| 
Thursday, April 12, 2012.  Chaos and violence continue, the political 
crisis continues, gential mutilation gets some attention, a mayor's killed in 
Iraq, Barack Obama gets praise (yes, praise from me), and more. 
  
US President Barack Obama did a good thing today.  We're going to start on 
something other than Iraq.  The reason being US President Barack Obama did a 
good thing today and a White House friend I was speaking to on the phone a 
little earlier said, "You won't mention it, you never mention anything nice" 
about him here.  Not only will we mention it, we'll open with it.  The following 
appeared here this morning :
  
Hilary Rosen is a corporatist who has done very little for anyone except 
herself. She's also a lousy spokesperson for the Democratic Party due to her 
previous lobbying for the RIAA. But that's their problem. And I wouldn't be 
weighing in were it not for nonsense Dylan Byers (POLITICO) reports :Democratic strategist and DNC adviser Hilary Rosen 
took a swipe at Mitt Romney's wife on CNN tonight, claiming that Ann had "never 
worked a day in her life" — a statement that led to criticism on Twitter from 
not just Ann but from the Obama campaign as well."I made a choice to stay home and raise five boys. 
Believe me, it was hard work," Ann wrote in response to the comments Rosen made 
earlier in the evening on CNN's Anderson Cooper 360. Hillary Rosen 
owes Ann Romney an apology. She owes all American woman an apology. A 
stay-at-home mom is not a woman on extended vacation. It is work, it is 
tremendous work. Those of us in the feminist movement -- apparently that does 
not include Hilary Rosen -- are aware of that and made a point to note that from 
day one. The media -- especially bad TV shows written largely by men like the 
awful 30-something  and Everybody Loves Raymond  -- like to invent this 
split where feminists sneer at home makers. That's not reality. "The Politics of 
Housework" by Pat Mainardi was not decrying the fact that women had extra hours 
of leisure. It was noting the very real work required to run a home.  Ann 
Romney made a choice on how to live her life and was fortunate enough to be in a 
position to make that choice (all women aren't so fortunate -- some are 
single-mothers, some have economic issues that prevent such a choice). There is 
nothing wrong with her choice or with her life as a mother. If she had decided 
to be a mother who works outside of the home, that would have been a valid 
choice as well. Hilary Rosen's statements need to be condemned loudly. 
She needs to be rebuked. What she said is offensive to all women, regardless of 
what choice we make or we're forced into. Rosen's remarks are sexist and 
divisive and I'm not in the damn mood to see the sexism we endured in 2008 
flourish again. Those of us who are feminists need to stand together and say, 
"It's not okay, Rosen." It's not okay, it's not acceptable. My apologies 
to Ann Romney that someone who will (wrongly) be seen as a feminist made such 
insulting remarks. They do not represent feminism and they are not appropriate. 
I don't know Ann Romney, have never met her, but from the press it would appear 
she's been very happy with her choice. I'm happy for her.
-------------------------- 
  
That is from this morning.  Mary Bruce (ABC News -- link is text and video) 
reports  that President Barack Obama has rejected Rosen's comments and stated 
"there's no tougher job than being a mom.  Anybody who would argue otherwise, I 
think, probably needs to rethink their statement."  Good for Barack.  
  
Good for Michelle Obama who had responded to the nonsense assertion (by 
Rosen) by 10:00 am this morning on her Twitter feed: "Every mother works hard, 
and every woman deserves to be respected."  That was a strong and graceful 
message.  Good for Michelle Obama. 
  
Good for David Axlerod and Jim Messina who publicly rejected it last 
night.  Good for the Republican female senators that stood up for Ann Romeny -- 
and for all women -- in a press call today.  I'm sorry, I haven't been following 
that story, I know (from a friend at CBS News) that Senator Kelly Ayotte was 
one.  Good for her and the other women.  (I'm also aware that they don't think 
Rosen was acting alone or independently.  I'll leave that for someone else to 
decide.) Thank you to Michelle Obama, to David Axelrod, to Jim Messina, to Kelly 
Ayotte and everyone else who took it seriously including the president. 
  
