| Wednesday, February 23, 2011.  Chaos and violence continue, protest  continue, Moqtada's back and wants to stop protests, Iraqi journalists remain  under attack and more.     At around 2:30 am Baghdad time a group of anti riot police raided  the headquarter of Iraq Freedom Congress satellite TV (Sana) in Baghdad and  destroyed every single piece of equipment in the office as well as confiscating  a number of documents. These attacks occurred following broadcasting segments of events  took place in Tahrir Square in Baghdad by a number of TV Channels via Sana TV  who filmed and documented a particular segment in which protesters clashed with  the police on the night of February 20th, 2011 and one protestor was killed as a  result, as well as the active participation of Sana TV in assisting of  organizing the forthcoming demonstrations in Tahrir Square. This is the Maliki government and its repressive practices; this is  the democracy and freedom of expression which Maliki is bragging about. He  continues sending his militias to silence his opponents and critics.  He is no  different than Ben Ali, Mubarak and Gaddafi in acts of torture.  Iraq Freedom Congress assert that it will carry on the fight and  will not bow to the pracitices of Maliki and his mercenaries and vow that the  demonstrations on February 25th, 2011 will continue the pace no matter how  brutal this government practices is. IFC pledges that it will continue [to] organize and fight with full  force in the million people march on February 25, 2011.     Attacks on the press also continue in Iraq. On Sunday, 50 gunmen  raided a new, Sulaimaniya-based independent TV station called Nalia Radio and  Television, according to Metro Center to Defend Journalists, a local press  freddom group.  Nalia TV only began broadcasting on February 17, when protests  begen in Sulaimaniya.  The boradcasting equipment was destroyed by bullets and  arson, Metro Center reported. Iran's Press TV reported that two guards and a  janitor were injured in the attack. "They came in military uniforms," Twana Othman, a manager at Nalia  TV, told Press TV.  "They wore special  hats so their faces could not be seen. They knew exactly what to shoot at and  what to destroy. Then they poured petrol and burned everything."  Rahman Gharib, a local journalist who reports for Metro Center,  told CPJ: "I think the attack on the station was connected to its editorial  policy of covering the demonstrations and giving voice to the  protesters." On February 17, Hawlati, an independent Kurdish newspaper,  evacuated its offices after threats from the guards of the Kurdistan Democratic  Party (KDP) [KRG President Massoud Barzani's political party] building, Tariq  Fattah, the director of the newspaper told CPJ. "Our office is close to where  the demonstrations were taking place," he said. "The guards of the KDP were  shouting at the door fo the paper that we are traitors and that we are stadning  behind and leading the demonstrations."      Hisham Rikabi (Al Mada) reports that Nouri's  spokesperson Ali al-Dabbagh held a press conference where he declared that  Baghdad will ban vehicles on Friday that can broadcast live. There may also be a  curfew imposed. In Egypt, the world was watching. In Iraq, the few western  reporters that are present include some smug frat boys who think that mocking  the Iraqi people is doing their job. Does it seem strange to you that Nouri's  attempting to ban video of the protests?  Joao Silva, New York Times photographer (recently  badly injured in Afghanistan) observed, "The Iraqis have learned the power of photographic  images, and they know that if there are no photographs of a bomb, it has far  less impact abroad.  We still try to go, but usually the police stop us before  we get near enough to the scene to photograph it. They will let a reporter go up  close, but no cameras.  Sometimes you get lucky and manage to get an image. And  on the really big explosions, like at the Hamra Hotel in January [2010] and the  government ministries last year, they are just too big to keep everyone away.   But usually they are very careful not to let cameras near. It's hit and miss,  but there is definitely a culture of 'See No Evil'."    And though Silva and Stephen Farrell know that, the paper's Jack Healy and Michael S. Schmidt  feel they can disrespect and mock the Iraqi protesters.  They  can have 'fun' with the "patchwork" of demands.  That's real strange considering  that both men are US citizens. It was the US government that started the illegal  war.  Before the start of the Iraq War, the electricity outages weren't a daily  feature.  There was potable water.  There was sanitation.  Eight years after the  Iraq War started, there is still not potable water, reliable electricity or  santiation.  