Archive for the 'General' Category

When Uncle Sam comes marching in

Monday, February 27th, 2006

SULU, Philippines – About 5,500 US soldiers are coming to the Philippines this month, the latest and reportedly the largest batch in the continuing and uninterrupted deployment of US troops to the country since the “global war on terror” was launched after September 11, 2001.
atimes.com

Protesters storm congress over coup charges
A hundred leftwing protesters barged into the Philippine congress today to protest at the charging of five members of the house of representatives for plotting to overthrow the presidency of Gloria Arroyo.

The five were among 16 implicated in a plot. Ms Arroyo declared a state of emergency on Friday after the military said it had foiled the alleged conspiracy.

The protesters, who were pushed back by police, claimed the arrests could be the start of a crackdown on political opposition.

Criminal Complaints Filed Against Humala

Sunday, February 26th, 2006

LIMA, Peru – Teresa Avila says she found her brother-in-law floating in the Huallaga River, a bullet in his forehead and knife wounds in his chest, a week after soldiers dragged him and his wife from their jungle home. Her sister’s body never turned up.

She had already gone to the Madre Mia counterinsurgency base looking for them, Avila says, but the commander, known as “Captain Carlos,” denied they were there.

“He told me, ‘Your family is a scourge and if they were in my hands, I would kill them all,'” she recalls.

Nearly 14 years later, Avila has identified “Captain Carlos” as Ollanta Humala, now a retired army lieutenant colonel with a fighting chance of becoming Peru’s next president.

Avila is one of five people who filed criminal complaints this month accusing Humala and his soldiers of disappearances, torture and attempted murder during his 1992 command of the jungle base.
news.yahoo.com

Jamaica to Get First Female Leader

Sunday, February 26th, 2006

KINGSTON, Jamaica – A Cabinet minister was positioned to become Jamaica’s next prime minister and first female head of government Saturday after narrowly beating a former Rastafarian in internal elections to head the country’s ruling party.

In the Jamaican system, the majority party’s president automatically becomes prime minister. About 3,800 delegates of the People’s National Party voted.
news.yahoo.com

Increasingly confident Nigerian rebels show their strength

Sunday, February 26th, 2006

OKERENKOKO, Nigeria (AFP) – The rebels are masters of the waterways around their base, confidently churning up the Niger Delta’s rivers in heavily-armed attack boats decked out in the banners of their god of war.

But when it comes to remembering the current name of their organisation, the ethnic Ijaw militants can seem a little less sure of themselves.

“We are the Niger Delta Volunteers,” barked the commander of one fast fibreglass skiff, packed to the gunnals with masked gunmen wearing body armour and brandishing belt-fed machine guns and rocket-propelled grenades.

From the back of the boat came a second, urgent voice: “MEND! We’re MEND!”

“That’s right,” continued the commander. “We’re the Movement for the Emancipation of the Niger Delta — MEND!”

“We’ve been suffering for a long time in this Niger Delta. The Nigerian government has enslaved us. They came to take oil from our villages. The federal government comes here to kill us,” he told a boatload of reporters.

The brief confusion of the war boat leader is understandable. In recent years many groups have arisen among the angry young Ijaw men living and fighting on the creeks of the delta, home to Africa’s largest oil industry.
news.yahoo.com

Uganda hit by violence as opposition claims election fraud

Sunday, February 26th, 2006

Uganda is in turmoil after its opposition leader refused to accept the result of the country’s general election which returned autocratic President Yoweri Museveni to power, claiming that fraud and intimidation hindered the poll.

Kizza Besigye, leader of the opposition Forum for Democratic Change, rejected the official results of the poll giving him 37 per cent of votes cast to Museveni’s 59 per cent, as violence flared between his supporters and security forces in the capital, Kampala. European Union and independent Ugandan observers said the campaign and ballot had been blighted by government interference, spurious criminal charges laid against Besigye and problems with voter registration, and could not be described as a fair and free contest.

Besigye said he would not accept the official outcome of the poll – Uganda’s first multi-party elections in 25 years – because of ‘widespread irregularities’.

His agents’ tallies at polling stations showed he had won 49 per cent of the votes to Museveni’s 47 per cent, he said.

The campaign ‘was marked by gross unfairness occasioned by the state which we did not consider to be an environment conducive to the free and fair expression of the Ugandan electorate’, said Besigye.

‘It is disgraceful that the government has chosen to abuse power and terrorise its opponents.’
guardian.co.uk

Bolton Blasts U.N. ‘Sex and Corruption’

Sunday, February 26th, 2006

…U.N. Secretary-General Kofi Annan on Thursday is expected to unveil his major overhaul for management reform for the United Nations.

Bolton on Saturday also described the U.N. as inept for not being able to stop Iran’s nuclear development and “devaluing the IAEA,” the International Atomic Energy Agency.

“Through all of this, the U.S. has been encouraged by Europe to pursue action through the U.N.,” Bolton said, adding that patience of the administration was wearing thin.

