| Wednesday, February 15, 2012.  Chaos and violence continue, UN  Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon talks Camp Ashraf, another prep meet-up for a  national conference takes place, Iraq continues to struggle to pass a 2012  budget, the US House Veterans Affairs Committee hears from the VA about their  budget requests and more.     President Barack Obama, don't threaten veterans.  That was the message of  House Veterans Affairs Committee Chair Jeff Miller this morning.  What was he  talking about?  He was noting that other departments know whether or not  sequestration would effect them but VA doesn't.  In 1985, the Congress passed  the Gramm-Rudman-Hollings Budget Act.  If the budget triggers sequestration,  then automatic cuts would take place.  Chair Miller explained that they had  repeatedly attempted to get a clear answer from the White House on this issue  but that they still had no answer.  "If the president won't lead on this issue,"  Chair Miller declared, "then we will."   It was a lively hearing.  So much so that all overshadowed Miller's opening  remarks.  The hearing was about the 2013 budget and two panels appeared before the  Committee.  The first panel was Secretary of Veterans Affairs Eric Shinseki  (with the VA's Robert Petzel, Allison Hickey, Steve Muro, Roger Baker and Todd  Grams).  Paralyzed Veterans of America 's Carl Blake, VFW 's Ramond Kelley,  Disabled American  Veterans ' Joseph Violante, AMVETS  Diane Zumatto and the American Legion 's Timothy Tetz.  We'll note the  second panel in tomorrow's snapshot and focus on the first panel today.  The  White House has put out their trial budget.  The House Veterans Affairs  Committee was focusing on the budget in terms of veterans issues.  Chair Jeff Miller: In the -- in the current budget submission, it  has a billion dollars for Veterans Job Corps. We all are keenly aware of the  high number of unemployed veterans in our country today. And not a single member  of this Committee nor this Congress should be in any way satisifed with that  number. And we have tried to do things in this Commitee to help bring those  numbers down.  My concern is there's no detail in the budget submission. Where  did the number one billion dollars come from?  You know, it was chosen to be  provided in your entitlement accounts to be dispensed over a five year period.   And so I think we all benefit from a conversation, Mr. Secretary, as to who's  going to be focused on, what area of the veteran population, how's it going to  work and what will happen to these jobs once the funds run out?     Secretary Eric Shinseki:  Mr. Chairman, the proposal for the  Veterans Job Corps, the $1 billion piece of that, is a program that we're  seeking Congressional authorization on and we are putting together the details  of that which we would provide to you and you would have a chance to review. I  would say that the intent here is to put up to 20,000 veterans back to work over  the next five years on projects that will protect and restore our public lands.  Projects would be in national parks, forests, rivers and trails, wild life  refuge, national monuments, other public lands. Veterans could work on park  maintenance projects, patrolling public lands, rehabilitating natural and  recreational areas and in administrative, technical, law enforcement-related  activities. The Veterans Job Corps program is a project that's going to be  coordinated with other departments and we are a -- sort of a oversight of the  distribution of funds but there are others who will be participating.  I'm told  that uh -- and I'm confident that uh VA resources won't be diverted to fund this  $1 billion that it will come from elsewhere.  And I don't know exactly where at  the moment.  But, Mr. Chairman, I'll share that with you as soon as I have  clarity.   And we'll note, from his written statement about the Veterans Job Corps,  "The program will serve all Veterans, but will have a particular focus on  post-9/11 Veterans."  So the 20,000 jobs are not guaranteed to veterans of  today's wars.  I'm not saying they should be but I am saying 20,000 wasn't, to  me, an impressive number, and became less so when it was going to address not  only the largest unemployed veterans population (young veterans of today's wars)  but all veterans.  US House Rep Corrine Brown would bring up the issue of  contracts and outsourcing and asking why every contract the VA outsourced didn't  have a clause in it about hiring veterans?  Not really an answer. "You're not  answering the question," Ranking Member Bob Filner pointed out to the VA's  Allison Hickey as she went on about how one contract has seen a company hire 15%  veterans and how they have conversations with contractors.  Filner pointed out  that Brown's question was why didn't they mandate this in the contract, why have  conversations when you should be writing it into the contract?  Hickey attempted  to reply but Shinseki took over.   Secretary Eric Shinseki:  Mr. Filner, we'll take a look at  this.   Ranking Member Bob Filner: Oh, come on, you can give me some kind  of answer.  Are you saying we can't do it legally?   Secretary Eric Shinseki:  I don't know. I don't know the answer to  that question.   