I'm not understanding how it's funny -- or for that matter strange  -- that the Iraqis are worse off with basic services than before the Iraq War.   I'm not understanding how anyone would find it surprising that people would be  outraged, in the 21st century, to live in an oil rich country that makes  billions while the people don't have potable water.  I'm not understanding how  they think Egypt is something to compare Iraq too.  Egypt wasn't occupied by a  foreign power during their recent demonstrations, Iraq is.  Egypt had every  outlet in the US and every European outlet storm into the country to cover their  protests.  The Egyptians knew the world was watching, as did their government.   By contrast, the Iraqis get less and less coverage every week.  And despite  this, they've been out in the streets protesting.  If Jack Healy and Michael S.  Schmidt had wanted to be honest about the protests throughout the country, they  couldn't have had so much 'fun' mocking the Iraqis. If they'd bothered to report  on Saturday's Baghdad protest involving widows and  orphans, maybe they would have understood the issues.  Reuters has video of one  of the women demonstrating in that protest explaining, "The Iraqi people have  been patient since the fall of the regime in 2003 and they want to improve their  living conditions but now a single glance at Baghdad and other cities can show  the tragedy that we've experienced. It's been eight years and government  officials are still unable to ensure that power supplies are back or create job  opportunities for the unemployed young people.  The infrastructure is completely  damaged.  At the same time, we always hear reports and news about corruption and  about those who steal the resources that belong to the people."    And these protests take place in a country that lived under repression long  before the current puppets the occupation installed.  In fact, the example the  US set in the early 90s would likely give many pause to ever stand up.  But  Iraqis do stand up and they don't deserve to be mocked for it.  For those who've  forgotten what happened when Iraqis were encouraged by the US to stand up under  then-US President George H.W. Bush,  here's a refresher from Lance Selfa (ISR):   General Colin Powell announced what the U.S. had in store for the  Iraqi army: "First we're going to cut it off, then we're going to kill it."  Poorly paid and equipped Iraqi conscripts, two-thirds of them oppressed Shiites  and Kurds, faced bombing 24 hours a day. Thousands of Iraqi troops deserted the  battlefield. U.S. and coalition forces mowed down some of them when they tried  to surrender. A military video showed in a combat briefing depicted Iraqi  soldiers as "ghostly sheep . . . flushed from a pen . . . bewildered and  terrified. Some were literally blown to bits by bursts of 30mm exploding cannon.  One by one they were cut down by attackers they couldn't see or understand,"  according to one report. One U.S. officer anticipated another night of action:  ". . . there is nothing that can take them out like an Apache [attack  helicopter]. It will be a duck hunt." In scenes reminiscent of mass burials at  liberated Nazi concentration camps in the 1940s, U.S. forces bulldozed the  bodies of thousands of Iraqi soldiers into mass graves. On February 15 -- a month into the air war -- Saddam's government  announced it would accept UN resolutions calling for its withdrawal from Kuwait.  The U.S. and its lackey, Britain, dismissed Saddam's surrender. Instead, Bush  called for Iraqis to rise up and overthrow Saddam: "[T]here's another way for  the bloodshed to stop, and that is for the Iraqi military and the Iraqi people  to take matters into their own hands, to force Saddam to step aside." Bush's  statement communicated two points: first, that the U.S. wouldn't settle only for  Iraqi withdrawal from Kuwait, and second, that the U.S. might back anyone who  rose up against Saddam. The first point proved that expelling Iraq from Kuwait  was a mere pretext for wider U.S. designs in the war. The second point proved a  lie only weeks later, when masses of Kurds and Shiites took "matters into their  own hands" and rose up against Saddam. Saddam had essentially cried "uncle," but the U.S. wanted to mount  a ground offensive anyway. In six days, U.S. and coalition ground troops swept  across Kuwait and southern Iraq, forcing Iraqi troops into a full-scale retreat.  In the last 40 hours of the war, before Bush called a cease-fire on February 28,  U.S. and British forces mounted a relentless assault against retreating and  defenseless Iraqi soldiers. The road leading from Kuwait to Basra became known  as the "Highway of Death." Iraqi soldiers fled Kuwait in every possible vehicle  they could get their hands on. Allied tank units cut the Iraqis off. U.S.  warplanes bombed, strafed and firebombed the stranded columns for hours without  resistance. In a slaughter which a U.S. pilot described as "like shooting fish  in a barrel," thousands of Iraqi conscripts were killed on a 50-mile stretch of  highway. So many planes filled the skies over southern Iraq that military air  traffic controllers maneuvered to prevent mid-air collisions. The "Highway of Death," and, in fact, the ground war itself, served  no military purpose. Saddam had admitted defeat before the ground war began.  