
"Desperate Housewives" returned last night to begin wrapping up it's final season.
I can't imagine anyone missing the show.
Lynette's just a shrew. She's dating a guy that's over Tom just to keep Tom from being able to go off with his new girlfriend. Even worse, her daughter doesn't want to eat a sandwich, just wants to eat candy and Lynette lets her after she finds out the daughter has news about Tom that she'll pass on.
Bree's on trial for murder (Gabby's step-father) and she has never felt so bad, she tells Susan, Lynette and Gabby, as when . . . her lawyer found out she had a string of one-night stands.
Gabby?
Doris Roberts guest starred as a rich widow. Gabby was doing her personal shopping thing and ignoring Doris until she found out Doris was rich. Then she was trying to make her her best friend. She even took her home for dinner and made Carlos make nice. He's working as a counselor and ended up talking her into donating money to that cause. Gabby was furious and she made sure it looked like he was ripping off money when Doris visited the center.
So they both lost Doris.
Susan? Mike's death has really effected their son. She handled all of her scenes well but they add up to noting.
As for Renee? She had two scenes and that's it. In the first, she asked her fiancee Ben about Bree and gets that he's hiding something. She tells him she won't go through this again. Have a husband who doesn't tell her everything. And then later -- second scene -- he tells her that her husband kept things from her to lie to her, Ben says he's doing it now to protect her.
Whatever.
"Iraq snapshot" (The Common Ills):
Monday,
 April 30, 2012.  Chaos and violence continue, the SIGIR releases a 
major report on Iraq, Tareq al-Hashemi's now being charged with the 
murder of six judges (among 300 charges against him), Saturday saw a big
 meet-up in Erbil that Nouri wasn't invited to, Bradley Manning's 
semi-secret trial gets some media attention, and more.
Starting in the US with Bradley Manning.  Monday April 5, 2010, WikiLeaks released US military video of a July 12, 2007 assault in Iraq. 12 people were killed in the assault including two Reuters journalists Namie Noor-Eldeen and Saeed Chmagh. Monday June 7, 2010, the US military announced that they had arrested Bradley Manning and he stood accused of being the leaker of the video. Leila Fadel (Washington Post) reported
 in August 2010 that Manning had been charged -- "two charges under the 
Uniform Code of Military Justice. The first encompasses four counts of 
violating Army regulations by transferring classified information to his
 personal computer between November and May and adding unauthorized 
software to a classified computer system. The second comprises eight 
counts of violating federal laws governing the handling of classified 
information." In March, 2011, David S. Cloud (Los Angeles Times) reported
 that the military has added 22 additional counts to the charges 
including one that could be seen as "aiding the enemy" which could 
result in   the death penalty if convicted. The Article 32 hearing took 
place in December.  At the start of this year, there was an Article 32 
hearing and, February 3rd, it was announced that the government would be
 moving forward with a court-martial.  Since then the court-martial has 
been scheduled to begin September 21st.  Recent weeks have seen a flurry
 of pre-court-martial hearings.
On this week's Law and Disorder Radio -- a weekly hour long program that airs Monday mornings at 9:00 a.m. EST on WBAI and around the country throughout the week, hosted by attorneys Heidi Boghosian, Michael S. Smith and Michael Ratner (Center for Constitutional Rights),   topics explored include Bradley Manning.  
Heidi
 Boghosian:   We continue our updates on the Bradley Manning trial.  
Senior staff attorney Shane Kadidal from the Center for Constitutional 
Rights recently returned from one of the hearings in Fort Meade, 
Maryland.  Welcome, Shane to Law & Disorder.
Shane Kadidal: Thanks for having me, Michael.
Michael
 Smith:  You know, Heidi and I, were down at the Mumia demonstration in 
Washington, DC yesterday.   We took the train down from New York.  We're
 sitting on the train, passing the Fort Meade exit on the train, you 
were sitting in that courtroom, in that semi-secret trial of Bradley 
Manning.  And we thought about, 'Well we'll get to talk to you today 
about what's going on in that semi-secret trial? And what do you think's
 at stake?