Those are the praises.  Now the idiots.  A friend at CBS News tells me that 
there is one article after another about how feminists were silent.  I wasn't 
silent.  I'm a feminist.  I'm sure the many women with websites in our community 
will note it in some form tonight.  Like me, they're not really following the 
race or, if they are, like Trina, they're blogging about  Jill 
Stein's campaign.  But as was pointed out to me -- by a non-feminist male with 
CBS News -- this silence is why the image of 'feminists don't care about home 
makers' can take root.  I don't control the feminist movement or feminist 
bloggers.  I am sure some others had to have weighed in.  But who got 
attention?  Zerlina's bad post at Feministing  was 
mentioned.
  
According to Zerlina, "the real magic started when Ann Romney" went on to 
Twitter and saw "it as an opening to restart the 'mommy wars' of the 1990s." She 
did no such thing and posts like that don't help feminism.  Ann 
Romney acknowledged today her good fortune to have been able to have made that 
choice, she noted that not every woman had that chance and she talked about how 
all choices were valid.  
  
Zerlina wasn't funny or cute or -- most importantly -- helpful to 
feminism.   Ann Romeny came off as more of a feminist than you today.  (And Ann 
Romney may be a feminist.  I don't know.  I've never spoken to her.) Zerlina can 
take comfort in that Joan Walsh, as always, carries the torch for 
stupidity at Salon .  Having distorted and outright lied with her 
coverage of the late Trayvon Martin (see Bob Somerby's archives ), you'd think Walsh would learn 
when to close her mouth and take a seat, but that would be crediting her with 
far more intelligence than she has.
  
As usual, Joan's got a 'quote' but it's not really a quote.  A quote is 
what someone said.  Joan's edited it, as usual, so that it is different than 
what was said.  Joan Walsh should have been kicked out of Salon a long, long 
time ago.  You can watch Ann Romney here (link is video) .  I 
don't watch Fox News, I can't find a transcript so I'm providing one but I don't 
know the name of the woman she's speaking to.  
  
Ann Romney:  My career choice was to be a mother. And I think all 
of us need to know that we need to respect choices that women make.  Other women 
make other choices -- to have a career and raise a family which I think Hilary 
Rosen has actually done herself.  I respect that. That's wonderful.  But you 
know, there are other people that have a choice. We have to respect women in all 
those choices that they make.  And, by the way, let me give a shout out to all 
the Dads that are at home raising kids.  This is obviously an awesome 
responsibility to raise children. It's, to me, the most important thing, we can 
do.  I will tell you that Mitt said to me more times than you can imagine, "Ann, 
your job is more important than mine." He was making money and doing the things, 
raising funds and helping other companies and he would come home and say, "Ann, 
your job is more important than mine."  
  
I'm holding up the roundtable for the gina & krista roundrobin (meaning 
everyone in the community will be late posting due to me).  So I can't do a full 
transcript.   But there was nothing insulting in Ann Romney's remarks.  "Look I 
know what it's like to struggle. Maybe I haven't struggled as much financially 
as some people have. I can tell you and promise you that I have struggled in my 
life."  Joan edits that quote down to  "I know what it's like to struggle." And 
having lied like the piece of trash she is, Joan Walsh then wants an 
apology. 
  
Joan, you deserve a public stoning.  And you haven't walked in Ann's shoes 
and hopefully you never will, you will never have to raise children while 
dealing with your own illness or fear of being unable to do all you need to as a 
parent due to your illness.  Joan Walsh is a disgusting person.  She's allowed 
partisanship to turn her into the worst stereotype of a woman and all to attack 
another woman.  We saw that in 2008.  It needs to stop and it needs to stop 
now.  And Joan Walsh needs to be called out loudly for her 'creative' 
'reporting.' 
  
  
This should have been about women.  Barack got it.  Again, praise to Barack 
for that, he earned it.   
  
But instead we got Joan Walsh or  Zerlina -- writing on one of the most 
prominent feminist websites -- who saw this as an opportunity to attack Ann 
Romney and other women.   And then Zerlina wants to call it a "faux controversy" 
(apparently reading from the Hilary Rosen Handbook).  How dare you? 
  
What feminist would ever say that issues about choice were a "faux 
controversy"? James Downie (Washington Post) puts  
quotes around controversy.  So, he's an ass and an idiot. Ruth Marcus makes an idiot out of herself  as well 
though I don't think we'd mistake her a feminist either. Rosen did not say the 
right thing the wrong way, Ruth Marcus. (Marcus: "Hilary Rosen made a legitimate 
point the wrong way.") How dare you suggest that because a woman makes a choice 
-- one that as feminist we're supposed to support -- to be a stay-at-home mom 
that she's not smart enough to know about the economy.
  