Attacks on retreating Iraqis merely delayed the war's end. But the U.S. mounted  this barbarism for one reason only: to render an example of what would happen to  any government which bucked the U.S. For nearly two days, the Pentagon invented  the excuse that the Iraqis were staging a "fighting retreat," a fiction which  they knew was a lie. "When enemy armies are defeated, they withdraw," said Air  Force Chief of Staff Merrill A. McPeak. "It's during this time that the true  fruits of victory are achieved from combat, when the enemy is disorganized . . .  If we do not exploit victory, the president should get himself some new  generals."  The savagery of the U.S. war took some of the luster off Bush's  victory. But nothing so revealed the callous disregard for ordinary Iraqis as  U.S. complicity in Saddam's suppression of the Kurdish and Shiite uprisings in  the weeks following Iraq's defeat. Demobilized soldiers in the southern,  predominantly Shiite sections of the country returned to their hometowns and  vented their fury on all symbols of Saddam's regime. Kurdish guerrillas launched  a coordinated uprising in Iraqi Kurdistan. In the week following the Gulf War  cease-fire, ordinary Iraqis stormed the regime's police headquarters, barracks  and prisons. Crowds broke into underground dungeons and torture chambers,  freeing political prisoners who hadn't seen daylight in decades. Masses of  people lynched officials of Saddam's government. For almost two weeks, ordinary  Iraqis controlled whole regions of the country and Saddam's government seemed on  the verge of collapse. Then, Saddam got a helping hand from an unlikely source -- the U.S.  government. Bush had meant his call for Saddam "to step aside" as a signal of  U.S. support for a military coup against him -- not a popular uprising. An  uprising from below might set the wrong example for the populaces of the  U.S.-allied feudal dictatorships in Saudi Arabia and the other Gulf States. U.S.  officials also expressed fears that successful uprisings could lead to a breakup  of Iraq and the strengthening of the other Gulf bogeyman, Iran. U.S. military  officials refused to meet with emissaries of the rebels. And U.S. forces stood  by as Saddam's government, officially violating the terms of the cease-fire  agreement, mounted a counterattack. When Saddam's forces dropped firebombs on  fleeing rebels near the southern Iraqi city of Kerbala, American planes  patrolled high above, surveilling the attack.   In the wake of all the slaughter and destruction, George Bush  promised that Desert Storm would usher in a "new world order." But the new order  looked quite a bit like the old order. In Kuwait, U.S. bayonets restored to power the ruling al-Sabah  family, a feudal dynasty. Bush had made much about the rights of the Kuwaiti  people to determine their own destiny free from Iraqi rule. But in restoring the  al-Sabahs to the throne, Bush restored a political system which allowed only 3  percent of Kuwaiti residents any political rights at all. Women still can't vote  in Kuwait. As soon as the al-Sabahs returned, they launched a reign of terror  against Palestinian "guest workers," whom the al-Sabahs accused of pro-Iraq  sentiments. Kuwaiti police rounded up thousands. They summarily executed  hundreds of them. Kuwait expelled more than 400,000 Palestinian workers -- many  of whom suffered under the Iraqi occupation -- from the country. Human rights  organizations denounce Kuwait's disregard for elementary human  rights. By the end of March 1991, Saddam had put down the Shiite/Kurdish  rebellion. The immediate result was a humanitarian catastrophe that dwarfs even  the horrible situation in Kosovo today. As many as 3 million Kurds fled into  Iran and Turkey. When destroying Iraq, the coalition air forces flew one raid a  minute. In the first week of the Kurds' torment in makeshift camps in the  mountains, those same forces could manage only 10 flights. The total relief for  Kurds that Congress approved in April 1991 amounted to about eight hours of  spending on the war. When the U.S. announced Operation Provide Comfort, it used  the safeguarding of Kurds to establish a military occupation of northern  Iraq. With that as a backdrop, it's amazing that any Iraqi protests.  But  they do protest and they are protesting all over the country and building up to  what they hope is a huge turnout on Friday. Hoping for.  Enter Moqtada.