Heidi Boghosian: [laughing]  Are you allowed to talk about this, Shane?
Shane
 Kadidal: [Laughing.]  We are. It was funny sitting there to 
contrast, for instance, to Guantanamo occasionally classified hearings 
and every word of what's said in there is presumed classified until you 
get told otherwise.  It wasn't like that, but it was odd in other ways.
Michael
 Smith: Well it's odd because it's not like you can't say what you want 
to say but because  you don't have access to the court pleadings, you 
don't have access to the off-the-record discussions with the judge, you 
don't have access to court orders so a lot of this trial is a secret 
trial which I always thought to be against the First Amendment of the 
Constitution.
Shane
 Kadidal:  Right. It's interesting to note two things about that.  You 
know, first of all, people think about this First Amendment right to 
access to judicial proceedings being about basic Democratic values.  
It's good to have government in the sunshine just as a philosophical 
principle.  But that's not what the Supreme Court says about it.  What 
they said about that very clearly in a number of cases in the late 
seventies and the early eighties, you know, openness actually helps the 
truth finding function of trials.  It gives a disincentive to witnesses 
to commit perjury.  It lets new witnesses come out of the woodwork and 
so forth.  By having the factual basis for legal ruling sort of exposed 
to the light of day and having the legal arguments exposed as well, it 
means that the court is less likely to make mistakes.  And that makes a 
difference when it comes down to accuracy.  And you   can imagine how 
this might play out in a case like Manning's where an awful lot is 
riding, for instance, on the testimony of a supposedly quite drugged out
 and unreliable informer whose name actually happens to be redacted from
 the few public documents that we do have.  So that's one point, that 
openness helps the accuracy of judicial proceedings -- and it's 
especially important in cases like this.  The other is sort of a 
meta-point about media coverage.  While I was down there, there were 
only about two or three reporters that came out of the media room 
 during the breaks and sort of milled about and talked to us which I 
think was a little bit shocking giving the significance of this case.  
You know, supposedly the largest set of leaks in American history, a set
 of leaks where the documents dominated news coverage globally for a 
good year-and-a-half.  And yet there are only two or three reporters   
there.  And I think it shows that when the government manages to choke 
off the flow of interesting detail about a case by redacting it out of 
documents or not releasing documents or holding proceedings off the 
public record, that is almost more effective at diminishing press 
coverage of an issue than completely barring the press from the 
courtroom as happens in classified hearings.  Because completely barring
 the press piques the press interest but simply blacking out all the 
colorful detail or the stuff that kind of makes a story interesting just
 results in boring coverage and eventually people sort of give up.  And I
 think that might be what's happening here.
Heidi Boghosian:  Well, Shane, since the media wasn't there, can you give us a sort of nutshell version of what happened?
Shane
 Kadidal:  You know, at the Tuesday hearing which I was at, one of the 
first issues up actually was around our letter to the court -- CCR's 
letter demanding that the court release its own orders including the 
protective order that governs what can be sealed off from public access 
and what can be released and what should be redacted.  So the court's 
own orders, then all the government's motions and the government's 
responses to the defense's motions.  And then a third subject which is 
an awful lot of the argument happens in what are called 802 conferences 
where the parties can agree to discuss anything in chambers and the 
public never has any sense of the legal arguments that are made or the 
conclusions that happen which is kind of different from a lot of public 
access issues because it means both parties can collude to keep 
something out of the public sight.  A little different from the usual 
situation where   it's usually the government trying to keep something 
out.
Michael
 Smith.  Especially in a shocking case like this with, for example, one 
of the things that Manning was allegedly accused of releasing was a 39 
minute video called The Collateral Murder Video where you've got US 
soldiers in a helicopter murdering two Reuters journalists and 
then seriously injuring two children.  It's all on video.  It's a War 
Crime.  They're trying to cover this up in this semi-secret trial. It's 
really shocking.  I remember the famous Judge Damon Keith saying, 
"Democracy dies behind closed doors."  So what do you think your chances
 are of prying open those doors?