I'm not in the damn mood, let's strip away the nonsense and get to what 
Hilary Rosen's remarks are about. 
  
The subtext of Rosen's remarks is: A woman who stays home is not smart, is 
not able to navigate the world, is not a full person, is but an appendage of a 
man. 
  
Now that description, I can remember hearing that sort of thing said about 
women when I was very young.  And you know who said?  Men.  And that's what the 
feminist movement fought against.  So I'm not in the mood at this late date to 
hear the sexist insults come from women. 
  
Any woman who is a stay-at-home mother has just as much chance of being 
aware of 'the world around' as does any other person on the face of the planet.  
How dare you suggest that their experiences and their work isn't valid and 
doesn't matter in the grown up world, in the public sphere.  That's what Rosen's 
remarks do.  That's what those remarks did when they came out of a man's mouth.  
There is no excuse for it. 
  
And, yes, Ann Romney's proud of raising five children, why shouldn't she 
be? 
  
I'm just not in the mood.  I'm sorry you're all so damn bitter and 
disappointed in your own lives.  That has to be the reason that you're slamming 
Ann Romney.  She defined her job -- her main job -- as raising her children.  
That's her job.  Let her have pride in it.  I worked outside of the home and I 
take pride in a number of projects I worked.  I also raised kids.  I take pride 
in the fact that they turned out well in spite of me.  (Truly, they deserve all 
the credit for the way they turned out.)  
  
Where is the bitterness coming from?  I worked outside the home.  I hear 
Ann Romney take pride in her choice to be a stay-at-home mom and I'm not 
threatened by that, I'm not offended by it, I don't see it as a judgment on my 
choices.  I don't know her age, I'd guess we're close to the same age and so 
you've got two women and we made two different choices and we're both happy with 
our choices.  What's to go negative on Ann Romney in her remarks today? I'm not 
hearing a judgment or stone cast at me.  So why are so many being defensive and 
attacking her.  She's happy with her life, I'm happy for her.  I'm happy with my 
life, I'm sure she'd be happy for me. 
  
In 2008, it was acceptable to call Hillary Clinton and Sarah Palin the 
c-word.  It was accepted and treated as okay.  Hillary was called a "bitch" on 
air, on CNN and that was acceptable. Sandra Bernhardt worked Palin into her act 
saying that African-American men should gang-rape Palin.  Which was not only 
anti-woman, it was rather racist that when casting for the part of "Rapist," 
Bernhardt's first thought was, "African-American men!"  We could do a whole week 
of snapshots that were nothing but examples of all the sexism in 2008 aimed at 
women who dared to run for higher office (in Hillary's case, the highest 
office).  As I said this morning, I'm not going to stand for it a replay of that 
this year and America shouldn't stand for it either. 
  
Hilary Rosen did not choose her words poorly.  (And, be honest, it's not 
that she forgot to say "work at home."  She stated Ann Romney had never worked a 
day in her life.  That was an insult and it was intended as such.  This was much 
more than I 'forgot to include work without pay.')  She offered a point of view 
that was sexist, a point of view that argues that women who do not work outside 
the home don't know how hard it is, don't know what the real world's like.  
That's the point she was making and how she was attempting to discredit Ann 
Romney.  If Hilary Rosen had a brain, she'd have woken up this morning and said, 
"I am so sorry."  And then everyone could have moved on to something else.  
Instead, she took to the Huffngton Post justifying her remarks. There is no 
justification.   
  
She was wrong.  She should have said that this morning and offered an 
apology.  
  
There's been no real apology.  I've been arguing with friends over that 
(reporters and producers and editors see Rosen's words late this afternoon as an 
apology).  Lucy Madison (CBS News) reports  that Rosen told 
Wolf Blitzer today, "I apologize Working moms, stay at home moms, they're both 
extremely hard jobs."  Good.  Glad you grapsed that basic.  But that's not where 
it ended.  You have not taken away the sexist implication that a stay-at-home 
mother isn't a full person, a grown up who can understand the economy and 
certainly has just as much right as any other woman or man to discuss it.
  