Ranking Member Bob Filner: She must know the answer [gesturing to  Hickey].  I mean, come on. This is not rocket science here.  You issue contracts  100 times a day.  Why can't we have contracts that do this?   Secretary Eric Shinseki:  You can. And I don't know the  circumstances of this contract. And I would --   Ranking Member Bob Filner: But she apparently does. Why didn't we  do it here?   Allison Hickey: So, Congressman, I will go back to our physician  folks to ask --   Ranking Member Bob Filner: Oh, come on.  You guys know the answer  to this.  Why are you so afraid to just tell us?   Secretary Eric Shinseki: I'm not sure it wasn't in the contract,  Mr. Filner. That's why --    Ranking Member Bob Filner:  Well she's sure --   Allison Hickey: Congressman --   Ranking Member Bob Filner: You started off your testimony, "I know  the contract." So did it specify or not?   Allison Hickey: I will find out and get back to you for the record  --   Ranking Member Bob Filner: I don't understand this.  You know this  better than you're saying here.     US House Rep Corrine Brown then noted that one of the biggest complaints  she gets is that VA does billions of dollars of work and they're not doing it  with veterans, they're not hiring them and this at a time when so many veterans  are unemployed. Brown noted employment elsewhere in the hearing as well.  US  House Rep and Dr. Roe raised the issue of the large number of suicides and  shared that one thing he's hearing from veterans is that they're doing well in  one-on-one sessions and then they're moved on to groups and that's not working.   "These needs aren't being met in large group settings," he explained. The short  answer is that the VA is currently evaluating with plans to increase in the  numbers hired where needed.   US House Rep Corrine Brown: Sir, I have a follow up on that, you  said can we hire -- are we not -- are we trying to hire all those people or are  we working with other agencies as far as subcontracting out? Because we're not  going to be able to hire enough people.  He talked about the group setting, some  people can benefit from the group setting, everbody don't need that one-on-one  but some people do. So based on the resources, how can we better utilize the  dollars to meet the needs?   Dr. Robert Petzel: Thank you, Congressman Brown.  We do contract in  the community.  We do provide on a fee basis mental health care. And as the  Secretary was just pointing out to me a new modality that's becoming  increasingly important is tele-mental health where we provide both evaluation  and therapy in a tele-health setting -- where the patient may be remotely, a  hundred miles away. They're on a television screen with an appropriate  supervisor and the psychiatrist or psychologist is back at a larger medical  center.  It has been very successful in treating PTSD and other mental health  disorders.  And I think that this is going to become a more common practice as  we move forward.   FYI, Petzel called every female House Rep, throughout the hearing,  "Congressman." Maybe here we'll call him "Mrs. Dr. Petzel" in the future?   Last week, Senator Patty Murray, Chair of the Senate Veterans Affairs  Committee, participated in a Virtual Town Hall, an online Town Hall which  allowed her and veterans all over the country to interact. The Virtual Town Hall  was sponsored by Disabled American Veterans  and a full transcript of the  exchange can be found here .  Various  veterans participating in the Virtual Town Hall noted the delays and backlog  with regards to claims -- not surprising, over 500,000 claims are currently  backlogged according to the VA's Allison Hickey testimony in today's hearing.   Senator Murray observed, "I receive so many complaints from veterans and their  families about long waits for claims. I visited the Seattle Regional Office a  few months ago and was astounded at the mountain of paper work and had the  opportunity to really see what we are facing.  I am working hard to try and help  the VA get a handle on this.  We do have to recognize that the claims are  increasingly complex and there are more of them with the number of service  members coming home today.  We want them to be done efficiently but correctly.   This will remain a top priority for me."  And in today's hearing, Ranking Member  Bob Filner touched on the issues of backlog and Agent Orange.    Ranking Member Bob Filner: And I just want to ask a couple -- focus  on a couple areas that I've been involved with over the years. One is the claims  backlog.  In your budget presentation ou title it "Eliminate The Claims  Backlog." But I don't see any real estimate or projection or anything of when  you think you're going to do that but I still think that -- in the short run, at  least -- to get this turned around your notion of -- I think you used the word  "brute force" a few years ago, if I recall that.   Secretary Eric Shinseki: It was probably a poor choice of  words.   Ranking Member Bob Filner: No, it's okay. It was good. Gives me  something to shoot at, you know? I don't think it's going to work.  