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Iraq Coming Apart: Intensifying Crackdown on Free Speech, Protests
With US Troops Hardly Gone, Iraq's Government is Coming Apart
The human rights situation in Iraq is worse now than it was a year ago, Human Rights Watch argues in a new report out Sunday.
In this Friday, March 4, 2011 photo, an Iraqi officer, left, hits and detains a journalist Mohammed al-Rased, center, during a demonstration in Basra, Iraq's second-largest city, 550 kilometers (340 miles) southeast of Baghdad, Iraq. Iraq's Shiite-led government cracked down harshly on dissent during the past year of Arab Spring uprisings, turning the country into a "budding police state" as autocratic regimes crumbled elsewhere in the region, an international rights groups said Sunday. (AP Photo/Nabil al-Jurani) Human Rights Watch says it uncovered a secret Iraqi prison where detainees were beaten, hung upside down and given electric shocks to sensitive parts of their bodies. The group based its claims on the testimony of detainees themselves. The group says the forces who control the facility report to the military office of Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki.
From the report:
BAGHDAD – Iraq cracked down harshly during 2011 on freedom of expression and assembly by intimidating, beating, and detaining activists, demonstrators, and journalists, Human Rights Watch said today in its World Report 2012.
In February, Human Rights Watch uncovered a secret detention facility controlled by elite security forces who report to the military office of Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki. The same elite divisions controlled Camp Honor, a separate facility in Baghdad where detainees were tortured with impunity.
“Iraq is quickly slipping back into authoritarianism as its security forces abuse protesters, harass journalists, and torture detainees,” said Sarah Leah Whitson, Middle East director at Human Rights Watch. “Despite U.S. government assurances that it helped create a stable democracy, the reality is that it left behind a budding police state.” [...]
In the weeks before the last convoy of US troops left Iraq on December 18, Iraqi security forces rounded up hundreds of Iraqis accused of being former Baath Party members, most of whom remain in detention without charge. Apolitical crisis and a series of terrorist attacks targeting civilians have rocked the country in the weeks since the US troop pullout.
During nationwide demonstrations to protest widespread corruption and demand greater civil and political rights in February, security forces violently dispersed protesters, killing at least 12 on February 25, and injuring more than 100. Baghdad security forces beat unarmed journalists and protesters that day, smashing cameras and confiscating memory cards.
In June, in one of the worst incidents, government-backed thugs armed with wooden planks, knives, and iron pipes, beat and stabbed peaceful protesters and sexually molested female demonstrators as security forces stood by and watched, sometimes laughing at the victims.
In May, the Council of Ministers approved a Law on the Freedom of Expression of Opinion, Assembly, and Peaceful Demonstration, which authorizes officials to restrict freedom of assembly to protect “the public interest” and in the interest of “general order or public morals.” The law still awaits parliamentary approval.
* * *
With US Troops Hardly Gone, Iraq's Government is Coming Apart
McClatchy newspapers are reporting:
BAGHDAD — Faster than anyone expected, barely a month after the last U.S. troops left, Iraq's government appears to be coming apart, prompting fears that the country is headed for another round of sectarian strife.
U.S. President Barack Obama meets Iraqi Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki in the White House.Prime Minister Nouri al Maliki, a Shiite Muslim, is driving to consolidate control and sideline more secular politicians in a battle that increasingly appears to be a fight to the finish in which there can be no compromise.
Barham Salih, the widely admired prime minister of the autonomous Kurdish region in the north, said the infighting is "tearing the country apart." Preemption is the name of the game.
"The motto is: 'I'll have him for lunch before they have me for dinner'," he said during an interview in his office in Irbil. [...]
President Barack Obama may even have made things worse last month when he hosted Maliki in Washington and hailed him as the leader of "Iraq's most inclusive government yet."
"Iraqis are working to build institutions that are efficient and independent and transparent," Obama said.
The speech enraged Saleh Mutlak, a Sunni who is a deputy prime minister.
"What I heard from Obama was deceiving both for Americans and Iraqis," Mutlak told McClatchy. "Obama is telling Americans that they were victorious in Iraq, they liberated the country and Iraqis are now very well situated, and the hero of Iraq, the prime minister, has made an inclusive government in Iraq. But it is the opposite."



45 Comments so far
Show All"My people are happier when they are hungry. They don't complain so much." Iranian contractor and friend of the former Shah of Iran.
The fruits of war are a decimated, weakened and frightened population...
Insuring a weak and terrified population is part of the systematic violence we call war. So is torture. One and the same... including its architects.
This is nothing more than a planned (and still supported/assisted) outcome.
"WAR is a racket. It always has been.
It is possibly the oldest, easily the most profitable, surely the most vicious. It is the only one international in scope. It is the only one in which the profits are reckoned in dollars and the losses in lives.