Rosen made it worse by telling Blitzer that "we are all sort of falling 
victim to this amazing crashing political machine in this campaign, to move awy 
from the real issues . . ."   
  
The real issues?  
  
The right of every woman to make their own choices aren't real 
issues? 
  
Rosen could have argued, "I applaud Ann Romney for her decision to 
stay-at-home and raise her children.  She seems to be very happy with that 
choice.  My concern is that her husband's proposed policies might make it 
difficult for other women who want to be stay-at-home mothers to do the same 
because I believe his policies would adversly effect the earning power of most 
couples and force some women who would choose to be stay-at-home moms to work 
outside the home instead." 
  
But to say that these aren't real issues? These are the issues of the 
feminist movement. Thank you, Hilary Rosen, for insulting all the work so many 
women have done to establish that a woman had a right to choose her path.  
  
  
Does she not get how insulting that is?  How insulting to the feminist 
movement? 
  
Some of us -- including me -- strongly believe that all employers should 
provide on-site day care.  Sorry, Hilary Rosen, that's a real issue.  And it's a 
real issue if you disagree with me.  If you think I'm wrong on this, that's your 
opinion, and you're voicing it because whether or not there is on-site day care 
is a real issue to you as well.  You're not in favor of it, I am, these are real 
issues we are debating. 
  
Everything Hillary Rosen has said since last night's interview has been an 
insult.  She should have simply stated, "I was wrong. I am sorry.  Please accept 
my apology and I'm going to take a few days to reflect on this before saying 
anything else."  
  
Instead, she's offered 'apologies' where she blames Ann Romney (if her 
husband didn't bring Ann up, Rosen insists, she never would have!), offers 
insulting remarks and thinks she's apologized? 
  
How did Hilary Rosen teach her own kids to apologize? 
  
I taught my children: You say you're sorry, you ask if you can do anything 
to make it better. 
  
Apparently Hilary Rosen taught her kids: You say you're sorry and then 
spend 30 minutes explaining to them why it was their fault to begin with. 
  
This is not a 'faux' controversy about made up issues.  This is about the 
rights of women and if Rosen has a problem with Ann Romney's comments on the 
economy, she should address those, not play 
pat-the-stay-at-home-mommy-on-the-head-and-say-you're-so-pretty.  Her remarks 
today have made it clear that she was stating not just that stay-at-home moms 
don't work but that they're not really full adults, they can't grasp the 
economy, those 'hair-brained' gals.  Her remarks and her attitude are 
insulting. 
  
Again, praise for Barack from me. He could have been silent.  I'm glad he 
wasn't.  And Michelle Obama handled it with strength and grace, so good for her 
too. Excuse me, Michelle handled it with strength, grace and wisdom.  Strong 
applause for her from me today. 
  
  
Now to Iraq, where the violence never ends. Alsumaria reports  that 
72 people were arrested by Iraqi forces yesterday, 1 guard was killed outside 
Baquba, a Baquba home bombing killed a husband and wife and their three children 
and 1 person was shot dead in Kirkuk. In another report  they 
identify the man in the Baquba bombings as Mayor Younis Youssef Ibrahim. And they note  that early 
this morning the home of the chair of the Diwaniyah security committee was 
targeted with dynamite. Though the house was damaged, no one was harmed. 
Meanwhile Al Rafidayn reports  two bombings in 
Baquba this morning have left fifteen people injured.  Sameer N. Yacoub (AP) notes  an armed 
attack outside Kirkuk on a police patrol which left 2 police officers dead and 
three more injured. AFP adds  that 3 civilians were killed in 
the attack and three more were left injured.
  
Staying on the topic of violence, we move over to the death penalty.  
Tuesday, the UN Secretary-General's Special Envoy to Iraq appeared before the 
United Nations Security Council to brief on the latest developments (see Tuesday  and Wednesday 's snapshots).  He also submitted a 
written report entitled "Second report of the Secretary-General pursuant to 
resolution 2001 (2011)."  Page 7-8, Section C ("Human rights activities") 
includes this:From December 2011 to February 2012, there were 80 
executions, compared to 68 for January to November 2011.  Those executed, most 
of whom had been convicted under anti-terrorism laws, included one foreign 
national and at least one woman.  UNAMI requested the Ministry of Justice, the 
Ministry of Human Rights and the Higher Judicial Council to provide details 
concerning individuals executed and the charges on which they had been 
convicted, but no information has been forthcoming.  On 24 January, the United 
Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights issued a statement expressing concern 
over trial standards in Iraq and the use of the death penalty, urging the 
Government of Iraq to suspend its implementation.
  