Shane
 Kadidal: Well I think maybe on appeal they'll be good.  But what we 
learned on Tuesday was that this judge [Col Denise Lind] doesn't really 
want to hear it.  So the first thing she said was, 'You know, the Center
 of Constitutional Rights has sent a lawyer down here and asked for 
permission to address the court and asked for all this release including
 making all of these documents public and that motion which is 
essentially a motion to intervene -- is denied.
Michael
 Smith:  Reporters Committee for Freedom of the Press which I think is 
45  press organizations did the same thing which is the same thing you 
guys did at the CCR
Shane
 Kadidal:  Right.  They wrote some letters as well.  And, you know, the 
letters kind of the court had disappeared into a black hole so we sent a
 second letter to the defense council so that he could kind of read it 
out in open court.  The judge revealed yesterday that she had, in fact, 
received both letters, which I guess was good news.  But the bottom line
 is this allows to go up the chain to the two courts of appeals in the 
military system  that stand above this judge and demand that we get 
immediate public access to these documents. And it was a First Amendment
 case so I was very clear that being deprived of public access to 
judicial proceedings even for a short period of time is irreparable 
injury and that kind of principle goes back to the Pentagon Papers case 
really. 
Heidi Boghosian: What did Michael Ratner say in his piece last week in the Guardian?
Shane
 Kadidal:  A terrific piece which is worth reading.  But, you know, a 
couple of things. First that Manning's revelations including that the 
Collateral Murder video you know really were made in the face of 
military lies about what had actually happened.  You know, the 
military's initial response was that there was no question that that 
gunfight involved a hostile force when it turned out that two children 
and a bunch of journalists were among the people who were shot.  But I 
think that the bigger picture, I think it's ironic that the government's
 heavy handed approach -- as Michael said in his piece -- really only 
serves to emphasize the motivations for whistle blowing of the sort that
 Bradley Manning is now accused of. It's this kind of blanket approach 
on the part of the government to secrecy that forces people to reveal 
things by going outside the letter of the law.
Michael
 Smith: Shane Kadidal, who is the senior attorney at the Center for 
Constitutional Rights has been down at Fort Meade, Maryland on behalf of
 the center at the Bradley Manning trial.  We'll keep checking in on 
you, Shane.  Good luck with your appeal. 
Ann
 Wright spent most of her life in government service.  In the army, she 
rose to the rank of Colonel.  In 1987, she went to work for the US State
 Dept and she continued serving there until her March 19, 2003 
resignation, the day before the Iraq War started and she resigned in 
protest of that war.  At The Daily Progress, Wright pens an article on Bradley:
I
 recently inadvertently and fortuitously ended up at a meeting with a 
U.S. State Department-sponsored group of young professionals from the 
Middle East who were brought to the United States to learn more about 
our country. I mentioned that I was attending the hearings for the 
alleged WikiLeaks whistleblower Bradley Manning.   
The
 reaction of the group was stunning. Immediately hands for questions 
went up. The questions began with a comment: Without WikiLeaks, I would 
never have learned what my own governments was doing, its complicity in 
secret prisons and torture, in extraordinary rendition, in cooperation 
in the U.S. wars in the region. WikiLeaks exposed what our politicians 
and elected officials are doing. Without WikiLeaks, we would never have known!   
And
 that is what Bradley Manning's trial is all about and what the charges 
against six other government employees who face espionage allegations 
for providing information the government classified to protect its own 
wrongdoings -- to silence other potential government whistleblowers.   
Today the Special Inspector General for Iraq Reconstruction released April 2012: Quarterly Report To Congress. From the introduction of the report, we'll note this:
As
 of April 3, 2012, DoS reported that 12,755 personnel supported the U.S.
 Mission in Iraq, down about 8% from the previous quarter.  Current 
staffing comprises 1,369 civilian government  employees and 11,386 
contractors.  In February, Deputy Secretary of State Thomas Nides said 
that DoS will continue to reduce the number of contractors over the 
coming months in an attempt to "right size" Embassy operations.