   AFP reports Iraq's own groundhog,  Moqtada al-Sadr, has returned to Iraq -- it must be spring. And guess what?  He  wants to put the brakes on protests.  Did Iran dispatch him?  Michael S. Schmidt and Yasir Ghazi (New York  Times) say that he and Grand Ayatollah Ali al-Sistani issued a call  today to ask that protests be delayed. This is a reversal on protests from last  week for Moqtada and a reversal from Sunday for al-Sistani.  Moqtada has an  'answer.'  What is it?  Alsumaria TV reports al-Sadr's proposing "a one  week referendum in all provinces of Iraq including Kurdistan on February 28."   Wow! A Moqtada referendum! Who wouldn't want that!!!! March 7, 2010, Iraq held  elections. Ayad Allawi's Iraqiya bloc came out with the most votes but Nouri was  determined to hold on to the prime minister post.  In April, al-Sadr held his  own elections to see who his bloc should vote.  From the April 7th  snapshot:     Moqtada al-Sadr's bloc won 40 seats in the Parliament. Kadhim Ajrash and  Caroline Alexander (Bloomberg News)  report that Ibrahim al-Jaafari "won 24 percent of  the 428,000 ballots cast in the internal referendum, ahead of al-Sadr's second  cousin, Jafar Muhammad Baqir al-Sadr, who obtained 23 percent, Sadrist spokesman  Salah al-Ubaidi said today in the southern city of Najaf." Al Jazeera  notes that Nouri al-Maliki received 10% of the vote  and Ayad Allawi 9%. The US military invaded Iraq in March 2003 (and still hasn't  left).    So Moqtada staged a referendum and the people's will would be followed!   Except it wasn't.  al-Sadr got credit for being a "king maker" for tossing his  support behind Nouri al-Maliki.  It would be different this go round how?  Don't  expect everyone to follow Moqtada al-Sadr and with an already weakening hold on  his base (due to his most recent lay over in Iraq), it's probably not the best  time for him to be tossing around "referendum" and inviting people to think back  to last April.   Al Rafidayn reports that today UN  Secretary-General's Special Envoy to Iraq, Ad Melkert says that the "differences  between the Arabs and the Kurds in northern Iraq" need to be resolved.  You  think? And how nice of Melkert to suddenly remember that issue . . . just as the  region is alive with protests.  Sky News reports Halabja is where hundreds of  protestors marched today and shots were exchanged with the Mayor insisting the  protesters did the shooting.  If you were being asked to step down by the  protesters, you'd probably work overtime to portray them poorly as well.  One  police officer died, another was injured. Sky News notes, "But protesters,  speaking on condition of anonymity for fear of arrest, insisted that no-one at  their rally was carrying weapons. They said that police fired into the air and  the casualties were caused when the bullets fell downwards." Jack Healy teams with Namo Abdulla for a report  on this and it's confusing because he tells us that "thousands of people" "over  the past week" have been protesting in the Kurdistan region.  But this is the  same Healy who took part in mocking the protests and insisting they were small.      Joao  Silva's earlier comment about the way the Iraqi government attempts to block  images from reaching the public (especially international audiences) is  included in the report Human Rights Watch issued yesterday, [PDF format warning]  "At a Crossroads: Human Rights in  Iraq Eight Years After the US-led Invasion" -- and let's excerpt from  the section on journalism:
 Murders,  assaults, and threats continue against writers for doing their
 jobs. Government officials, political party figures,  and militias may all be responsible for the violence, intended to silence some and intimidate the  rest. New obstacles to the free exchange  of information have emerged in the period since 2007: the rising number of  libel suits lodged by government  officials against journalists, and increasingly restrictive regulations that constrain their professional  activity. Legislation intended to create additional protections for journalists has been  stalled for more than a year and is unlikely to move forward any time soon.