I just think  all this stuff you have is good stuff but it's too big and, as you point out,  there's all kind of factors making it bigger.  I still think you have to take  some, I'll say, radical step in the short run -- whether it's to grant all the  Agent Orange claims that have been submitted or have been there for X number of  years or, as I've suggested at other times, all claims that have the medical  information in it and have been submitted with the help of a Veterans Service  Officer you accept subject to audit. That is, unless you take some real radical  step to eliminate a million of them or 500,000 of them, you're never going to  get there. It's going to always be there.  You don't want that as your legacy --  I don't think.  So -- Nor do we.  I think you're going to have to take some  really strong steps in terms of accepting stuff that's been in the pipeline a  long time, again, that has adequate -- by whatever definition -- documentation  and help from professional support. Plus this incredible situation of Agent  Orange where, as you know, not only have those claims increaded but we're  talking about -- as you well know -- your comrades for thirty or more years that  have been wrestling with this.  Let's give the Vietnam vets some peace. Let's  give them a real welcome home. Let's grant those Agent Orange claims.  Let's get  those -- whatever it is, 100,000 or 200,000  of our backlog -- just get them off  the books.  I don't know if you want to comment on that but I still think you're  never going to get there with -- All this is good stuff.  We've talked about it  on many occasions.  But it's not going to fundamentally -- or at least in the  short run change it around so you can get to a base  level of zero or whatever  you want to be and move forward from there.    Secretary Eric Shinseki:  Mr. Filner, I'll call on Secretary Hickey  for the final details but we've pretty much worked through the Agent Orange --  the increase in Agent Orange claims. I think we're well down on the numbers.  I'll rely on her statistic here.   Many other issues were touched on.  We'll note the exchanges on women  veterans.   Ranking Member Bob Filner: The House passed a bill that I had put  forward a year or two ago called a Women's Veterans Bill of Rights.  It got  through the House, it got stuck in the Senate.  [He's referring to HR 809 which  he introduced in the 111th Congress and which the Senate didn't pass.  He  reintroduced HR 809 in the new  Congress in February of 2010.]  I would just ask that you look at that.  You can  do stuff administratively. You could post something in each of our centers and  clinics. We have a long way to go on this but women veterans need to feel that  this institution is evolving to meet their needs.  And a statement at the front  door of their rights, I think, would be very helpful. So I would just ask you to  look at that.  We didn't do it legislatively but I think you could do some stuff  administratively.     Shinseki replied that women veterans' issues in the proposed budget  increased by 17%. Dropping back to his written statement, he gives 8% as the  number women make up in VA's total population, women are "nearly 15 percent of  today's active duty military forces and 18 percent of National Guard and  Reserves."  337,000 women access care through VA and, "The 2013 budget includes  $403 million for the gender-specific healthcare needs of women Veterans, an  increase of 17.5 percent over the 2012 level."  Later in the hearing, US House  Rep Linda Sanchez would raise the issue of women veterans and we'll jump to her  exchange.   US House Rep Linda Sanchez: Secretary Shinseki, I recently had the  opportunity to visit the Patient Alligned Care Center at the Long Beach VA  facility and I want to applaud the efforts there to provide an integrated system  of care. But one of the things that's been brought to my attention is the levels  of staffing for the new models that will be put in place. I heard from doctors,  nurses and other pracitioners to discuss how thinly they feel they are being  stretched in this new system. And it's a system that they want to see succeed.  They're employed there because they believe in the mission, they want to provide  the service.  But I'm wondering if you could maybe go into a little bit of  detail  as to how the $433 million that is proposed for patient-centered care --  how that will go towards staffing to make sure that we have the staff availble  to meet the needs of those veterans.    Secretary Eric Shinseki:  I'm going to call on Dr. Petzel for the  details.   US House Rep Linda Sanchez: Sure.   Dr. Robert Petzel: Thank you, Mr. Secretary.  Congressman Sanchez,  when we implemented the PAC [Patient Aligned Care] program, several years ago,  the first thing that we did was a survey of what we call PAC readiness.  One of  which was to determine how many support people there were in place for each one  of the providers in a PAC clinic.  The desirable ratio agreed to in the entire  health care community is 3 people per provider. We found that there were places  that were reaching that goal and then others that weren't.  One of the major  things that has been involved in the PAC model financing has been to provide the  medical centers with -- and the clinics with -- the number of people that they  need to support the provider.  