As
 currently constituted, the U.S. reconstruction programd evotes the 
preponderance of its financial resources to providing equipment, 
services, and advice to the Iraqi Security Forces (ISF).  The Office of 
Security Cooperation-Iraq (OSC-I) manages U.S. security assistance to 
the Government of Iraq (GOI), OSC-I is staffed by 145 U.S. military 
personnel, 9 Department of Defense (DoD) civilians, and 4,912 
contractors.  DoS's Bureau of International Narcotics and Law 
Enforcement Affairs (INL) administers the Police Development Program 
(PDP) whose 86 advisors mentor senior police officials at the Ministry 
of Interior (MOI). 
Eli Lake (Daily Beast) notes,
 "A 2012 audit conducted by the Special Inspector General for Iraq 
Reconstruction (SIGIR) and released to the public on Monday found that 
76 percent of the battalion commanders surveyed believed at least some 
of the CERP funds had been lost to fraud and corruption." There's so 
much in the report.  We'll note more of it tomorrow.  Right now we'll 
note page 59 demonstrates how the US government repeatedly subsidizes 
the weapons industry.  The US government thinks Iraq needs weapons.  For
 some reason -- despite having billions in oil money -- the US 
government seems to feel they need to 'assist' -- provide US government 
welfare -- to weapon makers.  So $2.54 billion will be spent, by the US 
government, on weapons for the government   of Iraq.  Some of the sales 
are pending and the US tab right now is 'only' $968.4 million.  It's 
really something to read the report and find that, among other US 
agencies, Homeland Security remains in Iraq.  Remember, there was a 
drawdown, there was no withdrawal.
 G.W. Schulz (Center For Investigative Reporting) reports,
 "California continues to lead the nation in fatal sacrifices made to 
the conflicts, according to an analysis of the most recent Defense 
Department data
 available. The figures, which include both hostile and non-hostile 
casualties, cover three major operations across the two wars: Operation 
Enduring Freedom, Operation Iraqi Freedom and Operation New Dawn."
Turning to Iraq, Alsumaria reports a Baghdad roadside bombing has left 6 people dead and a Ministry of Health official's wife and 3 children were killed when unknown assailants slit their throats.  Al Rafidayn says the   wife and children were killed by blunt objects.
Over
 the weekend, a major meet-up took place in Erbil.  Before we get to 
that, let's recap the political crisis.  Only instead of me doing it, 
let's refer to the Special Inspector General for Iraq Reconstruction 
released April 2012: Quarterly Report To Congress. 
 And, please note, the Erbil Agreement is in November 2010 -- not 
December.  It's implemented in November. It's briefly implemented.  
(Refer to the November 11, 2010 snapshot about Parliament meeting finally and the agreement that allowed it to.)
 Along
 with the serious threat posed by terrorism, an array of interlocking 
governance and economic issues endanger the health of the Iraqi state.  
Foremost among them is the lack of reconciliation among the many 
political blocs, which stems from disputes over the March 2010 Council 
of Representatives (CoR) election and its unsettled aftermath.  The 
so-called "Erbil Agreement," reached in December 2010, ostensibly 
crafted a road map for resolving these disputes, though the map has not 
been followed.  Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki thus sits atop a fractious
 coalition government wracked by internecine rivalries.  
Last
 December's events, including the Prime Minister's attempt to oust 
Deputy Prime Minister Salih al-Mutlaq and the Higher Judicial Council's 
(HJC) issuance of a warrant for the arrest of Vice President Tariq 
al-Hashimi, continued to cause turmoil this quarter.  Al-Mutlaq did not 
attend Council of Ministers (CoM) meetings (and called the Prime 
Minister a "dictoator"), while al-Hashimi remained outside the effective
 jurisdiction of the HJC, primarily in the Kurdistan Region.  Al-Mutlaq 
and and al-Hashimi are both Sunni members of the al-Iraqiya political 
bloc, a heterogeneous union of political parties dominated by Sunni 
interests.  In early April, efforts by Iraqi President Jalal Talabani 
and CoR Speaker Osama al-Nujaifi to convene a national reconciliation 
conference to address the issues dividing the government foundered, and 
the April 5 meeting was abruptly canceled.  The disputing factions have 
yet to agree on a new   date.