  
Hala Kareem (NIQASH) reports on the death penalty 
including noting that it is popular in Iraq with officials and thought to be 
popular with the people.  Kareem offers these numbers: 
  
While United Nations figures suggest that more than 1,200 people 
have been senteced to death in Iraq since 2004. Figures obtained by NIQASH from 
the Ministry of Justice indicate that from 2004 up until the end of 2011, 1145 
people were sentenced to death and around 250 have been executed, 84 of them in 
2010. Those numbers would have increased due to executions in late 2011 and 
early 2012, totalling at least 63. 
The Iraqi government justifies the executions by arguing that only 
the death penalty can deter terrorist acts.  And somewhat unusually, this 
sentiment is iterated by the Iraqi Minstry of Human Rights.  According to a 
Ministry spokesperson, Kamil Amin, death by hanging is suitable as long as there 
has been a fair trial. 
  
Violence in Iraq also includes genital mutilation.  Though there have been 
efforts to portray this as a problem exclusive to the Kurdistan Regional 
Government, the problem goes beyond that.  MESOP  sent the following press release to the 
public e-mail account:
  
For the first time, an empirical study proved that female genital 
mutilation is also prevalent in parts of Iraq beyond the borders of the Kurdish 
Region. WADI and the local women's rights organization PANA have conducted an 
in-depth research about the existence and background of female genital 
mutilation (FGM) in Kirkuk. They interviewed 1212 women above the age of 14 and 
asked each of them 61 questions. 
Two years ago, WADI did a similar research  in Kurdish Northern 
Iraq which revealed an alarmingly high prevalence rate of more than 72%. Around 
the same time, Human Rights Watch published a qualitative study  which backs and 
complements WADI's results. Meanwhile, after extensive protests and lobby 
efforts from activists and women's rights groups (see notably the campaign STOP 
FGM in Kurdistan ), the Regional Government has adopted a legal ban of FGM and 
other forms of violence against women and children. 
 
Not so in Southern and Central Iraq, which also comprises the 
multi-ethnic, oil-rich city of Kirkuk. The public authorities assume that FGM is 
non-existent outside the Kurdish Region. 
The new Kirkuk study proves this assumption to be utterly false. 
According to its findings, 38.2% of Kirkuki women live with the consequences of 
FGM. 
With 65.4%, Kurdish women are the most affected ethnic group. Arab 
women hold 25.7% and Turkmen women 12.3%. 
Focusing on the religious affiliations, 40.9% of the Sunnis, 23.4% 
of the Shi'ites and 42.9% of the Kaka'is are genitally mutilated. 
No Christians were found to be affected. 
The FGM prevalence rate among girls under the age of 20 is a "mere" 
15% which may indicate that the practice is about to decrease gradually. Among 
women aged 60-70, it is up to 80%. 
When it comes to the reasons for the practice, the answers are 
evenly divided between "tradition" and "religion", i.e. Islam. 
In most cases, FGM means the amputation of the clitoris. Some women 
however – in the Arab-dominated countryside it is 21% – experienced more severe 
types, including the cutting of the inner and/or outer labia. 
The Kirkuk findings prove that FGM is a common practice also among 
non-Kurds – Sunnis and Shi'ites alike. This data constitutes strong evidence for 
the assumption that FGM is prevalent throughout Iraq. Millions of women and 
girls are likely to be affected by these grave human rights 
violations. 
Therefore, we call on the Baghdad parliament to address the issue 
as soon as possible, support public awareness and discuss further ways to 
counter female genital mutilation in Iraq. The complete study will be published 
in June 2012. 
  
