| Wednesday, June 1, 2011.  Chaos and violence continue, Iraq tops a list yet  again but it's not the one you want to be on unless you enjoy being a haven for  journalist killers, Iraqiya says no movement until the Erbil Agreement is  honored, talks on extending the US military presence in Iraq continue, Iraq War  veteran Adam Kokesh plans a meet-up for this Saturday at the Thomas Jefferson  Memorial, and more.   Kate Wiltrout (Virginia Pilot) reports  on today's send-off ceremony for members of Task Force 183, "The group is also  part of the Viriginia National Guard's largest single-unit deployment since  World War II. Its 825 soldiers come from seven unites across the state,  including four in Hampton Roads." Erin Barnett (WSLS) adds , "The soldiers will  spend 45 to 60 days at Camp Atterbury in Indiana, before leaving for Iraq. They  are expected to be in Iraq for more than a year." Hugh Lessing (Daily Press) reports  on  those departing including Capt Brian Gallavan who states, "We have some of our  soldiers where this is their third or fourth deployment.  I have two on their  fifth deployment."   And it's a year long deployment.  But they're being told to be 'flexible.'   Why?  Because the US government's really not sure what's happening with the US  military and Iraq just yet.  On Antiwar Radio. Scott Horton spoke  with Jason Ditz  about what may or may not happen with US troops in Iraq. Excerpt.  Scott Horton: We've been talking quite a bit about this. The empire  has made no secret that they're determined to stay, they want so badly to stay,  but there is no UN resolution authorizing the occupation.  There's only the  Status Of Forces Agreement that Bush signed with Maliki in 2008 and now that  says that every last one of our army troops have got to be out of the country --  and that goes for Air Force, Navy and Marines too -- at the end of this year,  December 31, 2011. Our guys are trying to get Nouri al-Maliki to "invite us" to  stay -- the way they've been able to successfully coherce the South Koreans and  the Japanese into inviting us to stay in their countries.  And this Sadr guy  doesn't seem to be going for it -- but then "seems" are iffy things.  And I read  a couple of things that said that the Pentagon is betting that Sadr is bluffing  and that the only way Sadr can make the United States leave is basically by what  he's doing right now which is saying, 'Listen, you're going to have to start the  war all over again and you don't want that.'  They stood by when the Americans  rolled in from Kuwait to take out Saddam Hussein, they've been fighting for the  Shi'ite factions -- the Iraqi National Alliance -- this whole time.  They're  saying, 'You're going to have to start the war all over again against us.'  And  the Pentagon is betting, trying at least, they're hoping that he's just  bluffing.  And I wonder, from all the indications, what you're reading about the  situation over there, whether you think Moqtada al-Sadr is really willing to  turn the south of Iraq upside down in order to force the Americans  out?   Jason Ditz: It looks like he might well be but Prime Minister  Maliki, of course, came up with ruling out the occupation beyond the end of the  year several times in public speeches and then recently he's backed off  that entirely saying that 'Well, it's going to be up to the Iraqi Parliament to  decide whether or not to extend the Status Of Forces Agreement --   Scott Horton: You know I wonder --   Jason Ditz: -- so --   Scott Horton: You know I wonder exactly how to spin that one or  which spin on that is most likely, I guess.  Whether that's him beginning to  give in to the Americans and really work for them and trying to invite us to  stay or whether that's him just setting the stage for trying to say, 'Look, I  tried to reason with them and they just won't go along' -- you know, as his  excuse to us for not inviting us to stay?   Jason Ditz: Well either one is possible but the several times that  he came out publicly and said absolutely not, the US pretty much pretended like  they didn't hear.  It's like they put their fingers in their ears and said,  'La-la-la we can't hear you.'  And then they would ask again, a couple of days  later.  And they even went so far in one of their public speeches -- I believe  it was Secretary Gates -- expressing concern that the Iraqi government hadn't  responded one way or another after several times of Maliki saying 'absolutely  not.'   Scott Horton: Right. Yep, well, boy oh boy, I mean, it's not hard  to imagine that over at the Pentagon, they figure that they stole Iraq fair and  square, they get to keep but somebody should have told them who they were  fighting for and how it wasn't working out so well.  I got to refer again to  that book The Good  Soldiers by [David] Finkel, the Washington Post  reporter where he covers the surge in east Baghdad against the Sadrists in 2007  and 2008 and these guys had no idea that they were fighting for Moqtada al-Sadr  against the rest of the country, that in the Sunni provinces that are guys are  basically the reserve forces for Sadr's death squads, going in there and  ethnically cleansing or religiously cleansing, whatever, the vast majority of  Baghdad and consolidating all that power for the Iraqi National Alliance and  their Iranian allies.  