 Iraq is obligated to respect the right to freedom of  expression of all persons under international  law and Iraq's constitution. However, its national laws and regulations are  inconsistent with these obligations. As  Human Rights Watch has documented in this report, the Iraqi government can use these laws to revoke or  suspend broadcasting licenses and bring  charges against individuals.
 Two  pieces of legislation designed to facilitate the work of journalists are stalled  in Iraq's parliament, the Council of  Representatives: the Access to Information Law, which ensures the right of journalists to obtain public information,  and the Journalists' Protection Law, which aims to protect media workers and compensate  them for injuries sustained while working. Local press freedom advocates and journalists  expressed concerns that the Journalists'  Protection Law should apply broadly and protect all journalists including those  working in new media. The law currently defines  "journalist" narrowly as someone who works for an established news outlet and is affiliated  with the Iraqi Journalists' Syndicate.
 [. . .]
 Journalists  who uncover corruption or criticize senior government officials are at  particular risk of abuse.Two television presenters, famous in Iraq for  provocative shows that criticize the government, said they had been beaten by security officials on  different occasions over the past two years.  Human Rights Watch viewed one video filmed by  his cameraman in which Iraqi security  officials punched one of the presenters and attempted to drag him into a van  during a taping on a busy Baghdad street  in 2009.
 Since the two presenters are  well known, security forces on the streets of Baghdad can easily recognize them. In the fall of 2009, they said  police detained the pair for allegedly not properly stopping at a Baghdad checkpoint. One officer  slapped the passenger on the head and  shouted, "You Ba'athist!" Six or seven police dragged them out of the car,  kicking and beating them. The police  arrested and took them to a police station. Although the police officially charged them with running a checkpoint, the  line of questioning during their interrogation was political. An officer spat on one of  the journalists and asked them, "Why do  you incite uprisings against the government?" and "Why do you glorify Saddam?"  The
 police dropped the charges and  released the pair after their television station  intervened.
 
 
 A journalist tells HRW, "In Basra, security forces act with complete  disdian and disrespect for journalists."  Another, also in Basra explains that  security forces detained them and confiscated their equipment for no reason last  year.  Nouri's been prime minister since 2006.  He can't blame it on those who  came before him.  And while the US media never wanted to address reality (AFP  and BBC did address it), Nouri came to power promising to attack the media.  His  'four-point initiative' (apparently now completely forgotten) that was going to  curb violence never did that.  But US outlets gushed over it.  They reduced it  to a three-point plan, though.  They didn't convey to US audiences that one of  the points was curbing the media, restricting freedom of the press. (This was in  the fall of 2006.  In the summer of 2006, he was touting a seven-objective plan.  Before that, in May 2006, Nouri had a 24-point plan.  As with most things he's  proposed, all went no where.)  The four-point initiative included a governmental  media oversight body which would monitor reporting for that pesky 'bias' known  as truth.     Reuters notes the following violence  from Tuesday: a Mosul bombing left four people injured, a Mosul roadside bombing  left ten people wounded, two Ramadi roadside bombs left five people injured and  a Shirqat roadside bombign injured one police officer; and for today's violence  they note that a Mosul roadside bombing claimed the life of 1 Iraqi soldier (two  more injured) and that a Baghdad home invasion in which 1 Christian male was  stabbed to death. Vatican Radio reports,  "The European Union Council on Monday issued a statement denouncing intolerance,  discrimination and violence on the basis of religion or belief, which  specifically condemned acts of violence against Christians and their places of  worship." Religious minorities have been targeted throughout the Iraq War. The  latest wave of targeting Iraqi Christians began October 31st with the assault on  Our Lady of Salvation Church in Baghdad causing many Iraqi Christians in Baghdad  and Mosul to flee to northern Iraq or another country.