Vice 
President al-Hashimi's decision to seek refuge in the Kurdistan Region 
aggravated an increasinly troubled relationship between the GOI and the 
Kurdistan Regional Government (KRG).  This dispute was also worsened by 
ExxonMobil's decision to pursue contracts with the KRG, despite GOI 
threats to exclude the company from further operations under its 
contract for work in southern provinces.  The GOI appears to have 
sidestepped the issue for the moment, announcing that ExxonMboil had 
"frozen" its dealings with the KRG.  But the relationship between the 
centeral government in Baghdad and the KRG remains tense with the flames
 recently fanned by the KRG's April 1 shutdown of all oil exports 
leaving its territory in retaliation for the GOI allegedly withholding 
about $1.5 billion from the KRG.
Iraq's 
political strife continued in mid-April with the arrest on the 
corruption charges of Faraj al-Haidari, the head of the Independent High
 Electoral Commission (IHEC).  Al-Haidari, who previously clashed with 
the Prime Minister after the 2010 CoR elections, stands accused of 
improperly using state funds.  Members of al-Iraqiya, the Kurdistan 
Alliance, and the Sadrist Trend immediately questioned the arrest.  The 
IHEC is responsible for administering Iraqi elections, including the 
upcoming provincial elections in 2013 and CoR elections in 2004.
Saturday, Al Mada reported
 on that day's big political meet-up in Erbil.  Among those attending 
were Iraqi President Jalal Talabani, KRG President Massoud Barzani, Ayad
 Allawi (head of Iraqiya) and Speaker of Parliamen Osama al-Najaifi.  Alsumaria reported
 on the meet-up and publishes a photo of the meet-up -- Moqtada al-Sadr 
is seated between Talabani and Allawi.  The consensus was that there 
must be a national partnership and that the Erbil Agreement must be   
implemented.
This wasn't at all surprising. They and others have been calling for the Erbil Agreement to be implemented for months and months. Nouri al-Maliki is the one who agreed to the agreement and then trashed it when he got what he wanted out of it.
This wasn't at all surprising. They and others have been calling for the Erbil Agreement to be implemented for months and months. Nouri al-Maliki is the one who agreed to the agreement and then trashed it when he got what he wanted out of it.
Lara Jakes (AP) called
 the meet-up a "mini summit" and feels that the participation of a wide 
range of groups -- including Shi'ites -- "underscored the growing 
impatience with the Shiite prime minister." Dar Addustour quoted
 from a press release noting the Erbil Agreement and the power-sharing 
and that the participants stress the need for things to be done 
logically (that may be "scientifically," I think it's logically), fairly
 and that the needs of the Iraqi people are paramount, they must be 
served and there should be no disruption of services.
The paper also notes that Ammar al-Hakim (head of the Islamic Supreme Countil of Iraq) was not present. And it notes various reasons for that. One common trait is he was not invited. Why he was not invited is in dispute. One explanation is that al-Hakim is seen as too close to Nouri, another given is that his stand is known and that those present were calling for possible solutions and debating their potential.
Alsumaria noted that there's also a call to implement Moqtada's 18 points. That's apparently on the same level of importance as returning to the Erbil Agreement. Moqtada's 18 points were presented Thursday in Erbil. There's been talk of them in the press; however, there's not any publication of the 18 points themselves. They have been said to support the Erbil Agreement, they're supposed to guarantee judicial independence and be good for Iraqis but that's from statements made on Moqtada's behalf and not from anyone working with the 18 points. Here's AP reporting on the 18 points on Thursday:
On Thursday, Moqtada Al Sadr offered an 18-point plan to solve the Iraq crisis, mostly through dialogue and political inclusiveness. The plan calls for having good relations with neighbouring nations, but to not let them meddle in Iraq's affairs. That appeared to be a reference to Iran, which is close to Nouri Al Maliki's Shiite-dominated government.