I will look specifically at Long Beach and I can,  in fact, get back to you. But our goal -- and we're very close to it as I  understand -- is to have 3 support people per provider in each one of our  clinics.     US House Rep Linda Sanchez: Okay because I hear stories about  staffing being stretched and no new hires or people leave and are not replaced.  And so the concern is to have the appropriate amount of people available to  provide the services that are needed.  And I would appreciate you following up  with me about that.  To the Secretary, I know that you and I have previously  discussed some of my concerns -- specifically with respect to the VA employing  female specialists to assist specifically female veterans with VA services.  And  I know that the administration's budget contains $403 million to address the  needs of women veterans.  I'm wondering if you can tease that out a little bit  and provide more specifics on how that money will be used to address the growing  needs of the female veteran population?   Secretary Eric Shinseki: Uh, thank you, Congresswoman. I'm going to  call on Dr. Petzel for the details but this is confirmed that you and I have had  discussions about this.   US House Rep Linda Sanchez: Yes.   Dr. Robert Petzel: I thank you, Mr. Secretary.  Uh, the -- our goal  is to ensure that every female veteran has a choice of providers and that, if  they wish to, they will be able to be seen by a female provider.  About 75% of  women choose to have a female provider.  And we are able to meet that need in  virtually every setting except perhaps some remote community-based outpatient  clinics where we just don't have those sort of uh facilities.  I can, for the  record, give you the details about how much staffing -- what kind of staffing is  to be associated with the $403 million increase we're seeing in women's health  programs. I don't have that number at the tip of my fingers but it is important  to us as I'm sure it is to you that women have a choice, that if they wish to  see a female provider, they are afforded that opportunity.    US House Rep Linda Sanchez:  Yeah, one of the things on my tour of  the Long Beach facility is that they do have a sort of separate women's clinic  area where women can choose that to be their point of entry to the  system.   Dr. Robert Petzel: About sixty of our largest medical centers have  specific women's centers, women's health centers where all of the services are  provided in that same environment. The rest of them are sort of associated with  women specific primary care clinics when they're not as large. And then, in  community based outpatient clinics we have trained the primary care providers in  the necessities of women's health.     Homelessness was touched on by US House Reps Corrine Brown and Dr. Phil  Roe.  We're ignoring that for two reasons.  1) Roe brought up that once a case  worker has X number of clients, the VA isn't issuing vouchers so even though  there is space a veterans left sleeping on the street or somewhere else (he or  she receives no voucher).  Shinseki noted that homeless veterans were  decreasing.  Are they?  Or is this program -- which tracks beds used in shelters  -- not factoring in that veterans aren't receiving vouchers if their caseworker  is maxed out?  That's not addressed and until it is, I'm not interested in going  into the figures.  2) What we do know is that one group of homeless veterans is  increasing and it's not the stereotype of the homeless veteran.  Earlier this  week, Peggy McCarthy (The  Day) reports on homeless veterans. Andy and Miriam Miranda live  with their young son in a New Haven shelter. Andy's a veteran, they both have  degrees and were teachers and their home was foreclosed during these economic  hard times. McCarthy reports an emerging trend for homeless veterans is that  it's no longer a single veteran but families. Connecticut saw 15 veterans family  appealing for help via the homeless programs in 2008 but last year saw 135  families which mirrors what's happening on a national level (2010 saw "an 86  percent increase over 2009").  This increasing group -- homeless veterans with  their femilies -- was not addressed in the hearing.  The VA budget calls for  "$1.352 billion for programs that will prevent and treat Veteran homelessness"  (Shinseki's written statement) and I'm fine with noting that figure but,  repeating, if VA is saying that the number of homeless veterans is decreasing  and US House Rep Roe is telling us -- without any dispute from Shinseki or  anyone from the VA on the panel -- that homeless people are being turned away  when beds are available, that they're not being given vouchers, then I think the  VA needs to clarify how they're collecting their numbers.  I'll also note that  Shinseki's defined as "VA's goal" for 2013 "to serve 32,000 homeless veterans."   Also on the issue of homeless veterans, Senator Patty Murray's office released  the following this afternoon:     FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASEContact: Murray Press Office
 (202)  224-2834
 Wednesday, February 15, 2012
 
