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*IRAQ: latest news and developments

Fear stalks city where the police hide behind masks

By Robert Fisk in Baghdad


So, "full ahead both" for the dreaded 30 January elections and democracy. The American generals - with a unique mixture of mendacity and hope amid the insurgency - are now saying that only four of Iraq's 18 provinces may not be able to "fully" participate in the elections.

Good news. Until you sit down with the population statistics and realise - as the generals all know - that those four provinces contain more than half of the population of Iraq.

Another Robert Fisk piece here: http://www.informationclearinghouse.info/article7654.htm
 
Hmmm :eek:

U.S. mulls strikes on Syria

01/11/05 -- New York, NY (UPI) -- Bush administration hard-liners have been considering launching selected military strikes at insurgent training camps in Syria and border-crossing points used by Islamist guerrillas to enter Iraq in an effort to bolster security for the upcoming elections, according to former and current administration officials.

Pressure for some form of military action is also coming from interim Iraqi Prime Minister Iyad Allawi, these sources said.

Some former and serving U.S. intelligence officials who have usually been opposed to any expansion of U.S. military activities in the region are expressing support for such strikes.

A former senior U.S. intelligence official told United Press International, "I don't usually find myself in sympathy with the Bush neo-cons, but I think there is enough fire under this smoke to justify such action."

Referring to the escalating attacks on U.S. forces in Iraq by Iraqi insurgents, he added, "Syria is complicit in the (anti-U.S.) insurgency up to its eyeballs."

"Syria is the No. 1 crossing point" for guerrillas entering Iraq," Gary Gambill, editor of the Middle East Intelligence Bulletin, said. He added that Damascus "does nothing about it."

An administration official said Syria has "camps in which Syrians are training Iraqis for the insurgency and others where Iraqis are training Syrians for the same purpose" which could be hit by U.S. air strikes.
 
:rolleyes:

Allawi group slips cash to reporters
The electoral group headed by Iyad Allawi, the interim Iraqi prime minister, on Monday handed out cash to journalists to ensure coverage of its press conferences in a throwback to Ba'athist-era patronage ahead of parliamentary elections on January 30.

After a meeting held by Mr Allawi's campaign alliance in west Baghdad, reporters, most of whom were from the Arabic-language press, were invited upstairs where each was offered a "gift" of a $100 bill contained in an envelope. Many of the journalists accepted the cash - about equivalent to half the starting monthly salary for a reporter at an Iraqi newspaper - and one jokingly recalled how Saddam Hussein's regime had also lavished perks on favoured reporters.

Giving gifts to journalists is common in many of the Middle East's authoritarian regimes, although reporters at the conference said the practice was not yet widespread in postwar Iraq. The press conference came as Mr Allawi and his allies kicked the electoral campaign of their Iraqi List into high gear. Mr Allawi was not at the conference, but Hussein al-Sadr, a Shia cleric running on the prime minister's list, used it to challenge Islamist opponents in the United Iraqi Alliance, saying they were falsely claiming the backing of the country's Shia clerical establishment.

In recent weeks, there have been signs that Mr Allawi's campaign is staging an unexpectedly strong challenge. According to the preliminary results of one survey in Shia majority areas, Mr Allawi's list was favoured by 22 per cent of respondents compared with 27 per cent who chose the Alliance.

Mr Allawi's list, whose campaign emphasises the rebuilding of the Iraqi military, is playing on its leader's reputation as a strongman and Iraqi yearnings for stability
 
Gunmen kill Sistani aides in Iraq
Gunmen have killed two aides to Ayatollah Ali al-Sistani, Iraq's highest Shi'ite authority and a key supporter of the January 30 elections, a senior official working with him says.

1,000 Dead Since Interim Government Took Power June 28
Car bombs echo across Baghdad and a constellation of cities around Iraq nearly every day, inflicting slaughter and billowing oily smoke, a reminder to all who see or hear them that the country's insurgents can strike almost anywhere.