All they thought they were doing was going out on patrol,  fighting those terrible Sadrists. They had no idea the war they were even in.     Jason Ditz: Oh and I think a lot of people still don't realize the  type of war that we're in and a lot more people seem to figure that this war is  over and has been over for awhile now.   Scott Horton: That's what Rachel Maddow says and apparently that's  what makes things true.       The Obama Administration is anxious to  retain military bases and thousands of troops in Iraq, which it is supposed to  leave entirely at the end of this year, and in Afghanistan as well, when the  U.S. is scheduled to depart at the end of 2014. President Obama is applying heavy pressure to Baghdad and Kabul to  "request" the long-term presence of U.S. troops and "contractors" after the bulk  of the occupation force withdraws. Why keep troops in Iraq? The  neoconservative Bush White House invaded Iraq, which was considered a pushover  after 12 years of U.S.-British-UN killer sanctions, not only to control its oil,  but as a prelude to bringing about regime change in neighboring Iran, thus  providing Washington with total  control of the immense resources of the Persian Gulf. The  Iraqi guerrilla resistance destroyed the plan, for now.   Thus, the upshot of the war -- in  addition to costing American taxpayers several trillion  dollars over the next few decades in principal and interest --  is that Shi'ite Iran's main enemy, which was the Sunni regime of Saddam Hussein  in Baghdad until 2003, has been replaced by the Shi'ite government of Prime  Minister Nuri al-Maliki, a politician who usually bends the knee to Washington  but is quite friendly to Tehran, as are many Iraqi politicians. (The Shia are  nearly 65% of the population; the Sunnis, nearly 35%.)   On May 16 Maliki declared that "Security,  military and political cooperation between Iran and Iraq is essential, and we  will certainly see the expansion of relations in these areas in the future."   Washington's big fear is that Maliki may eventually thumb his nose at Uncle Sam,  and that in time, Iraq and Iran will draw much closer together -- a prospect  deeply opposed by the U.S., Israel, and Saudi Arabia.   According to Stratfor, the private  intelligence resource, on April 26: "[T]he U.S. has reportedly offered to leave  as many as 20,000 troops in the country" after its "pullout" at the end of this  year. In addition, a large but undetermined number of "contractors" -- often  paramilitary hirelings -- are to remain.   Further, according to an Inter Press  Service report May 9, the State Department "intends to double its staff in Iraq  to nearly 16,000 and rely entirely on private contractors for security." So  large a staff is almost unbelievable, but so is the immense size of the new U.S.  embassy in Baghdad's Green Zone -- the largest such facility in the  world.       Lara Jakes (AP) informs, "The Obama administration is ready to play  ball on keeping thousands of U.S. troops in Iraq beyond this year. But for  Iraq's government, in the words of one lawmaker, the issue is like playing with  fire. "  In iraq,  New Sabah calls  it US Ambassador to  Iraq James Jeffrey's "first public reaction" on the issue of US forces staying  in Iraq beyond 2011 (and possibly it is for the Iraqi press). It? He's dimissed  the review of the Mahdi militia from last week. He also called out Moqtada  al-Sadr and his militia's claim that they can attack US forces insisting that  the presence of US forces on Iraqi soil was a result of the "legitimate will of  the Parliament." (He's referring to the 2008 Thanksgiving Day vote on the SOFA.  And while he may have a point, a stronger point would be that the Iraqi people  were promised a voice in the process -- without that promise, some believe  Parliament wouldn't have passed the SOFA -- I disagree, but a number of people  believe that -- and the promised referendum that they'd vote in never came to  be.) And a new group joins the chorus of 'extend' that Kurdish officials have  been chanting.  Dar Addustour reports  that the  Chaldean Syriac Assyrian Association has come out in favor of US forces  remaining on the ground in Iraq beyond 2011 stating that their presence is  necessary to provide safety for Iraq's religious and ethnic minorities. The  organization also maintains that the continued presence of US forces would allow  Iraqi forces the opportunities to refine their own performance. Nouri al-Maliki  is expected to call a meeting shortly to discuss keeping US forces on the ground  in Iraq beyond 2011. Saturday Al  Mada noted  that as the end of the 100 days approaches (June  7th, "100 days" refers to the promise Nouri made that he would clean up  government corruption and provide services within 100 days) Iraqi security  forces seem to be taking a harder line with protesters. They cite as an example  what took place Friday in Baghdad when youth activists protested in Tahrir  Square and four were arrested. The paper notes that the forces used "special  security measures" that were new to this arrest. Iraqi forces also used some  actions that were the same as previous ones: closing the bridges and cutting off  roads, etc. The Iraqi Democratic Youth Federation and the Union