 Tester Press Office (202)  228-0371
 Snowe Press Office (202) 224-8667
 
 
 VETERANS: Chairman  Murray and Senators Tester and Snowe Call on VA and HUD to Provide Answers about  Homeless Women Veterans
 
 After GAO report emphasizes data collection  partnership opportunities between VA and HUD, Murray, Tester, and Snowe ask  Secretaries for answers ahead of the March 14 Senate Veterans' Affairs Committee  hearing on veteran homelessness
 
 READ FULL GAO REPORT HERE
 
 (Washington, D.C.) -- Today, Senate Veterans' Affairs Committee Chairman  Patty Murray, Committee Member Jon Tester, and Senator Olympia J. Snowe sent a  joint letter to Department of Veterans Affairs Secretary Eric Shinkseki and  Department of Housing and Urban Development Secretary Shaun Donovan asking for  explicit answers to questions in light of a GAO report highlighting missed  opportunities for the two departments to improve services for homeless women  veterans. The report also highlighted limitations in available housing options  for women veterans with children and an inability to ensure the privacy, safety,  and security of women veterans in mixed-gender housing facilities.
 
 "It is  critical that we continue doing absolutely everything we can on behalf of the  brave men and women who have already made tremendous sacrifices for our nation,"  the Senators wrote. "Until every single veteran is off the street, we must not  relent in our efforts to provide the services and assistance they need to find  adequate and long-term housing for them and their families. In doing so, we must  make every effort to ensure we are addressing the needs of our entire veteran  population, particularly our women veterans, to ensure their needs are being met  and they are not falling through the cracks."
 
 The Senators have requested  a response in advance of the March 14 Senate Veterans' Affairs Committee hearing  scheduled on veteran homelessness.
 
 The full text of the Senators' letter  follows:
 
 The Honorable Eric K. Shinseki
 Secretary of Veterans  Affairs
 810 Vermont Avenue, NW
 Washington, DC 20420
 
 Honorable  Shaun L.S. Donovan
 Secretary
 United States Department of
 Housing &  Urband Development
 451 7th Street, SW
 Washington, DC 20410
 
 
 Dear  Secretary Shinseki and Secretary Donovan,
 
 We appreciate your ongoing  efforts to reduce homelessness among our nation's veterans, and applaud your  request for an increase of $333 million for programs to end veteran homelessness  in the fiscal year 2013 budget. Recent reports of a 12 percent reduction in the  homeless veteran population over the last year are certainly a testament to your  hard work and leadership. Despite these gains, we have concerns that the  particular needs of homeless women veterans are frequently being overlooked. As  we see more and more women veterans returning from Iraq and Afghanistan, it is  increasingly critical that we do more to help them transition home.
 
 As  you know, a recent Government Accountability Office report, "Homeless Women  Veterans: Actions Needed to Ensure Safe and Appropriate Housing," highlighted an  opportunity to increase collaboration between your two agencies when it comes to  gathering data about homeless women veterans. As you would undoubtedly agree,  without that data, it is impossible for us to have a clear understanding of the  demographics of this population or to develop a strategy that can effectively  address their particular needs.
 
 The report also highlighted limitations  in available housing options for women veterans with children. Although VA has a  referral policy in place for temporary housing, it is not being implemented  uniformly nationwide. As a result, homeless women veterans in some parts of the  country are forced to return to the streets until they are admitted into the  Grant and Per Diem or HUD-VASH programs. Additionally, infrastructure needs such  as private and secure rooms and showering facilities are often lacking --  placing women veterans in uncomfortable and potentially unsafe situations. We  can and should do better.
 
 In light of this report, we request responses  to the following questions:
 
 * What steps are your agencies taking to  better capture information on our homeless women veteran population?
 
 *  How do you track both the demographics and particular needs of this population?
 
 * What strategies are being employed to effectively address their unique  needs?
 
 * What improvements will be made to VA's implementation of its  referral policy?
 
 * What type of gender-specific safety and security  standards will be implemented for VA's Grant and Per Diem program?
 
 *  What additional steps need to be taken to reduce the rate of homelessness among  female veterans?
 
 
 Recent data from the Bureau of Labor Statistics  points out that, although the overall number of unemployed veterans has  decreased significantly over the past year, the unemployment rate amongst women  veterans is now more than double the national average. As unemployment rates  often directly correlate with rates of homelessness, how closely are your  Agencies working with the Department of Labor to reduce the homeless women  veteran population by addressing one of the underlying symptoms of their  unemployment or underemployment?
 