Bolton was given a recess appointment by President Bush as ambassador to the United Nations on Aug. 1 after failing to win confirmation in the U.S. Senate. Because of the recess appointment, Bolton’s term expires when the current Congress concludes on Jan. 3, 2007.

Bolton – who has a reputation for brilliance, obstinacy and speaking his mind – said in 1994 that it wouldn’t make a “bit of difference” if the United Nations lost the top 10 stories from its 39-story headquarters.
guardian.co.uk

Yeah, a real philosopher king…

Setting sail away from America: The world finds it’s too hard to do business with the US

Sunday, February 26th, 2006

Lucrative opportunities taken away on a political whim; the danger of being locked up by an over-mighty government agency; the brick wall of protectionism – the business community expects to do battle with all these things in an emerging market.

Yet this suddenly seems to be a description of doing business in that most developed of all markets, the United States of America.

In the UK, in the cash-rich Gulf states and in fast-growing India, different incidents in the past week have made people ask the same question: is it worth doing business with the US?

Critics say the outcry over the £3.9bn acquisition of P&O by Dubai Ports World, which will transfer the running of five US ports to a state-controlled Middle Eastern company, has exposed the US Congress at its xenophobic worst. But it has also revealed more starkly than ever the protectionist tide that is waxing in America under the guise of national security.
independent.co.uk

O please…

Attack Shows al-Qaida Can Still Strike

Sunday, February 26th, 2006

MANAMA, Bahrain – Al-Qaida on Saturday vowed more attacks on Saudi oil facilities, a day after an attempt to bomb the world’s biggest oil processing complex showed the group still can strike inside the kingdom.

A strike on the Abqaiq complex, near Saudi Arabia’s eastern Persian Gulf coast, could have been devastating. Nearly two-thirds of the country’s oil flows through the facility for processing before export

….Analysts said it was too early to say if the Abqaiq bombing signaled a new, aggressive campaign. But the choice of oil facilities should increase concerns, they said.

“If the Saudi system goes down, then you will have a real problem, and for oil prices the sky is the limit,” Mohamedi said. “You’re attacking the absolute heart of the world oil system.”

Saudi Arabia holds over 260 billion barrels of proven oil reserves, a quarter of the world’s total. It currently puts out about 9.5 million barrels per day, or 11 percent of global consumption.
news.yahoo.com

It’s alarming when headlines scream “Al Qaida can still strike.” Maybe our fasten seat belt sign should be switched on. Events are converging, and it feels to me like somethin is about to blow, and the groundwork is being laid in stories like this…

Iraqis tortured by government death squads

Sunday, February 26th, 2006

Most of the corpses in Baghdad’s mortuary show signs of torture and execution. And the Interior Ministry is being blamed.

Hundreds of Iraqis are being tortured to death or summarily executed every month in Baghdad alone by death squads working from the Ministry of the Interior, the United Nations’ outgoing human rights chief in Iraq has revealed.

John Pace, who left Baghdad two weeks ago, told The Independent on Sunday that up to three-quarters of the corpses stacked in the city’s mortuary show evidence of gunshot wounds to the head or injuries caused by drill-bits or burning cigarettes. Much of the killing, he said, was carried out by Shia Muslim groups under the control of the Ministry of the Interior.

Much of the statistical information provided to Mr Pace and his team comes from the Baghdad Medico-Legal Institute, which is located next to the city’s mortuary. He said figures show that last July the morgue alone received 1,100 bodies, about 900 of which bore evidence of torture or summary execution. The pattern prevailed throughout the year until December, when the number dropped to 780 bodies, about 400 of which had gunshot or torture wounds.
independent.co.uk

‘The cheapest thing in Iraq is a human life’
At the city’s main mortuary yesterday corpses were piled in the corridors according to the districts where they had been discovered. Periodically a policeman would shout the name of a district to the crowd outside and take families to see if they could find their missing men.

There were no stretchers, sheets or shrouds. The bodies were simply identified, pulled from the piles, dumped into cheap coffins and removed from the building by any available transport. Some were simply tied to the roofs of taxis.

“Don’t cry,” one man told his daughter. “We’ve got to get used to this by now. The cheapest thing in Iraq is a human.”

Finally it was Mr Dulaimi’s turn. He walked slowly into the mortuary with his brother and a nephew, looking down at the long line of corpses. He stopped abruptly. Though he had feared the worst, nothing had prepared him for the sight of his dead son’s face. “Tortured!” he cried as he turned to his weeping cousin. “How can one imagine? They have pulled out his eye and teeth.”

Well that’s one problem, it is impossible to imagine, and so we dutifully pay our taxes and don’t. This filth is on our hands.

Whose Bombs were they?
02/25/06 “ICH” — — “We should stand hand in hand to prevent the danger of a civil war. We are facing a major conspiracy that is targeting Iraq’s unity.” Iraqi President Jalal Talabani.

There’s no telling who was behind the bombing of the al-Askariya Mosque. There were no security cameras at the site and it’s doubtful that the police will be able to perform a thorough forensic investigation.