of Students in  the Republic of Iraq issued a statement condemning the arrests, calling for the  immediate release of the four protesters and denouncing the "return to  repressive authoritarian" measures. Friday was "False Promises Friday." The Great Iraqi Revolution noted  the four arrested : "THE 4 YOUNG ACTIVISTS WHO WERE ARRESTED TODAY BY  QASSIM ATTA AND TAKEN TO A PLACE UNKNOWN - 27.5.2011 - THEIR NAMES ARE: JIHAD  JALEEL, ALI ABDUL KHALIQ, MOUAYED AL TAYEB AND AHMED AL BAGHDADI. We pray God to  have them released very soon."They also noted of Friday's Baghdad protest --  or in response to it, a smear campaign is being launched on TV , "In  the serial of attempting to bad mouth and blacken the Tahrir Square protestors  and demonstrators, Qassim Atta and the Iraqiya air photos of one of the detained  activists in the Protests and accuse him of several crimes, they then proceed to  air a film of a crime whose perpetrators are known to all and sundry, and in the  same film some hooded men are heard to accuse that the activist is the person  who committed the crime!" And the assault on protesters continued Saturday. Aswat al-Iraq  reported : An eye witness  said that a military force raided an NGO, known as Where is My Right, and  arrested 11 persons, including its secretary general, in suspicion for their  relationship with the organizers of Tahreer Square  demonstrations. "Four Hummer military  vehicles and two 4-wheel drive cars surrounded the organization premises in  Maidan Square, in the center of Baghdad, where they searched it and destroyed  its computers," the source told Aswat al-Iraq. On the other hand, an activist said on the Facebook  page for the Tahreer Square demonstrations, that the organization is an NGO that  participated in organizing the demonstrations. The arrested persons were meeting to discuss how to  release the four activists who were arrested last Friday. All for  calling for an end to corruption, calling for basic services, calling for the  detainees to be freed, calling for the occupation of Iraq to end. Ned Parker and Salar Jaff (Los Angeles Times) cover  these  events and speak with activist Hanna Edwar: The government's actions raise the specter of a  security apparatus that tolerates little dissent by people not affiliated with  religious parties or any of the major groups in government. It also speaks to  the limits of American influence in a country where the U.S. still has nearly  50,000 troops and has served as the main architect of the country's new  democracy and sponsor of those in power. The government has been far from clear about the  status of the four activists. First it said they were being held by military  intelligence. Then it denied that, adding that there was no record of any  protesters being arrested. Baghdad's military command issued a statement late  Tuesday saying that the four had been picked up with fake IDs in the same  neighborhood as the demonstrations — a charge the men's supporters called  ludicrous. The men's families were told they would be taken to see them  Wednesday at a military intelligence prison. Edwar said the nine others detained Saturday were  probably being held in the same place. The detained activists' friends, mostly young people  who met through Facebook, spent Sunday and Monday stealthily putting up posters  about the four around university campuses.Dar Addoustour reports  that youth  activists are gearing up for demonstrations on June 10th, three days after the  end of the 100 days. David Ali (Al  Mada) adds  that the government continues to assert the  protesters were not arrested for their political activities. Al  Mada's Fakhri Karim surveys  the scene to see what has taken  place in the 100 days thus far and finds that the security situation has  worsened (and notes the increase in assassinations), the political blocs in the  government continue to be at loggerheads, protesters had noted that the security  ministries had no heads (Ministry of Interior, Ministry of National Security and  Ministry of Defense) and that remains the case, and calls any claims of tensions  being eased to be a mirage and illusion.  In addition,   Nahrain is reporting Iraqiya's Tareq  al-Hashemi (the country's Sunni vice president) has declared that Iraqiya has  suspended all discussions with State of Law and will not resume them until the  Erbil Agreement is followed.  Aswat al-Iraq quotes  from the statement  Iraqiya issued, "Due to the delay of the negotiations that took place on Monday,  May 30, 2011, the leaders of al-Iraqiya have studied the political situation and  decided to suspend the attendance of its delegation in the said talks in the  future, unless the State of Law Alliance responds to its legitimate demands,  within the agreements concluded in response to Kurdistan President, Massoud  Barzani's initiative,"    Still on violence, last week mini-thug Ali al-Lami was murdered. In 2010,  Ahmed Chalibi's little fellow used the Justice and Accountability Commission to  settle old scores. Al Sabaah reports  that  a raid was conducted in Taji and a suspect (an officer in the intelligence  service during the Saddam Hussein era) was arrested.Xinhua adds  that Baghdad Operations  Command released a statement which included: "Iraqi security forces have  