 It is critical that we continue doing  absolutely everything we can on behalf of the brave men and women who have  already made tremendous sacrifices for our nation. Until every single veteran is  off the street, we must not relent in our efforts to provide the services and  assistance they need to find adequate and long-term housing for them and their  families. In doing so, we must make every effort to ensure we are addressing the  needs of our entire veteran population, particularly our women veterans, to  ensure their needs are being met and they are not falling through the cracks.
 
 We appreciate your attention to this matter, and request a response to  inform our views in advance of the March 14 hearing before the Senate Committee  on Veterans Affairs on veteran homelessness. We look forward to working closely  with both of you to address this critical issue.
 
 Sincerely,
 
 Chairman Patty Murray
 
 Senator Jon  Tester
 
 Senator Olympia J. Snowe
 
 ###
 
 
 Meghan Roh   Deputy Press Secretary   Office of U.S. Senator Patty  Murray   @PattyMurray   202-224-2834   Get Updates from Senator Murray   
     Violence continued in Iraq today.  Reuters notes  a police officer's Jurf  al-Sakhar home was attacked with gunfire and grenades leaving his wife and their  two daughters dead and him injured and a Baquba roadside bombing left two people  injured.  Aswat al-Iraq adds  that a Mosul bombing  left 1 person dead and one police officer injured.  From the never-ending violence to confusion.  Confusion over AFP  and Reuters ' reporting and confusion over  United Nations Secretary-General Ban Ki-Moon. Let's set the stage by noting what  we were noting this morning .  We're talking about  the residents of Camp Ashraf, approximately 3,500 Iranian dissidents who were  welcomed into Iraq decades ago, following the Iranian revolution. Nouri  al-Maliki does not care for the residents and has, since Barack Obama was sworn  in as US President, twice ordered their assault. They are protected persons  under international law and Nouri gave his word that he would ensure their  protection. Nouri's word is worthless. They are being relocated to Camp Liberty.  The British Parliamentary Committee for Iran Freedom's Muriel Turner offers   this in a guest column for UPI :The 3,400 residents will be housed it what can only be  described as veal crates, in an area not much more than half-a-kilometer-square.  Martin Kobler, the U.N. special representative to Iraq, has admitted to Ashraf  residents that they will still be denied medical facilities. There will be no  way to care for the disabled and nowhere to tend to the injured.There isn't even any drinking water!Their instructions mandate that, residents can only  take "individual belongings" with them -- basically as much as they can carry.  Vehicles and other property that they have worked hard for over the 30 years in  Ashraf will have to be abandoned.The  Iraqi government has designated Camp Liberty to be a "temporary transfer  location." That's because it does not meet the standards required of a refugee  camp.Once inside Camp Liberty, the  13-foot-high walls will close in on them and they will no doubt be forgotten.  They will have no way of contacting U.N. observers other than by telephone,  which the Iraqis will disconnect as they please. They are to be fingerprinted  upon arrival, as if they were prisoners of war. One report said Iraqi guards,  perhaps even the same guards who killed their friends and relatives, will be  based inside the camp. United Nations Secretary-General Ban  Ki-moon's Special Envoy to Iraq is Martin Kobler. He penned a column on Camp Ashraf  for the International Herald  Tribune  which includes:As a first step, it calls for the camp  residents to voluntarily relocate to a transit site at the Baghdad airport. In  contrast to Camp Ashraf, this site would be monitored around the clock by  observers from the United Nations. There, the residents would be interviewed by  the U.N. refugee agency, the UNHCR, to determine their eligibility for refugee  status, paving the way for their resettlement outside of Iraq. Most have filed  refugee claims. A small number have returned to Iran in recent years, but many  others will want to go elsewhere.
 Under the same agreement, the government of Iraq has  made two key commitments that it must uphold. First, it has accepted full  responsibility for the safety and security of the residents, from the relocation  process throughout their stay at the new facility. Secondly, it has promised  that nobody would be forced to go to Iran or elsewhere against their  wishes.
 The new site is a former U.S.  Marine base that can hold more than 5,000 people. It has been equipped at  considerable expense to receive the residents of Camp Ashraf. It has cooking and  medical facilities, space for recreational activities and provisions for women  and religious observance. UNHCR has carried out a careful technical assessment  and determined that the new camp meets the humanitarian standards it applies for  refugee situations around the world.
 