Wadi e.V. – Association for Crisis Assistance  and Development 
Co-Operation Phone: +49-69-57002440  
  
Wadi Office Sulaimaniyah/Northern Iraq                
 
Phone: +964-7701588173 7 Pana Kirkuk   Phone: 
+964-7701512007 
  
  
Some Iraqis manage to physically escape the violence.  Amir Al Tamimi (GS Summit) reports  on 
"Moon," an Iraqi woman whose husband worked for US troops and was kidnapped and 
killed for doing so.  Her parents and sister had already moved to Egypt due to 
the violence.  She was now a widow and alone with threatening phone calls 
declaring her late husband a traitor and spy.  She went to Jordan but was not 
allowed to work (refugees who flee to Jordan or Syria are not allowed to work -- 
those who do get paid under the table) and returned to Iraq.  Her family had 
been accepted in the US and her father "received assistance from Catholic 
Charities  and Survivors of Torture International  in persuading Rep. Duncan 
Hunter to sponsor a bill to permit her to reunite with her family, after four 
long years of separation." She states, "I am telling my story to show the 
people, wnever there is hope, there is a chance to have a new life."
  
  
  
What the brutal 'honour killing' of a girl in Iraq's Kurdistan 
province shows about the country's headlong descent into sectarian violence 
 
Houzan Mahmoud, an Iraqi Kurd who lives in Britain, is the overseas 
representative of the Organisation of Women's Freedom in Iraq and initiator of 
the Campaign against Killing and Stoning of Women in Kurdistan 
When 17-year-old Doa appealed to the men to stop their attack, she 
was completely ignored. Surrounded by an excited, baying crowd of dozens of 
mature, burly men, she was beaten to death. Slowly. Having thrown her to the 
ground, they surrounded her and began a barrage of stones and chunks of 
concrete, mostly aimed at her head, deliberate blow after deliberate blow. 
Periodically she was disdainfully kicked by some of her assailants. Her 
suffering was dragged out for half an hour, long enough for many of the killers 
to film her death throes on their mobile phone videocams. 
Doa's crumpled figure now adorns several websites. This horror-porn 
emanates from Iraq, in particular, from Iraqi Kurdistan, my own homeland and one 
that I believe is descending into the wider maelstrom of religious sectarianism 
that is tearing post-Saddam Iraq apart. And in Doa's death, I think we can see a 
terrifying portent of a future Iraq increasingly eviscerated by primeval 
sectarian hatreds. But let us go back to poor Doa. 
She was a 17-year-old girl called Doa Khalil Aswad. This teenager 
came from the Yezidi community in northern Iraq, one of the country's religious 
minorities, an ancient Kurdish faith with strong links to Sufism and non-Islamic 
ancient Babylonian beliefs. Her misdemeanour, her 'crime', was to fall in love 
with a local Sunni Muslim boy. And her fate was sealed, it seems, when, one day 
last month she spent a night away from her family home. Rumours circulated that 
she had 'converted' to Islam and suddenly there was a witch-hunt for the couple, 
especially for the female now deemed guilty of a 'crime of honour'. A Yezidi 
tribal leader in the town of Bashika initially sheltered the girl, but his house 
was stormed and in broad daylight she was dragged outside and literally stoned 
to death. The boy escaped and is said to be in hiding. 
Kurdish websites are now buzzing with postings on Doa's death and 
there are both photographs and gruesome videos of her last minutes. The videos 
show other spectator-participants holding their phones aloft, capturing their 
own trophy shots even as the girl writhes in pain in front of them. 
 
  
  
Amnesty International (now celebrating 50 years) helped get the word out on 
the above.  And yesterday, Iraqi Refugee Assistance Project  released a video 
on being gay in Iraq which the Huffington Post has posted to their 
site . and which noted that gay men in Iraq are also targeted with the 
so-called 'honor' killings. Others may have grasped that before yesterday. I 
didn't. (And am never afraid to note my ignorance.) I was aware that LGBTs in 
Iraq were sometimes killed by family members. I was not aware that it was done 
as an 'honor' killing -- which is generally done a bit more publicly or less 
secretly because the intent is to restore 'honor' by killing. 
  