arrested a terrorist who carried out the assassination of Ali al-Lami. The  terrorist was affiliated with the intelligence service of the former Saddam  Hussein's regime." Hundreds of Iraq Christians, Iraqi Jews and other  religious minorities have been killed while Nouri al-Maliki has been prime  minister -- as have many journalists. Those deaths? Never solved to this day. Apparently there just wasnt a 'desire' on the part of Nouri to find  those killers (many of whom were in his party and/or working for him). But Ali  al-Lami dies and all stops are pulled out to arrest a suspect. Today the  Committee to Protect Journalists released their Impunity Index : "CPJ's  annual Impunity Index, first published in 2008, identifies countries where  journalists are murdered regularly and governments fail to solve the crimes. For  this latest index, CPJ examined journalist murders that occurred between January  1, 2001 through December 31, 2010, and that remain unsolved. Only the 13 nations  with five or more unsolved cases are included on the index. Cases are considered  unsolved when no convictions have been obtained." And guess who comes in first?  That's right: The scourge of impunity  worsened in Iraq, a country with a rating far worse than anywhere else in the  world. None of the 92 journalist murders recorded in Iraq in the past decade has  been solved, and, after a brief decline in targeted killings, journalist murders  spiked in 2010. Among the four murder victims in 2010 was Sardasht Osman, a  contributor to several news outlets who had received numerous threats for  coverage that accused Kurdistan Regional Government officials of corruption. The  investigation of his murder is emblematic of the deeply entrenched culture of  impunity in Iraq. Authorities took no discernible action in the case until they  faced intense international pressure. Then, investigators produced a cursory,  430-word report that vaguely accused Osman of having links to an extremist group  that led to his killing. The report, which cited no supporting evidence for its  claims, was widely denounced for lacking credibility and transparency. Impunity Index Rating: 2.921 unsolved  journalist murders per 1 million inhabitants. Last year: Ranked 1st with a rating of 2.794.AFP notes , "Iraq remained worst in  the world when it comes to punishing murders of reporters, the Committee to  Protect Journalists said on Wednesday. The war-wracked country topped the list,  published by the New York-based press watchdog to spotlight countries where  media killings often go unpunished, for the fourth year running with an unsolved  murder rate more than three times that of Somalia, which was next worst." Iraq  has 'topped the charts' every year of the Impunity Index. Wladimir van Wilgenburg (Rudaw) notes : In a report released on June 1, Iraq is ranked first  on the 2011 impunity index of the Committee to Project Journalists (CPJ). CPJ  criticizes the Kurdish government for its unsatisfactory handling of the murder  case of Kurdish writer Sardasht Osman in 2010. The Kurdistan Regional  Government (KRG) has come in for fierce criticism by human rights and press  organizations such as Amnesty International, Reporters Without Borders (RSF),  CPJ and Human Rights Watch in the last few months for the way it dealt with  demonstrations and the media. On May 30, the KRG responded to the  allegations and didn't deny violations by Kurdish security forces and  ill-treatment of protestors. So the message is that when the  deaths matter to him, Nouri is interested in finding at the very least a suspect  and the deaths of journalists and Iraq's religious minorities really don't  matter to Nouri. Meanwhile Iran's Fars News Agency insists , "The United States and  Saudi Arabia have sent their death squads to Iraq to assassinate the country's  Shiite officers and scholars, Iraqi security sources revealed on Wednesday."  While the idea of Special Ops being sent on such a mission wouldn't be shocking  to me, it's a bit hard to take seriously a report that promises "security  sources" -- plural -- in its opening sentence but spends the entire report  citing one and only one source.  In addition, the actual article -- in Arabic -- is from  Nahrain  and it mentions one source and only one source for the  allegations.  (It's an unnamed source.) On the topic of rumors, Nahrainnet reports  that an unnamed "official  source in the police of Najaf" is denying previous reports that Grand Ayatollah  Ali al-Sistani is the target of a planned assassination.  Now about the Human  Rights Watch issue brought up a second ago.  Last week  Human Rights  Watch issued  an alert on the KRG which included the following:   Kurdistan regional government officials and security forces are  carrying out a growing assault on the freedom of journalists to work in Iraqi  Kurdistan, Human Rights Watch said today. Regional officials should stop  repressing journalists through libel suits, beatings, detentions, and death  threats, Human Rights Watch said.
 Kurdistan authorities have repeatedly  tried to silence Livin Magazine, one of Iraqi Kurdistan's leading  independent publications, and other media. The international community should  end its silence and condemn these widening attacks, Human Rights Watch  said.
 