 
 Yes, the two are at odds over the conditions of Camp Liberty. First,  Reuters , Kobler's column was not "an article in Wednesday's New York  Times."  It was a column run by the International Herald Tribune .  The  New York Times  is now the sole owner of that paper and it elected to  repost the column to the New York Times  website today.  It did not run  it in the paper.  This should have been clear with the note the Times' website  attached to the column at the end : "A version of this  op-ed appeared in print on February 16, 2012, in The International Herald  Tribune."  Repeating, the column did not run "in Wednesday's New York Times."   That is an error you should correct.  It's also a minor point except to note  that the wires obviously don't read the daily New York Times  -- either  in print or digital form.  And that's not necessarily a bad thing, just  something worth noting.  Confusion.  For some reason, Ban Ki-moon weighed in today.  No  indicationthat this would be happening from Kobler's column.  More confusing are  his remarks.  The UN News Centre notes:   Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon today  called for the start of the relocation of residents of the settlement in Iraq  formerly known as Camp Ashraf, urging the Government and the camp dwellers to  continue to cooperate so that the process can be carried out in a peaceful  manner.  "The Secretary-General reiterates that the Government of Iraq bears  the primary responsibility for the security and the welfare of the residents of  Camp Ashraf," said a statement issued by his  spokesperson. "At the same time, the residents of Camp Ashraf also bear a  responsibility to abide by the laws of Iraq. Any provocation or violence must be  avoided and would be unacceptable."   I'm confused why he made that last statement?  Are Camp Ashraf residents  threating to riot or attack?  There's been no reports indicating that.  They  aren't supposed to have any weapons, the US disarmed them.  It's a very  interesting remark.  Did he say it? Let's go to the UN's post of UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-Moon's remarks :  The Secretary-General continues to closely follow the situation in  Camp Ashraf. Over the past few months, the United Nations Assistance Mission for  Iraq (UNAMI), under the leadership of his Special Representative, Martin Kobler,  and in close cooperation with UNHCR, the European Union, the United States and  other interested Member States, has been tirelessly working as an impartial  facilitator to promote a peaceful resolution of this issue, within the framework  of UNAMI's humanitarian mandate.At the request of the Secretary-General, the  Government of Iraq extended its deadline to close Camp Ashraf from 31 December  2011 to 30 April 2012. The Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) signed on 25  December 2011 between the United Nations and the Government of Iraq has laid the  foundation for a peaceful and durable solution, respecting both the sovereignty  of Iraq and meeting Iraq's international humanitarian and human rights  obligations.
 The Secretary-General acknowledges the efforts of the Government  of Iraq to prepare the temporary transit location to host the residents and  allow UNHCR to undertake refugee status determination. On 31 January 2012, UNHCR  confirmed that the infrastructure and facilities at the temporary transit  location are in accordance with the international humanitarian standards  stipulated in the MoU.
 The Secretary-General believes that the time has come  to start the relocation process without further delay. He urges the Iraqi  authorities and the residents of Camp Ashraf to continue to cooperate and  complete the process in a peaceful manner. The Secretary-General reiterates that  the Government of Iraq bears the primary responsibility for the security and the  welfare of the residents of Camp Ashraf. At the same time, the residents of Camp  Ashraf also bear a responsibility to abide by the laws of Iraq. Any provocation  or violence must be avoided and would be unacceptable.
 The Secretary-General  reiterates his call to Member States to contribute to a durable solution by  demonstrating their readiness to accept eligible residents of Camp Ashraf who  wish to resettle in third countries.
 The Secretary-General stresses that the  United Nations remains strongly committed to continue to do its utmost to  facilitate a peaceful and durable solution.
   Yes, the remarks the UN intended to be attributed to him carry it.  So  where is that in the Retuers report?  Or the AFP report?  Not  present in either. That's the part that confuses me regarding the two news  outlets.  In terms of Ban Ki-Moon, the remarks admonishing Camp Ashraf residents  not to resort to violence and the timing of the 'you must move now'  statements  are confusing.   Turning to the political scene, Al  Mada notes  that the Parliament discussed the 2012 federal  budget yesterday, they also did a reading (the first reading) of it. The article  mainly addresses MP Jaafar al-Moussawi. He is a part of the National Alliance  and a member of the Sadr bloc. He is also an opponent/rival of Nouri's for many  years now. He has repeatedly, over the years, called for the Constitution to be  followed and castigated Nouri when Nouri refused to do so. November 28th, a bomb  went off outside Parliament. Dropping back to that day's  snapshot :In the one that  will probably have the most impact the Baghdad-based government, Parliament was  attacked. Confusion remains as to what it was attacked with. Mohammed Tawfeeq (CNN) puts it  this way, "Also Monday, a mortar  round landed inside the heavily fortified Green Zone, killing at least two  people, police said. The round landed on the outdoor car park that belongs to  the Iraqi Parliament compound and hit a car. " Citing the news channel  Al-Arabiya, Adnkronos Security  maintains it was a rocket. KUNA states mortars and that it "hit a parking lot near the  parliament" leaving at least four injured. Aswat al-Iraq  notes Parliament's Mohammed  al-Khalidi states it was a car and a suicide bombing, "the car exploded outside  the parliament building, where the driver was trying enter, but blocked by a  military hummer, which obliged him to commit suicide." AFP  emphasizes the confusion over  details, "The explosion in the parking lot of the Iraqi parliament was caused by  a mortar round, said Baghdad security spokesman Qassem al-Moussawi and several  other sources. However, at least two sources at parliament said it was a car  bomb." Parliament's spokesperson Aidan Helmi declares  the attack was an attempted assassination of Speaker of Parliament Osama  al-Nujaifi and states the car involved was similar to the cars used in Nujaifi's  security detail and that when asked to display a security badge, the car slammed  into anothe car, the driver got out and detonated a bomb on his  person. Jack Healy, Yasir Ghazi, Andrew  E. Kramer and Zaid Thaker (New York Times) observe, "An attempted bombing steps outside Parliament would  represent a serious security breach inside one of the capital's most heavily  guarded sectors, raising questions about the competence -- or complicity -- of  security forces. Parliament sits inside the Green Zone, the locked-down expanse  along the Tigris River that houses many Iraqi governmetn buildings and the  American Embassy."Immediately came the lies. In order to try to elevate Nouri to martyr  status, he and his lackeys began declaring that it was an attack on him. He was  no where near the Parliament nor scheduled to be. But his vanity is so great  that everything must be about him.
 