   The Iraq War hits the 8 year mark next month.  That's a long war with a lot  of details.  Molly Ivins and Lou Dubose noted in Bushwhacked: Life in George  W. Bush's America, "The most serious split between ourselves and our allies  was over the war in Iraq.  As White House chief of staff Andrew Card observed,  'You don't roll out a new product in August,' so it was September 2002 before  the administration officially announced it planned to attack a country that had  not attacked us or anyone else."  Two weeks ago, during a phone conversation  with a friend (poli sci professor, leftist), I mentioned Card's statement in  passing -- related to the current White House -- and he didn't remember it.  I  had to jog his mind (we'd discussed it in real time -- I have a memory like an  elephant).  He's smart, publishes papers and has a lot of things on his mind and  had forgotten that moment.  Which is why refreshers may be needed.  On this  week's Law  and Disorder, Scott Bonn of Drew University discussed the early stages  of the war and the selling of it with Michael Ratner, Michael S. Smith and Heidi  Boghosian.  As a refresher, it may be of value to someone.  And I think the  show's almost always worth listening to and one of the top five shows on public  radio. But the segment didn't make it for me.  If you're claiming you've  developed a new "integrated and interdisciplinary theory," you should be able to  use that "integrated and interdisciplinary theory."  I did not find his book  helpful or needed. I thought it was a total waste.  If the one of the main  points of the book is that the Iraq War is wrong, then what does that say for  today?   The book said nothing.  It's nothing but grudge f**king masking for  scholarship -- and it's not a theory.  A theory -- even in poli sci -- is tested  and all Bonn has is a hypothesis.  (An academic who does not know the difference  isn't much of an academic.)   The Iraq War continues.  Your grudge f**king didn't do a damn thing.  It  gave us a synopsis, a "last time on Gossip Girl" -- several seasons old. It  offers nothing for today.  It is no help at all to ending the Iraq War and Bonn  can't even admit that the Iraq War goes on. I don't have time for that crap.  He  would probably argue (and makes this point in both the book and on the show)  that if you don't learn from history, you're doomed to repeat it.     Repeat what?   The Iraq War has not ended.  Bonn can't even use that tired bromide  correctly.  The point of "learn from history" is that if you don't learn, you  will be trapped in a repeating cycle for years and years.  The Iraq War has not  ended.  I don't know how else to put it.  In the truest sense of that bromide,  you're dealing with past events, not current ones, not ongoing ones -- that's  what the term "history" in that sentence means.   Michael Ratner gave him a chance to somehow bring it to something beyond  Bush bashing.  All he could offer was he respects Barack Obama.  Well good but  don't pretend you wrote a book worth reading about the Iraq War because if  you're truly appalled by it, you're not just appalled it started 8 years ago,  you're also appalled it continues.  I don't have time to obsess over the past.   I'm not going to forgive the War Criminals of the previous administration but  I'm also not going to pretend that in January 2009 the Iraq War ended.    Look at the Human Rights Watch report issued this week.  Those actions  described are the result of the puppet government.  And Barack fought to keep  Nouri al-Maliki prime minister. The hosts also speak with Stephanie  Coontz. I'm sure that was  much more productive. (I was asked to note the  program, I called a friend who records it each week and said, "Play me the Iraq  segment."  That's all I heard.  He also told me that there's a lively discussion  of Clarence Thomas at the top of the show.)  Bonn was often highly uninformed.  (The world does not begin and end with the US.  If discussing polling and why  something's polled, it's not necessary to go to an outlandish  they're-out-to-get-me hypothesis if you know what other countries are pushing  for and if there's a global media mogul you're discussing, you need to be aware  of the world holdings and not think you're an expert just because you keep  mentioning one of the US holdings.)  To hear about attitudes towards the Iraq  War before and after it started (as well as today) the latest War News Radio features a  segment with Richard Sobel that's heavy on facts. Sobel, Peter Furia and Bethany  Barrett are the editors of the forthcoming (May 2011) Public Opinion and International Intervention:  Lessons from the Iraq War.   It's because the Iraq War hasn't ended that two actions are taking place.   This Friday,    Busboys & Poets, Langston room  14th & V st NW Washington DC  This report back will be to answer  questions from media and the peace movement about the recent trip back to Iraq  by members of Iraq Veterans Against the War. The war is not over but it is not the same as it was  in years past. What is the humanitarian  situation in Iraq?  How  can we do reparations and reconciliation work?  Speakers are all returning from this  delegation and include:  