Iraq rebels in video taunt
Departing from fiery Islamic slogans, Iraqi guerrillas have launched a propaganda campaign with an English-language video urging U.S. troops to lay down their weapons and seek refuge in mosques and homes.

Plan to kill Allawi foiled
The Iraqi Army has foiled a plot to assassinate Iraqi Prime Minister Iyad Allawi. The Islamic Army group planned to assassinate the prime minister with a booby-trapped car in the western Al-Anbar governorate.
 
Jesus, there's some killing going on in Iraq. Oddly the BBC and major news stations seem more bothered about Price Williams choice of fancy dress outfit.

- Fighters opposed to the presence of foreign troops in Iraq set off a bomb Friday in a voting centre in Sharqat badly damaging it, police Lieutenant Colonel Farris Mahdi said. No one was in the centre at the time of the blast, the second there in two months.

- In other violence, a civilian, a policeman and two Iraqi soldiers were killed in separate incidents north of Baghdad.

- Meanwhile, in the northern city of Mosul, a car bomb exploded Friday as a US convoy drove through the central district of Al-Muthanna, a witness said.

- Elsewhere, a car bomb in north Baghdad has killed four people, while a further six Iraqis have died after a US tank smashed into the car they were travelling in. The car bomb was detonated in Khan Bani Saad's Shia mosque immediately after Friday prayers, Aljazeera has learned. Up to 13 people were injured in the blast.

- In the crash involving a US tank, eight people were also injured, three of them seriously. The wounded were transferred to hospital in Mugdadiya, in northeast Baghdad.

- Separately, US troops burned down commercial shops in al-Radwaniya district, west of Baghdad, saying they came under attack from that area, Aljazeera has learned. Eyewitnesses said the US troops encircled the area and closed all roads to it before setting the shops ablaze.

- Elsewhere, Aljazeera has learned that a US military vehicle was damaged by an explosive device planted on the highway in al-Dawra district, south of Baghdad. Witnesses said US troops flooded the area to evacuate the injured.

- Fifteen Iraqi soldiers were kidnapped by armed men off their bus after they finished work on Friday at the Al-Asad US military base in the western province of Al-Anbar.

- Late on Thursday, fighters shot dead another member of Iraq's electoral commission, west of Baghdad, an interior ministry official reported.

- In a separate development, armed fighters killed three officials of a leading Kurdish political party in an ambush in the northern city of Mosul, another official of the party said on Friday.

http://english.aljazeera.net/NR/exeres/DDA27B01-76E6-42B3-81D1-B2F26230F461.htm
 
Abu Ghraib abuse firms are rewarded
Two US defence contractors being sued over allegations of abuse at Abu Ghraib prison have been awarded valuable new contracts by the Pentagon, despite demands that they should be barred from any new government work.
Three employees of CACI International and Titan - working at Abu Ghraib as civilian contractors - were separately accused of abusive behaviour.

The report on the Abu Ghraib scandal implicated three civilian contractors in the abuses: Steven Stefanowicz from CACI International and John Israel and Adel Nakhla from Titan.

Stefanowicz was charged with giving orders that 'equated to physical abuse', Israel of lying under oath and Naklha of raping an Iraqi boy.

It was also alleged that CACI interrogators used dogs to scare prisoners, placed detainees in unauthorised 'stress positions' and encouraged soldiers to abuse prisoners. Titan employees, it has been alleged, hit detainees and stood by while soldiers physically abused prisoners.

Investigators also discovered systemic problems of management and training - including the fact that a third of CACI International's staff at Abu Ghraib had never received formal military interrogation training.

Despite demands by human rights groups in the US that the two companies be barred from further contracts in Iraq - where CACI alone employed almost half of all interrogators and analysts at Abu Ghraib - CACI International has been awarded a $16 million renewal of its contract. Titan, meanwhile, has been awarded a new contract worth $164m.
 