That’s too bad; the bomb-residue would probably provide clear evidence of who engineered the attack. So far, there’s little more to go on than the early reports of four men (three who were dressed in black, one in a police uniform) who overtook security guards at the mosque and placed the bombs in broad daylight.

It was a bold assault that strongly suggests the involvement of highly-trained paramilitaries conducting a well-rehearsed plan. Still, that doesn’t give us any solid proof of what groups may have been involved.

The destruction of the Samarra shrine, also known as the Golden Mosque, has unleashed a wave of retaliatory attacks against the Sunnis. More than 110 people were reported killed by the rampaging Shia. More than 90 Sunni mosques have been either destroyed or badly damaged. In Baghdad alone, 47 men have been found scattered throughout the city after being killed execution-style with a bullet to the back of the head. The chaos ends a week of increased violence following two major suicide bombings directed against Shia civilians that resulted in the deaths of 36 people.

The public outrage over the desecration of one of the country’s holiest sights has reached fever-pitch and it’s doubtful that the flimsy American-backed regime will be able to head-off a civil war.

It is difficult to imagine that the perpetrators of this heinous attack didn’t anticipate its disastrous effects. Certainly, the Sunni-led resistance does not benefit from alienating the very people it is trying to enlist in its fight against the American occupation. Accordingly, most of the prominent Sunni groups have denied involvement in the attack and dismissed it as collaboration between American and Iranian intelligence agencies.

A communiqué from “The Foreign Relations Department of the Arab Ba’ath Socialist Party” denounced the attack pointing the finger at the Interior Ministry’s Badr Brigade and American paramilitaries.

The Ba’ath statement explains:

“America is the main party responsible for the crime of attacking the tomb of Ali al-Hadi…because it is the power that occupies Iraq and has a basic interest in committing it.”

“The escalation of differences between America and Iran has found their main political arena in Iraq, because the most important group of agents of Iran is there and are able to use the blood of Iraqis and the future of Iraq to exert pressure on America. Iran has laid out a plan to embroil America in the Iraqi morass to prevent it from obstructing Iran’s nuclear plans. Particularly since America is eager to move on to completing arrangements for a withdrawal from Iraq, after signing binding agreements on oil and strategy. America believes that without the participation of “Sunni” parties in the regime those arrangements will fail. For that reason ‘cutting Iran’s claws’ has become one of the important requirements for American plans. This is what Ambassador Zalmay spoke of recently when he declared that no sectarian would take control of the Ministries of the Interior or Defense. Similarly, America has begun to publish information that it formally kept hidden regarding the crimes of the Badr Brigade and the Interior Ministry.”

Don’t blame Canada anymore, blame Iran.

A Growing Afghan Prison Rivals Bleak Guantánamo

Sunday, February 26th, 2006

While an international debate rages over the future of the American detention center at Guantánamo Bay, Cuba, the military has quietly expanded another, less-visible prison in Afghanistan, where it now holds some 500 terror suspects in more primitive conditions, indefinitely and without charges.

Pentagon officials have often described the detention site at Bagram, a cavernous former machine shop on an American air base 40 miles north of Kabul, as a screening center. They said most of the detainees were Afghans who might eventually be released under an amnesty program or transferred to an Afghan prison that is to be built with American aid.

But some of the detainees have already been held at Bagram for as long as two or three years. And unlike those at Guantánamo, they have no access to lawyers, no right to hear the allegations against them and only rudimentary reviews of their status as “enemy combatants,” military officials said.
nytimes.com

Inmates Riot at High-Security Kabul Prison
KABUL, Afghanistan – Terror convicts and hundreds of other inmates clashed with guards and took control of parts of a high-security prison in Afghanistan’s capital, officials said Sunday.

Police and soldiers surrounded the Policharki Prison on Sunday as government officials attempted to negotiate with the inmates, who include al-Qaida and Taliban militants.

An Associated Press reporter heard two bursts of gunfire about two hours apart from inside the prison Sunday. A few minutes after the first gunfire, an ambulance carrying an unidentified patient drove out of the prison.

The trouble began Saturday night when prisoners forced guards out of a prison block, said Abdul Salaam Bakshi, chief of prisons in Afghanistan. He accused al-Qaida and Taliban inmates of inciting other prisoners.

The Afghan army deployed more than 100 soldiers to surround the prison and parked eight tanks and armored personnel carriers outside the gates.

A British bastion in the heart of Taliban territory
The vast camp spreads across an unforgiving landscape, the biggest British military base since the Second World War, a potent symbol of the new British presence in Afghanistan.

Camp Bastion is being built in Helmand, the most dangerous part of this highly dangerous country. It is from this desolate spot that British operations against a resurgent Taliban and al-Qa’ida will be run.

“Please don’t call it our Dien Bien Phu”, said a senior officer, referring to the siege of French forces that brought their occupation of Vietnam to an end in 1954. But if the isolated British base in the heart of hostile country does turn into the same sort of debacle, it won’t be because the British, unlike the French, made the mistake of underestimating their enemy.

Well, they said it, not me…