 "The Kurdistan Regional Government promised a new era of freedom  for Iraqi Kurds, but it seems no more respectful of Kurdish rights to free  speech than the government that preceded it," said Sarah Leah Whitson, Middle  East director at Human Rights Watch. "In a time when the Middle East is erupting  in demands to end repression, the Kurdish authorities are trying to stifle and  intimidate critical journalism."
 
 On May 17, 2011, the Kurdistan  Democratic Party (KDP) of regional president Massud Barzani brought a defamation  lawsuit against the Livin editor-in-chief, Ahmed Mira, for publishing  an article about an alleged plot by the KDP and its ruling alliance partner, the  Patriotic Union of Kurdistan (PUK), to assassinate opposition leaders. According  to court documents obtained by Human Rights Watch, the KDP is seeking total  damages of one billion dinars (US$864,000) and an order to shut down the  magazine by revoking its license.
 
 The court documents say the party is  suing Mira because the Livin article "not only has no basis in truth  but is a threat to national security [and] a violation to the dignity and glory  and the great achievements" of Iraqi Kurdistan.
 
 Earlier in May, the Iraqi  president, Jalal Talabani, the PUK leader, filed his own lawsuit over the same  article. Mira told Human Rights Watch that, as a result, police detained him and  a Livin reporter, Zhyar Mohammed, for five hours on May 5.
 
 "Such  libel suits by Kurdistan government officials are nothing more than a  thinly-veiled effort to punish critics and create an atmosphere of fear and  self-censorship," Whitson said. "The attacks by Barzani and his colleagues on  independent journalists do more to undermine Kurdish 'dignity' and 'glory' than  anything in the media reports."
 
 A Livin reporter told Human  Rights Watch that when he called Sheikh Jaffar Mustafa, Minister of Peshmerga  (Kurdistan security forces), on April 24, Mustafa threatened Livin's  editor, Mira, with death. The reporter had called Mustafa and taped the  conversation because he wanted to get an official comment on an unrelated  matter. The reporter said that Mustafa was upset over an unflattering article in  the magazine that compared Mustafa to the Israeli defense minister, Ehud Barak.  Mira said he decided to report the threat to the regional government's prime  minister rather than make it public or go to the police, which he believed would  be ineffectual and put him at further risk.
       I have been directed by the Prime Minister of the Kurdistan  Regional Government, Dr. Barham Salih, to write to you in response to Human  Rights Watch's statement on April 21, 2011 in relation to the protests in  Suleimaniyah between February and April of this year.
 First and  foremost, we reaffirm our gratitude and appreciation for the work conducted by  HRW throughout the years in defense of Kurdish rights. While we take issue with  some of the assertions in your statement, we consider your intervention  consistent with your concern with the human rights of Kurds and others.
 
 This has been a testing period in so many ways for our government and  the Kurdistan Region's political process. We will not deny that a few  individuals from KRG security forces may have committed violations and might  have subjected some protesters to ill treatment. We can assure you, however,  that these incidents have occurred despite KRG's clear directives for strict  adherence to the law and the rights of the protesters. These violations can be  attributed, at least in part, to lack of training and equipment needed for crowd  control, which has also led to the death and injury of many police and security  personnel. It is also important to recognize that the protests in the  governorate of Suleimaniyah were not entirely peaceful. Many of the protest  leaders incited violence, some even called for Jihad. Many of the demonstrators  took part in violent actions that caused extensive damage to public and private  property as well as hundreds of injuries and even the deaths of two security  personnel.
 
 The protests and opposition politics
 
 The KRG, since  its inception in 1991, has achieved much progress—despite many setbacks that  have been manifested through internal strife. Nonetheless, after twenty years,  there is still need for change and reforms. Our constituents legitimately aspire  to better governance, combating corruption, and preventing the abuse of power.  The initial wave of protests was undoubtedly a reflection of this desire for  reform.
 
 However, the facts show that much of the protests' organization  and motivation, as well as the degeneration of the security situation, is a  result of political opportunism whereby opposition political parties and leaders  have attempted to achieve in the streets what they were unable to achieve at the  ballot box. The violence accompanying some of the protests is not an expression  of democracy—it is a direct challenge to democracy.
 