 Also because the Iraq War is not over, next month there will be a march  which  A.N.S.W.E.R. and  March Forward! and others will be  taking part in this action: 
 March 19 is the 8th anniversary of  the invasion and occupation of Iraq. Iraq today remains occupied by 50,000 U.S.  soldiers and tens of thousands of foreign mercenaries.  The war in Afghanistan is raging.  The U.S. is invading and bombing Pakistan. The U.S. is financing endless  atrocities against the people of Palestine, relentlessly threatening Iran and  bringing Korea to the brink of a new war.  While the United States will spend  $1 trillion for war, occupation and weapons in 2011, 30 million people in the  United States remain unemployed or severely underemployed, and cuts in  education, housing and healthcare are imposing a huge toll on the people.  Actions of civil resistance are  spreading.  On Dec. 16, 2010, a veterans-led  civil resistance at the White House played an important role in bringing the  anti-war movement from protest to resistance. Enduring hours of heavy snow, 131  veterans and other anti-war activists lined the White House fence and were  arrested. Some of those arrested will be going to trial, which will be scheduled  soon in Washington, D.C.  Saturday, March 19, 2011, the  anniversary of the invasion of Iraq, will be an international day of action  against the war machine.  Protest and resistance actions  will take place in cities and towns across the United States. Scores of  organizations are coming together. Demonstrations are scheduled for San  Francisco, Los Angeles, Chicago, Washington, D.C., and more.  
   In legal news,  a verdict has been rendered in the case of a man who killed  his daughter. Dropping back to the November 3, 2009  snapshot:  
 In the US, Noor Faleh Almaleki has died.  The 20-year-old Iraqi woman was intentionally run over October 20th (see the  October 21st  snapshot) while she and Amal Edan  Khalaf were running errands (the latter is the mother of Noor's boyfriend and  she was left injured in the assault). Police suspected Noor's father, Faleh  Hassan Almaleki, of the assault and stated the probable motive was that he felt  Noor had become "too westernized." As noted in the October 30th  snapshot, Faleh Hassan Almaleki was  finally arrested after going on the lamb -- first to Mexico, then flying to  London where British authorities refused him entry and he was sent back to the  US and arrested in Atlanta. Karan Olson and CNN note that the judge has set the man's bail at $5 million.  Philippe Naughton (Times of London) adds, "Noor died yesterday, having failed to recover  consciousness after the attack. The other woman, Amal Khalaf, was also seriously  injured but is expected to survive. "
 
 This year the trial  finally commenced. Bill Chappel (The Two-Way, NPR)  reports, "A Phoenix jury has convicted an Iraqi immigrant of  second-degree murder [yesterday] in the death of his daughter in what  prosecutors say was an 'honor killing'." Carlin DeGuerin Miller (CBS News)  adds, "Almaleki was also convicted of aggravated assault for the  injuries suffered by the older woman. Peoria, Ariz. detective Christopher  Boughey testified that Faleh Almaleki confessed to him during a lengthy  interrogation that he did in fact intend to cause his daughter's death.  Prosecutor Laura Reckart played a recording in which Boughey and another  detective confronted Almaleki with their suspicions that he ran over Noor  Almaleki because she had become too westernized and brought disrespect to the  family." Lisa Halverstadt and Michel  Kiefer (Arizona Republic -- link has text and video) report  that sentencing was supposed to take place this afternoon, "At sentencing, he  faces 10 to 22 years in prison for second-degree murder, 5 to 15 years for  aggravated assault, and 2 to 8 ¾ years for leaving the scene of the accident.  All of those sentences would be stacked on top of each other, meaning Al-Maleki  can face 17 to 45 ¾ years in prison."  However, I'm told the sentencing is April  15th.  We'll cover the sentencing whenever it is and I'm sorry for the  confusion.
 
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