A racket is best described, I believe, as something that is not what it seems to the majority of the people. Only a small "inside" group knows what it is about. It is conducted for the benefit of the very few, at the expense of the very many. Out of war a few people make huge fortunes."
Smedley Darlington Butler, Major General - United States Marine Corps
more at: http://www.allinharmony.org/from_empire_to_ecology/war_is_a_racket
http://www.globalresearch.ca/index.php?context=va&aid=1159
We need to occupy the records that are hidden from The JFK Coup to the War. That includes all the hidden records from 9/11 too.
Well put. It's even more difficult to impose a pre-conceived government in a place like Iraq, which itself is an artificial construct of several different religious and cultural subgroups thrown together within the same borders.
I distinctly recall the Bush Administration sending to Iraq, circa 2002-3, a bunch of naive, inexperienced, and idealistic conservative twenty-somethings fresh out of graduate school to "build democracy" in Iraq in their image. Anyone paying attention at the time could forecast that would be a complete disaster. And of course it was. And of course no one in the United States really cares.
We are such a naive and ignorant people. We need more humility and less arrogance.
We need more Peace Corps, less Marine Corps.
My guess is Cheney made sure he never talked to that guy.
Am I correct to presume that you would regard the thoughts expressed by Hillary Clinton in a March, 2008 campaign trail speech as the pathological, delusional hubris of Amerikan exceptionalism? I know I do!:
_________________________________________
Iraq is the most under-reported catastrophe in the world, today, given the vastness of the devastation and destruction that it has witnessed since even the Gulf War (I write this, really, with tears in my eyes). And, I can NOT recommend Dahr enough. I have Iraqi heritage and have been an avid reader of the news about Iraq since well before the 2003 invasion (even following Voices in the Wilderness' updates). Also, some of my relatives and friends lived in Iraq during the sanctions and/or the invasion, and I've heard totally horrifying first hand accounts of what has happened there; in fact, some of my distant relatives died during "Shock and Awe". Oddly, I didn't know too much about Dahr's journalistic work until 2009, when I happened to see him give a talk. I'm sure I read his stuff, but his name didn't pop out until I heard his talk. Since then, I've paid more attention to his work. What he's written about Iraq is totally in line with what the Iraqis I know would say (except, of course, the Iraqis I know also like to contrast the older, pre-Gulf "War" days with the "new" days more, but Dahr couldn't know too much about the old days since he didn't witness them himself). Please do consider shooting him an email. I think YOU have borne witness to events that need to be made more public, and he's great at that. YOUR story is important. The more witnesses there are speaking out about this, the harder it is for people to deny what REALLY happened.
That the report you mention was stifled is incredibly upsetting, but not unexpected. There was so much knowledge about Iraq, from the American side, even from their experience in the Gulf "War". I don't have time to look up all the articles on this right now, but most of the devastation in Iraq could have been prevented - yes, the invasion was totally illegal to begin with - but even the aftermath... that they were bringing "democracy" is the most cruel joke that has ever been made. That Iraqis at the Baghdad Museum KNEW to hide artifacts from the invaders.... That David Kelly's mysterious and very sudden death perhaps indicates an assassination.... That people I personally know well, who were born in Iraq, were actually interviewed by the FBI prior to the invasion, and that this resulted in a silencing effect - an intimidation tactic by the U.S. government - on some Iraqi-American community members who were against the invasion (all of whom were not Ba'athists, either).
Just to share, here's a favorite report on Iraq pre-invasion: http://www.progressive.org/mag/nagy0901.html . It highlights just how intentionally cruel our policy toward Iraq has been, even since before the 2003 invasion. And, now Iraq still suffers so. Iraq has been destroyed - not just its infrastructure, not just the many, many innocent lives lost or detrimentally altered (so many Iraqis I know are traumatized), not just the displacement, not just the educational system and the hospitals, not just the government, but EVERY SINGLE aspect of its once thriving and vibrant culture has been destroyed. Iraqis are the *warmest* people I know - they never deserved this. And, yet, they still suffer, mostly in silence, so many of them.
Sorry I'm rambling! It's late, it's been a long day (been at work since 8 AM), and although I promised not to distract myself with the news for a few months, YOUR comment just is so important that I had to respond. Thank YOU, again, for speaking out.
please tell me none of us actually believe there is a population somewhere living free of global violence and toxicity, and voting themselves clean, honest everythings, all manner of healthful product and service, and fairly distributed riches for everyone, besides?
of course Iraq is not going well...what is? why, do you think?
we could stop participating in America, Inc., by quitting on September 22, 2012...everyone around the world could quit their country that day...quit their job, quit going to school, quit paying rent or mortgage...
America, Inc. never went to Iraq to improve it...they went to squeeze it dry...
F*** You liberals and conservatives!