UK abuse photos released.

_40735183_11.jpg


http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/in_pictures/4185719.stm
 
Sadr livens Iraq campaign as security threat looms over elections
BAGHDAD (AFP) - Supporters of radical Shiite leader Moqtada Sadr demonstrated for the second-day running to demand better living conditions, a rare display of popular interest in an electoral campaign which has so far been stifled by relentless violence. Hundreds of Sadr followers from various cities in Iraq gathered in front of the oil ministry in Baghdad, some of them oil workers waving lanterns and wearing orange jumpsuits, to protest against oil and electricity shortages.

"The demonstration we are holding here today is aimed at showing what the mood of the Iraqi people is," said Sheikh Malek al-Kinani, who heads the Sadr office in the Baghdad neighbourhood of Kakh.

"It is very disturbing to see politicians only interested in elections. Instead they should be focusing on meeting the basic needs of the people," he told AFP.

Thousands joined similar protests in the Shiite heartland south of Baghdad on Saturday. By invoking the dire economic situation and singling out the ever-worsening fuel shortages, Sadr's movement is tapping into an issue that strikes a chord with most of the population, especially with his power base among the poorer strata of the majority Shiite community.

Nearly two years after the US invasion, many Iraqis complain that they have seen no improvement to their daily lives after 12 years of the sanctions imposed by the United Nations on Saddam Hussein's regime. Sadr is not running in the landmark January 30 general elections, but members of his entourage have thrown their weight behind the front-running list of Shiite leader Abdel Aziz Hakim.
 
....

Gunmen assassinate two candidates in southern Iraq
Assailants in southern Iraq gunned down two candidates running in the Jan. 30 elections for the political coalition of interim Prime Minister Ayad Allawi, a member of the group said Tuesday.

Media Training Now Required for Iraq-Bound Soldiers
As the U.S. military approaches nearly two years in the Iraq conflict, media training for soldiers going into the war zone has been stepped up, becoming mandatory for Army troops since October

U.S. Building Forts On Iraq Border
The U.S. military is also supervising a complex of 32 forts being built along the borders with Saudi Arabia, Jordan and Syria. Iraqis move into them quickly because in the past they have been looted and destroyed before they could be manned.
 
U.S. Military Resorting to Collective Punishment
BAGHDAD, Jan 18 (IPS) - The U.S. military is resorting to collective punishment tactics in Iraq similar to those used by Israeli troops in the occupied territories of Palestine, residents say.

Military bulldozers have mown down palm groves in the rural al-Dora farming area on the outskirts of Baghdad, residents say. Electricity has been cut, the local fuel station destroyed and the access road blocked.

The U.S. action comes after resistance fighters attacked soldiers from this area several weeks back.

"The Americans were attacked from this field, then they returned and started cutting down all the trees," says Kareem, a local mechanic, pointing to a pile of burnt date palms in a bulldozed field. "None of us knows any fighters, we all know they are coming here from other areas to attack the Americans, but we are the people who suffer from this."

The military action follows a similar round of attacks and retaliation earlier this month.

U.S. Army Brigadier-General Mark Kimmit told reporters then that the military had launched 'Operation Iron Grip' in the area to send "a very clear message to anybody who thinks that they can run around Baghdad without worrying about the consequences of firing RPGs (rocket propelled grenades), firing mortars."

Gen. Kimmit said "there is a capability in the air that can quickly respond against anybody who would want to harm Iraqi citizens or coalition forces." Then as now, local people denied any knowledge of harbouring resistance fighters.

And now, as then, they say they have to pay the price.

"They destroyed our fences, and now there are wolves attacking our animals," said Mohammed, a schoolboy. "They destroyed much of our farming equipment, and the worst is they cut our electricity. They come by here every night and fire their weapons to frighten us."

People need electricity to run pumps to irrigate the farms, he said. "Now we are carrying water in buckets from the river, and this is very difficult for us," Mohammed said. "They say they are going to make things better for us, but they are worse."