In a nod to Kurdish President Masoud Barzani, Al Sadr said Iraq's oil must be used for the benefit of Iraq's people, "and no individual has the right to control it without participation from others".
Al Rafidayn noted that the Saturday meeting was closed-door and took place at the headquarters of the Patriotic Union of Kurdistan. That's the political party Talabani heads. They also note that the meeting lasted three hours. Also Al Rafidayn notes that Ibrahim al-Jaafari (leader of the National Alliance) declared Friday that Iraq needs to hold a national conference and needs to do so next month, the first week. The previous deadline Nouri was working with came from Massoud Barzani. The KRG will hold provincial elections in September and Barzani's made clear that if the political crisis isn't solved by then the issue of what the KRG does next can go on the ballot. al-Jaafari just moved the deadline up and moved it up signficantly.
Like Ayad Allawi, Ibrahim al-Jaafari has held the post Nouri al-Maliki currently does, prime minister of Iraq. In fact, Ibrahim was the choice of Iraqi MPs in 2005 and 2006. The US refused to allow al-Jaafari to be named prime minister again and insisted that their pet Nouri be named.
The paper also notes that Ammar al-Hakim (head of the Islamic Supreme Countil of Iraq) was not present. And it notes various reasons for that. One common trait is he was not invited. Why he was not invited is in dispute. One explanation is that al-Hakim is seen as too close to Nouri, another given is that his stand is known and that those present were calling for possible solutions and debating their potential.
Alsumaria noted that there's also a call to implement Moqtada's 18 points. That's apparently on the same level of importance as returning to the Erbil Agreement. Moqtada's 18 points were presented Thursday in Erbil. There's been talk of them in the press; however, there's not any publication of the 18 points themselves. They have been said to support the Erbil Agreement, they're supposed to guarantee judicial independence and be good for Iraqis but that's from statements made on Moqtada's behalf and not from anyone working with the 18 points. Here's AP reporting on the 18 points on Thursday:
On Thursday, Moqtada Al Sadr offered an 18-point plan to solve the Iraq crisis, mostly through dialogue and political inclusiveness. The plan calls for having good relations with neighbouring nations, but to not let them meddle in Iraq's affairs. That appeared to be a reference to Iran, which is close to Nouri Al Maliki's Shiite-dominated government.
In a nod to Kurdish President Masoud Barzani, Al Sadr said Iraq's oil must be used for the benefit of Iraq's people, "and no individual has the right to control it without participation from others".
Al Rafidayn noted that the Saturday meeting was closed-door and took place at the headquarters of the Patriotic Union of Kurdistan. That's the political party Talabani heads. They also note that the meeting lasted three hours. Also Al Rafidayn notes that Ibrahim al-Jaafari (leader of the National Alliance) declared Friday that Iraq needs to hold a national conference and needs to do so next month, the first week. The previous deadline Nouri was working with came from Massoud Barzani. The KRG will hold provincial elections in September and Barzani's made clear that if the political crisis isn't solved by then the issue of what the KRG does next can go on the ballot. al-Jaafari just moved the deadline up and moved it up signficantly.
Like Ayad Allawi, Ibrahim al-Jaafari has held the post Nouri al-Maliki currently does, prime minister of Iraq. In fact, Ibrahim was the choice of Iraqi MPs in 2005 and 2006. The US refused to allow al-Jaafari to be named prime minister again and insisted that their pet Nouri be named.
Today's
 big news was  Vice President Tareq al-Hashemi.  The political crisis 
was already well in effect when December 2011 rolled around.  The press 
rarely gets that fact correct.  When December 2011 rolls around you see 
Iraqiya announce a  boycott of the council and the Parliament, that's in
 the December 16th snapshot and again in a December 17th entry
 .  Tareq al-Hashemi is a member of Iraqiya but he's not in the news at 
that point.  Later, we'll learn that Nouri -- just returned from DC 
where he met with Barack Obama -- has ordered tanks to surround the 
homes of high ranking members of Iraqiya.  December 18th
 is when al-Hashemi and Deputy Prime Minister Saleh al-Mutlaq are pulled
 from a Baghdad flight to the KRG but then allowed to reboard the plane.