 Here are some key  facts to take into account when considering what is happening in the Kurdistan  Region:
 
 The KRG and reformThe current administration of the Kurdistan Regional Government came  into office in July 2009 as the result of a competitive election in which the  winning coalition received 59% of the vote.
More than 320 international observers from 35 countries and  organizations, including the UN and EU, monitored the elections. They praised  the high turnout of the elections and its competitive environment.
Opposition parties made significant gains in these elections, and  for the first time in history, the Kurdistan Region's Parliament has a large  opposition group in attendance.
The Gorran Party, the main opposition, first called for the KRG to  resign more than three weeks before the first protest, and they promised to  bring their people to the streets if the government was not dissolved.
The outbreak of violence on February 17th resulted when a group of  protesters left the licensed protest area and attacked the offices of the  Kurdistan Democratic Party (KDP) in Suleimaniyah. A regrettable shooting  incident took place. Of the 64 total wounded (reported by the Suleimaniyah  Emergency Hospital), 11 were security personnel.
Some protesters have repeatedly insulted, taunted, and used violence  in attempts to provoke security officers in order to gain sympathy for their  cause.
In Halabja, two police officers were killed and many others were  wounded during violent protests in which not a single protester was injured,  illustrating the restraint shown by the police.
In addition to the two officers who were killed, almost 500 security  personnel have been wounded by protestors throwing sticks, rocks, glass, and  using knives, guns, and other weapons. Of the 99 persons reported injured during  the events of April 17th and 18th, 66 were security personnel, and two of these  were blinded by broken glass fired from slingshots.
Of those arrested, over 95% were released almost immediately. Due  process is a fundamental right, and the government does not hold any persons for  political reasons. Those who have been held are being detained with charges  ranging from carrying a weapon without a license to assault with the intent to  kill.
Almost 90% of the demonstrators were male, and 60% of them were  under the age of 18.
Of the nearly one million residents of Suleimaniyah, the usual  turnout of less than 1,500 protesters had a devastating impact on the economy in  the Suleimaniyah area and on the Region as a whole. Local merchants, shops and  service centers have suffered terrible financial losses, and the government has  received countless calls for action to be taken to protect their  welfare.
 
 The  government has recognized the need for reform since long before these protests  began, and many significant reforms have already been passed. Among these are:
 
 Response to criticismBefore protests began in the region, the government was already  taking steps to initiate many reforms. The current cabinet, which took office in  October 2010, embarked on a series of reform initiatives aimed at limiting  political party interference in governmental work and promoting new levels of  transparency in public finances.
On November 23rd, 2010 President Barzani held a meeting with Prime  Minister Salih and the Council of Ministers urging a wide ranging reform agenda  to improve government services, the unification of Peshmerga forces, and  measures to eliminate corruption.
President Barzani called parliament together on February 10th. In  addition to the measures listed above, he asked each party to draw up a plan for  introducing reforms on: improving government efficiency, creating more jobs, and  making public access to services easier and more convenient.
In a public meeting on February 14th, the President reiterated his  firm resolve to fight corruption and stressed that no one is above the law.
Establishing an independent Judicial Council to separate the  judicial system from the influence of the Ministry of Justice.
Promoting the protection, rights, and participation of women in  government through establishing the Higher Council of Women and a directorate to  follow up on the government's actions to prevent violence against women, passing  a law to prosecute perpetrators of honor killings as murderers, and passing a  law requiring 30% of MPs to be women.
Passing a Press Law ensuring imprisonment is no longer possible as  punishment for press-related matters.
Enacting a Code of Ethics and Conduct for greater accountability of  government officials to ensure separation of public and private interests.
Establishing a continuing program of training and mentoring for KRG  civil servants with the UK's National School of Government.
Starting a program with the UK's Westminster Foundation for  Democracy to enhance the Kurdistan Parliament's training and capacity-building  for MPs and parliamentary staff.
Bringing in the independent firm Price Waterhouse Coopers to advise  the KRG on strategies for good governance and  transparency.
 
 Concluding thoughtsSince the protests began, the government has listened closely to the  people's demands and has taken many steps to address the protesters' concerns in  a responsible and democratic way.
Parliament has passed an extensive program to institute 17 points of  reform (see attached translation – app 1).
A committee was formed by the Council of Ministers on February 23rd  to investigate the events that took place in Suleimaniyah and elsewhere. This  report, based on video footage, health reports, and interviews with civilian and  government witnesses, has now been presented to the public.The substantial  criticisms of government actions in this report are a testament to its  credibility, and you can rest assured that we will do everything that we can to  address the issues brought to light in this report (see attached translation of  the report's findings summary – app 2).
 