Going into fields littered with unexploded mortar shells after the U.S. retaliation has become hazardous now. "We asked them the first time and they said okay, we'll come take care of it," said a farmer who called himself Sharkr. "But they never came."

Other residents say soldiers beat them up during random home raids. "I was beaten by the Americans," said Ihsan, a 17 year-old secondary school student. "They asked me who attacked them, but I do not know. My home was raided, our furniture destroyed, and one of my uncles was arrested."
 
.....

IRAQI CIVILIAN KILLED TRYING TO DRIVE THROUGH A CHECKPOINT
An Iraqi civilian was killed and two others were wounded when they tried speeding their truck through a Multi-National Force checkpoint on Jan. 17 in northern Iraq.

Approximately 300 academics have been killed
Al-Rawi, a geologist at Baghdad University and head of the Association of University Lecturers, says about 300 academics and university administrators have been assassinated in a mysterious wave of murders since the American occupation of Iraq

BP to head Iraq oil-field study
British oil giant BP said Monday it had signed an agreement with the Iraqi government to study an oil field in the south of the country. It comes after Anglo-Dutch energy group Shell on Friday said it had signed a similar deal.

Iraq to shut borders during election
Iraq says it will shut its land borders and bar traffic from getting close to voting centres over the January 30 polls to try to thwart attacks, as insurgents targeted a Shi'ite party with a suicide bomb.

Car bomb goes off near U-S convoy in northern Iraq
Police say a car bomb has exploded near an American convoy in northern Iraq. The blast in Mosul damaged an S-U-V and witnesses say there are some casualties. U-S troops also have traded fire with gunmen today in the eastern part of Mosul.

Insurgent Video Says Eight Chinese Held in Iraq
Insurgents released a video on Tuesday of eight Chinese hostages in Iraq and threatened to kill them in 48 hours unless the Beijing government clarified their role in the country.

Soldiers Discover Partial Remains of Iraqi Police Officer in Khalis
First Infantry Division Soldiers from 2nd Battalion, 63rd Armor Regiment, discovered the remains of an Iraqi police officer at the bus station in Khalis about 10:00 a.m on Jan. 18. Identification was found with the remains.

One Insurgent Killed and One Wounded Near Tikrit
One insurgent was killed and another wounded after they fired on a vehicle and tower at a Multi-National Force base gate in Tikrit at 7:00 p.m., January 17.The wounded insurgent fled avoiding capture.

Security firm hired to protect U.S. polling sites for Iraqi elections
A private security company staffed by former elite U.S. special forces soldiers will provide security at polling places in the United States for people voting in Iraq's Jan. 30 parliamentary election.
 
Robert Fisk on 'journalism' in Iraq. As he most cleverly points out, when Saddam was in charge, the BBC and other stations reported that they were reporting under 'restrictions'. Yet now there is barely a mention of the fact that most of them dont leave the hotels..... :rolleyes:

Hotel Journalism
Rarely, if ever, has a war been covered by reporters in so distant and restricted a way. New York Times correspondents live in Baghdad behind a massive stockade with four watchtowers, protected by locally hired, rifle-toting security men, complete with “NYT” T-shirts. Journalists with America’s NBC television chain are holed up in a hotel with an iron grill over their door, forbidden by their security advisers to visit the swimming pool or the restaurant, “let alone the rest of Baghdad”, lest they are attacked. Several Western journalists simply do not leave their rooms while on station in Baghdad.....

....The Independent, along with several other British and American papers, still covers stories in Baghdad in person, moving with hesitation — not to mention trepidation — through the streets of a city which is slowly being taken over by the Iraqi resistance. Only six months ago, it was still possible to leave Baghdad in the morning, drive to Mosul or Najaf or other major cities to cover a story, and return by evening. By August, it was taking me two weeks to negotiate my dubious safety for a mere 80-mile journey outside Baghdad. I found the military checkpoints on the motorways deserted, the roads lined with smashed American trucks and burned-out police vehicles. Today, it is almost impossible. Drivers and translators working for newspapers and television companies are threatened with death. Several have asked to be relieved of their duties on Jan. 30 lest they be recognized on the streets during Iraq’s elections.
 