 The attacks were blamed -- by the press -- on the usual catch-all:  al-Qaeda in Mesopotamia.
 
 
 More recently, Nouri's asked that the Supreme Court lift Jaafar  al-Moussawi's immunity and accused him of being responsible for the bombing.  al-Moussawi held his press conference yesterday at the Parliament building and  denied any involvement in the bombing or guilt of the charges. He decried  unnamed politicians who were attempting to use the media to smear his name. He  stated that a DNA test on the body of a corpse thought to be the suicide bomber  demonstrates that the man, two hours prior to the bombing, killed someone  working for al-Moussawi (a bodyguard). al-Moussawi states he has other  information and will be sharing it. Dar Addustour has him declaring   that it was not him or people supporting him that did the bombing but people  wanting to harm him for Saddam Hussein's execution. Alsumaria TV reports   this morning that Spain's Ambassador to Iraq, Jose Turbine, is stating that the  national conference is going to resolve the al-Hashemi issue. Today  Aswat al-Iraq reports , "The preparatory  committee for the National Conference held its third meeting today with the  attendance of all parties, according to a Parliament statement issued today."   Since December, President Jalal Talabani and Speaker of Parliament Osama  al-Nujaifi have been calling for a national conference to address the political  crisis. All this time later, all that's taken place is meetings to prepare for  it. Al Mada reports  that al-Nujaifi  attempted to meet with State of Law for a discussion but they rebuffed him.  al-Nujaifi is a member of the Iraqiya political slate headed by Ayad Allawi.  They came in first in the March 2010 elections. Nouri al-Maliki's State of Law  slate came in second. Iraqiya's Haider Mullah is calling for the issues of  Deputy Prime Minister Saleh al-Mutlaq and Vice President Tareq al-Hashemi to be  addressed prior to the national conference. Nouri is demanding that al-Mutlaq (a  Sunni and member of Iraqiya) be stripped of his title (and immunity -- so Nouri  can sue him for "libel" for his comparison of Nouri to Saddam Hussein) and he  issued an arrest warrant for al-Hashemi (a Sunni and member of Iraqiya) on  charges of 'terrorism.' This is what finally prompted press attention in the  political crisis that's gone on since December 2010.            |