The Prime Minister issued a statement to the protestors responding  to their demands and establishing a committee to work on a mechanism for  coordination (see the translation of the letter – app 3).
On February 27th, the Patriotic Union of Kurdistan (PUK) officially  returned a list of party properties to government control (see attachment – app  4).
The Prime Minister and Ministers of Peshmerga Affairs and the  Interior have all attended sessions of parliament to be questioned about events  related to the protests.
The Ministry of Interior has sought training and equipment for  non-lethal crowd management, and a directive was sent to all the security forces  of the Kurdistan Region regarding appropriate procedures for detaining and  processing prisoners (see attached directive – app 5).
On March 20th, President Barzani laid out a list of 20 reforms that  he called on parliament and the other appropriate entities to enact in response  to many of the legitimate demands of the protesters (see attached translation –  app 6).
The government has scheduled provincial elections for September 10,  2011, and President Barzani has indicated a willingness to consider holding  Parliamentary elections before their currently scheduled date in 2013.
The government has repeatedly asked for the assistance of the people  to put an end to the violence and to address their concerns through constructive  and peaceful dialogue, and in recent days the local security forces in  Suleimaniyah have successfully cleared the protest area so that business and  commerce may resume - their restraint during this action is evidenced by the  fact that more than two thirds of the reported injured were security  personnel.
 
 While  this government acknowledges significant shortcoming and deficiencies in its  performance, we ask that it be viewed with appreciation for the challenges that  it faces and with honest consideration for the progress it has made. Since  obtaining limited autonomy from Saddam Hussein's oppressive regime in 1991, this  Region has quadrupled its number of schools, doubled the number of hospitals,  completed more than 4,000 drinking-water projects, built more than 900 km of  paved roads, made significant improvements in sewage and waste management,  multiplied its average electricity output by more than 9 times, and has  increased oil exports from zero to 150,000 bpd since 2007. The number of  newspapers, magazines and broadcast media outlets has risen dramatically, and  all of these improvements have been made in order to enhance the education,  healthcare and the provision of services and infrastructure to the people of the  Kurdistan Region. The KRG is proud to be a government that puts the security and  the needs of its people above all else.
 
 In addition to the reforms  mentioned above, Amnesty International recognized the region for discontinuing  the incarceration of political prisoners, for passing legislation to compensate  detainees that have been held without charges, and for its improvements in human  rights overall in its 2009 report. This region has also become a refuge for tens  of thousands of internally displaced persons (IDPs), particularly those fleeing  religious persecution, and the KRG provides them with food, housing, and  financial assistance.
 
 Progress and reform are not new to this  government. A culture of positive change has been fostered since well before the  protests began. The KRG welcomes the new opposition as a means of improving the  efficiency of the democratic system, and it is open to constructive criticisms  and cooperative efforts toward further progress. However, we call on the  opposition to take its responsibility seriously. They should participate in the  coalition government to help implement the many reforms that are still needed or  win the right to lead the country through the ballot box. Their calls to  dissolve a democratically elected coalition government are irresponsible, and  ceding to this demand would set a dangerous precedent for the Kurdistan Region's  emerging democracy.
 