Suicide car bombers hit Baghdad
US soldiers sealed off the area near the Australian embassy
At least 26 people have been killed in a series of car bombings in Baghdad, US military officials in Iraq say. Four of the blasts happened within 90 minutes of each other, targeting local and foreign security forces. Iraqi officials say only 13 people died. A group linked to suspected al-Qaeda leader Abu Musab al-Zarqawi said it carried out several of the attacks.

The blasts came a day after Iraq announced new measures to boost security for elections on 30 January. The BBC's David Willis in Baghdad says it seems to be one of the most violent days in the capital for several weeks. Grim predictions of an escalation in violence in the run-up to the elections appear to be coming true, our correspondent adds.

In other developments:

Two Iraqis said to be working for a US firm involved in preparations for the Iraqi elections are shown being killed by militants in a video on the internet

Two employees of a British security company killed in attack near Beiji, US military says

A roadside bomb hits a military convoy south of Baghdad, injuring one soldier

An influential group of Muslim scholars calls for the release of all hostages on the eve of the Muslim festival of Eid.
 
New Yorker journalist corroborates murder allegations against Iraq’s prime minister

https://www.wsws.org/articles/2005/jan2005/alli-j20.shtml

Jon Lee Anderson, a correspondent for the New Yorker magazine, provided further substantiation this week for allegations made last July that Iraqi interim prime minister Iyad Allawi carried out the extra-judicial execution of at least six prisoners being held in Baghdad’s Al-Amariyah security centre.
...
Anderson belatedly confirms that he sat in while Australian journalist Paul McGeough, an award-winning foreign correspondent, interviewed an Iraqi man who witnessed the murders. In McGeough’s original story, he had referred to “another journalist” being present when he interviewed one of the two witnesses he tracked down.
...
Allawi and Naqib laughed off the charges of murder on the few occasions they were questioned by journalists. Significantly, however, Richard Boucher of the US State Department, while indicating that no American investigation was taking place, refused to categorically deny the allegations when questioned at a press conference on August 3. Boucher would only state that the US government did not “have any information that would indicate those reports are true”.

Anderson writes in the New Yorker: “[T]he story has lingered, never having been either fully confirmed or convincingly denied.” During his recent trip to Jordan though, Anderson states that a “well-known former [Iraqi] government minister” told him “that an American official had confirmed that the killings took place”. The American official told the ex-minister: “What a mess we’re in—we get rid of one son of a bitch [Saddam Hussein] only to get another.”

Allawi is commonly referred to in Iraq as “Saddam without the moustache”.
... He was an informer and possibly worse for the Baathist regime until 1975. ... Allawi’s cousin told Anderson: “He understands the Mukhabarat culture of intimidation.”

There is only one reason why it has taken until now for further revelations about Allawi’s actions last June to appear in public. The international press (especially in the United States), deliberately censored or downplayed McGeough’s story after it was published in the Sydney Morning Herald and has made no attempt to follow it up.

In particular, the New York Times and Washington Post [not to mention the BBC and the Guardian bf] were distinguished by their silence. Both papers posture as the voices of liberal reason and objectivity [as too do the BBC and the Guardian bf]. Yet, despite the lies over weapons of mass destruction and the revelations from Abu Ghraib prison, where American soldiers carried out the torture of Iraqi prisoners, both papers refused to probe the accusations that the White House had installed a thug as Iraq’s leader and had abetted him get away with extra-judicial killings.
...
 
interesting how the BBC internet version of the above photo (5 posts up) is darker and less clear than the one above. I wonder if the Beeb altered it so it wasnt quite as obvious as to what it was? Or am I just being paranoid?
 
bigfish said:
This is an orphan link, so it obviously didn't get editorial approval. No mention of this incident anywhere else on their website - so this URL http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/shared/spl/hi/picture_gallery/05/middle_east_shooting_in_tal_afar/html/1.stm

Even stranger, it was featured on the front page when it first appeared.