 December 19th is when the arrest warrant is issued for Tareq al-Hashemi by Nouri al-Maliki who claims the vice president is a 'terrorist.' .
al-Hashemi was already in the KRG when the arrest warrant was issued. He did not "flee" there. He remained there with the approval of Iraqi President Jalal Talabani and KRG President Massoud Barzani until April when he left the country on a diplomatic mission. Nouri and his flunkies insisted that Qatar, Saudi Arabia and Turkey hand him over. None did. They also insisted that INTERPOL arrest him when he was in each of the three countries. INTERPOL cannot take part in political arrests, it's against their charter. They have to look impartial, per charter.
Alsumaria notes that May 3rd is when the Baghdad court intends to officially try al-Hashemi. "Officially"? Baghdad judges held a press conference in Februrary insisting al-Hashemi was guilty of the charges. Having insisted that publicly -- in violation of the Iraqi Constitution -- they now want to have a trial? The Baghdad courts are controlled by Nouri and a joke. Al Rafidayn notes that al-Hashemi is still in Turkey and that the trial will take place in absentia. Alsumaria reports that al-Hashemi and his bodyguards are now also charged with the murders of 6 judges. Still having not learned what a joke they are on the national stage, the Baghdad judges sent their spokesperson Abdelsatter Bayraqdar out to make a statement about how "confessions were obtained on them, including the assassination of six judges, mostly from Baghdad." The judicail system is corrupt and ignorant in Iraq. They have confused the role of the judge with the prosecution and their actions betray their country's Constitution. They should all be immediately removed from office. They won't be, but they should be.
Al Sabaah notes that there are 300 charges in all, according to the spokesperson, and that there will be 73 defendants on trial and, in addition to being accused of murdering judges, al-Hashemi and his bodyguards are also being accused of mudering military officers. Dar Addustour reports rumors that al-Hashemi will be stripped of his office prior to the start of the trial.
al-Hashemi was already in the KRG when the arrest warrant was issued. He did not "flee" there. He remained there with the approval of Iraqi President Jalal Talabani and KRG President Massoud Barzani until April when he left the country on a diplomatic mission. Nouri and his flunkies insisted that Qatar, Saudi Arabia and Turkey hand him over. None did. They also insisted that INTERPOL arrest him when he was in each of the three countries. INTERPOL cannot take part in political arrests, it's against their charter. They have to look impartial, per charter.
Alsumaria notes that May 3rd is when the Baghdad court intends to officially try al-Hashemi. "Officially"? Baghdad judges held a press conference in Februrary insisting al-Hashemi was guilty of the charges. Having insisted that publicly -- in violation of the Iraqi Constitution -- they now want to have a trial? The Baghdad courts are controlled by Nouri and a joke. Al Rafidayn notes that al-Hashemi is still in Turkey and that the trial will take place in absentia. Alsumaria reports that al-Hashemi and his bodyguards are now also charged with the murders of 6 judges. Still having not learned what a joke they are on the national stage, the Baghdad judges sent their spokesperson Abdelsatter Bayraqdar out to make a statement about how "confessions were obtained on them, including the assassination of six judges, mostly from Baghdad." The judicail system is corrupt and ignorant in Iraq. They have confused the role of the judge with the prosecution and their actions betray their country's Constitution. They should all be immediately removed from office. They won't be, but they should be.
Al Sabaah notes that there are 300 charges in all, according to the spokesperson, and that there will be 73 defendants on trial and, in addition to being accused of murdering judges, al-Hashemi and his bodyguards are also being accused of mudering military officers. Dar Addustour reports rumors that al-Hashemi will be stripped of his office prior to the start of the trial.
 