 We would like to thank you for taking the time to  consider these thoughts. I hope that we have been successful in communicating a  more complete picture of our region. For, as the Prime Minister has recently  stated, "the lives and the safety of the people, as well as the stability of the  region, are above all of the political positions that we hold."
     Adam Kokesh:  As most of you are now aware I was body slammed,  choked and arrested at the Thomas Jefferson Memorial this past weekend for  silently making some vaguely rhythmical body movements well within my First  Amendment rights.  But rest assured, citizen, my silent movements were put to a  stop before they were able to terrorize the nation.  That said dissent and free  expression is the very highest form of respect for the lifelong champion and  Founding Father Thomas Jefferson.  Not to take the W line of  being 'with us or  with the terrorist' but wasn't it the Taliban who was all hardline about illegal  dancing? So about the whole body slamming and choking me thing?   You know  what?  We'll let it go.  You guys aren't very good dancers. I get it. You're  forgiven.  Okay.  Nice badge. Sorry about your penis. Compensating for something  obviously.  But you know there's a lot of pent up anger there for a good  reason.  Seriously, no hard feelings. I want to look at the bright side of this.  You know I thought it was a really fitting tribute to the late Macho Man Randy  Savage for me to be body slammed into the granite there but no more freebies.   You guys want to try to take me again?  We'll throw down.  Mano y mano. In fact,  I'll take all of you at once and it still won't be a fair fight for you. But you  better remember your dancing shoes because I'm fighting dance off style.  In one  corner, we've got the First Amendment, you know that whole mess about no laws  being made abridging free expression or press.  In the other corner, laws that  abridge free expression and press.  You want to help make sure that I win this  contest?  Be there. TJ's Memorial this upcoming Saturday.  That's right, Dance  Party at TJ's June 4th, noon sharp.  Anniversary of Tineman Square by the way.   Now we don't all need to go getting cuffed or thrown in cages or maced or beaten  with cubs or punched, so if you want to play it safe, party on the stairs.  If  you're feeling really footloose, harness your Constitutional right and shimmy  your way into the Memorial.  Just, like me, be ready for the  consequences.     He also briefly discussed it on air with Stewart Rhodes.   Adam Kokesh:  How are we going to get accountability for this  because, you know, Oath Keepers would not have done  this.  Am I right?   Stewart Rhodes:  No.  Of course not. It's absurd.  Because, first  of all, where's the law that says you can only move your feet in a certain  manner as you cross the tile, cross the marble. I mean what is dancing away?   How do they define that?  So it's just ridiculous.  And where is the law is what  I want to know? And then, how does that trump the First  Amendment?       There's a student paper that just published an editorial on the Iraq War  that's awful.  Kelly McEvers (NPR) does not do "columns" for NPR, for example.   A report that you link to , a report that aired on  Weekend Edition Sunday, is not a "column."  That's (a).  Next, this Washington Post webpage ("Faces of the Fallen ")  does not say 6,013 US service members died in the Iraq War.  Your editorial says  it does, but the page says 4,442 died in Operation Iraqi Freedom and 1,571 died  in Operation Enduring Freedom for a total of 6,013.  "Operation Enduring  Freedom" is the Afghanistan War.  (C) Moqtada al-Sadr has not "led a march in  Iraq of tens of thousands . . ."  Moqtada al-Sadr was not in Iraq last week.  He  could not physically lead the march from Iran. It's a student paper and we're  going to be kind and not name it or toss in a link. We'll just note those are  really serious mistakes for a college newpaper to have in its editorial.  But  they are students.  So they're not responsible for the most ridiculous nonsense  the country may see this month.  No that would be Tracy Baim promoting her bad book or 'book' on The Progressive  Radio with Matt Rothschild . Time and again, she shows ignorance (at  best) and flat out lies at worst.  I'm really tired of the little brats who  don't know the history of Don't Ask, Don't Tell.  Tracy's decided to write a  book including but feels she can be ignorant or lie about it.  But promoting the  book appears to mean trashing Bill Clinton and Hillary as well.  Hillary doesn't  have "a veneer" of support for LGBT rights.  That's not poor word choice, it's a  bitchy remark and it's a lie.  And seconds later, liar Tracy has to back away  from that claim (because it's a damn lie). It's cute to watch how Tracy  addresses Barack putting homophobes on stage at campaign events (for more on  that you can see Kevin Alexander Grey's "Obama's Big Gay and Black Problem .")  To Matthew's credit, in  their print publication, The Progressive  ran Kevin Alexander Grey's  article -- this while The Nation , in print and online, actively ignored  what was taking place on the campaign trail.  Asked about this issue by Matthew,  Baim wants to laugh about the homophobe who claims he's an ex-gay (and ignores  the other homephobes on stage at that event) before immediately adding "and  several other missteps during the campaign, now the thing is Clinton wasn't pure  on . . ."  That's how she deals with.  By never dealing with it and by  immediately defocusing on Hillary.  (Who, for the record, did not stage a  campaign event featuring known homophobes paraiding on stage.) Is her book about  Hillary or is it about Barack? If it's about Barack, the alleged reporter (who  seems to feel she was both a reporter and Barack emissary to the LGBT community  during the 2008 campaign) needs to stop whoring and start addressing what the  man she wrote a book about did, what he actually did.  She's a stupid moron, a  petty con artist and dirty liar.  I have no use for these fools who will sit  there and ignore reality or attempt to explain it away.  Stupid, stupid moron..   It only gets worse.  And please note, she needs to learn how to speak.  She  makes a remark about Barack's former church that I can follow because I'm very  familiar with that church.  But I doubt many others can since she's using  "denomination" repeatedly including when she's speaking of the church and how it  differs, yes, from the "denomination." (And on how it differs, she actually  manages to use the term "denomination" correctly.  It's a damn shame she wasn't  able to do so consistently.)       |