Maybe it was the night shift put it up?

Now "Tal Afar" (name of place where it happened, in the headline) doesn't appear in the BBC News site search... though it does show up if you search the Web using the BBC's search engine, and Google.

Anyone know someone who works for BBC News who'd go public about being pissed off at the story being hidden?
 
Jiust some links I ran across this week.

Dick Clarke on Iraq blowback is worth reading. The man is livid about the whole GWOT, quite rightly too.

Henry K in the Post says declaring mission accomplished and dashing to the helicopters is not an option the consequences of failure in Iraq are dire. If in doubt bomb the shit of a neighboring country was his technique I recall.

He has a long to do list for Dubya is desparately seeking at least the appearence of a coherent unified regional strategy rather than the flip-flop ridden muddling that Rummie oversees. He may be responding to the Brit's demanding a timetable for withdrawal to help Mr Tony get another landslide, and the barb that Europe is not pulling it's weight may be aimed at No 10 more than Paris.

This came up on Belmont The Islamic Paradox(PDF) It's pure breed Neo-Con but worth reading. It's the deepest analysis of the politics of the Iraqi Shia I've read and makes a fairly good case for a democratic Arabia being not only possible but even likely.

But its also realistic about it being a very Islamic kind of democracy being some where between Iran and Turkey and rabidly anti-America/Israel.
 
Some Just Voted for Food
BAGHDAD, Jan 31 (IPS) - Voting in Baghdad was linked with receipt of food rations, several voters said after the Sunday poll. Many Iraqis said Monday that their names were marked on a list provided by the government agency that provides monthly food rations before they were allowed to vote.

”I went to the voting centre and gave my name and district where I lived to a man,” said Wassif Hamsa, a 32-year-old journalist who lives in the predominantly Shia area Janila in Baghdad. ”This man then sent me to the person who distributed my monthly food ration.”

Mohammed Ra'ad, an engineering student who lives in the Baya'a district of the capital city reported a similar experience. Ra'ad, 23, said he saw the man who distributed monthly food rations in his district at his polling station. ”The food dealer, who I know personally of course, took my name and those of my family who were voting,” he said. ”Only then did I get my ballot and was allowed to vote.”

”Two of the food dealers I know told me personally that our food rations would be withheld if we did not vote,” said Saeed Jodhet, a 21-year-old engineering student who voted in the Hay al-Jihad district of Baghdad. There has been no official indication that Iraqis who did not vote would not receive their monthly food rations.

RIOT AT CAMP BUCCA LEAVES 4 DEAD, 6 INJURED

BAGHDAD, Iraq -- A riot at the Camp Bucca Theater Internment Facility shortly after noon, Jan.31, left four detainees dead and six injured.

The violence erupted after a routine search for contraband in one of the camp’s 10 compounds. The facility’s commander immediately deployed all available guards to the camp in an attempt to control the situation.

The riot quickly spread to three additional compounds, with detainees throwing rocks and fashioning weapons from materials inside their living areas. The four compounds involved in the riot house more than 2,900 of Camp Bucca’s 5,300 detainees.

Guards attempted to calm the increasingly volatile situation using verbal warnings and, when that failed, by use of non-lethal force. After about 45 minutes of escalating danger, lethal force was used to quell the violence. The situation quickly began to subside after the use of lethal force. Medical personnel on site provided immediate aide to the injured.

The injuries resulted from both the use of force to control the situation and from violence by other detainees within the camp during the riot. Three injured detainees were evacuated from the facility for treatment at a military hospital, while the remaining three were treated at the facility’s medical clinic.
 
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