliament can call a vote of no  confidence at any time. They can remove Nouri and they may need to review the  process for how that's done before the 100 days expire.   Meanwhile Aswat al-Iraq reports , "A leader in  north Iraq's Kurdistan Alliance has demanded that a portion of the U.S. forces  remain in the areas of dispute of eastern Iraq's Diala Province, due to what he  described as non-readiness of the Iraqi forces to take over the security dossier  in the province." They add , "The UN  Secretary-General's Representative in Iraq, Ad Melkert, has said during a visit  to north Iraq's city of Kirkuk on Wednesday that the United Nations does'nt  intend to send "peace-keeping forces" to the conflict areas in the country,  after the withdrawal of the U.S. troops by the end of the current year." David Ali (Al  Mada) also notes  the UN announcement and that Ban Ki-moon's  special envoy to Iraq, Ad Melkert, insists there is a move towards holding  elections in Kirkuk. Those elections, per the Constitution's Article 140, were  supposed to have taken place by 2007. It's four years later and the UN pins  their hopes on a 'move' towards elections? How very, very sad. New Sabaah explains  that Melkert  met Governor Najm al-Din Karim, Deputy Governor Rakan Saeed al-Joubouri and the  provincial council's chair Hassan Turan.    Amira al Hussaini (Global Voices)  reports on a rumor spreading throughout Iraq, "Saddam Hussein is making the  rounds on social media, with a new recording claiming that the Iraqi dictator is  alive and well and that his double Mikhail was the one executed on December 30,  2006.  Many netizens are quick to describe the video as phoney and assure  readers that Saddam is dead and gone. Had he been alive, the former Iraqi  dictator would have turned 74 today." Al Rafidayn quotes  Hassan Al-Alawi who  received a phone call from someone claiming to be Hussein, "I was sure that the  person who phoned me and said he was Saddam is not Saddam because Saddam  died." |