  
  
Parliament barely functions. The Iraqiya bloc, comprising mostly 
Sunnis and secularists, won the most seats of any party in the 2010 election and 
subsequently joined a coalition government. But the animosity of its Shia 
partners, who jointly hold more seats, has in effect pushed Iraqiya into 
opposition. Its nominee as deputy prime minister, Saleh al-Mutlaq, fell out with 
Mr Maliki last year over the lack of Sunnis in the security forces. He claims 
that tanks then surrounded his house, forcing him to flee the 
country. 
The prime minister also chased away Tareq al-Hashemi, the Sunni 
vice-president, by issuing an arrest warrant in connection with terrorism 
charges. Mr Hashemi took refuge in the Kurdish north and is now abroad. He says 
that three of his bodyguards, who stand accused by Mr Maliki of running a Sunni 
death squad, have been tortured to death in police custody. 
Kurdish leaders are also angrier than usual with Mr Maliki. The 
president of the autonomous Kurdish area, Masoud Barzani, has accused the prime 
minister of building a million-man army loyal only to himself, and of violating 
a 2010 power-sharing deal. Mr Barzani has appealed to the White House, but 
appears to have secured only limited support. The American embassy in Baghdad 
released an unprompted statement stressing its backing for a unified 
Iraq. 
  
  
  
 Al Mada reports that Iraqiya leader 
Ayad Allawi states that Prime Minister and thug Nouri al-Maliki took advantage 
of the White House's indifference to violate the Constitution and grab powers to 
intimidate and suppress political rivals. Iraqiya came in frist in the March 
2010 elections, Nouri's State of Law came in second. Allawi criticizes the 
corruption in the current government -- a non-controversial position in Iraq. 
Last year, Iraqis took to the streets protesting the government corruption. To 
distract protesters, Nouri claimed he needed 100 days to address it and then the 
problem would be solved. At the end of 100 days (all Nouri does is stall), the 
corruption was not addressed and Nouri offered more excuses and more brutality. 
Mahmoud Othman leads the Kurdish Alliance in Parliament and he states that KRG 
President Massoud Barzani's call for a national conference is in keeping with 
the needs of Iraq and what Iraqi President Jalal Talabani has been calling for. 
Since December 21st, Talabani and Speaker of Parliament Osama al-Nujaifi have 
been calling for a national conference to address the political crisis. Aswat al-Iraq reports  that Iraqiya is 
stating that there will be "a change in Iraqi political bloc if the National 
Conference" does not "rectify the process in the country." Alsumaria notes
  
that Ammar al-Hakim, leader of the Islamic Supreme Council of Iraq, states that 
many mistakes have been made in Iraq since 3002 and that this is "natural" due 
to the fact that many now participating in the process were kept out of it under 
Saddam Hussein but that the political crisis must be addressed. Al Rafidayn notes  that al-Hakim 
stated it will take courage to recognize mistkaes that have been made. The 
article also reminds that since April 6th, there has been speculation that the 
National Alliance and the Kurds have made a political agreement that would 
replace Nouri al-Maliki with Ahmed Chalibi -- an agreement everyone has public 
denied exists.  It's not a repeat, it just feels like one: Al 
Mada notes  that KRGS is sending a delegation to Baghdad to 
discuss the crisis. Yes, they did that in the fall of last year. No, it didn't 
resolve anything then. Yes, as with that time, the people involved are stating 
that they believe the delegation's dialogue can resolve the crisis. Al Rafidayn notes  that KRG 
President Massoud Barzani has repeated his concern that Iraq is currently headed 
towards a dictatorship and that, if the political crisis cannot be addressed, 
the only option would be for the Kurdish region to go with full autonomy (three 
provinces currently make up the KRG and it is a self-autonomous region). 
Barzani, who has been visiting several countries including the US, states that 
when he turns there will have to be real efforts at partnership ("sincere") and 
democracy or else the Kurds will have to decide for themselves what their future 
holds.  
  
In more distrubing power-grab news, Raheem Salman (ioL news) reports , "The 
head of Iraq's Independent High Electoral Commission (IHEC) and one of its 
members were arrested by police on Thursday on corruption charges, IHED 
officials said, in the latest apparent move for more government control of 
independent bodies.  Iraq's Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki won a court ruling in 
January 2011 that put the IHED and other entities, including the central bank, 
under cabinet supervision, raising concern over attempts to consolidate power by 
the Shi'a premier." 
Turning to the US, Senator Patty Murray is the Chair of the Senate Veterans 
Affairs Committee.  The Committee notes: 
  
  
Committee on Veterans' Affairs 
United States Senate 
112th Congress, Second Session 
Hearing Schedule 
Update: April 12, 2012 
  
Saturday, April 21, 2012 
10:30 am MST 
2465 Grant Road  
Billings, Montana 
Field Hearing: Improving Access to Quality Health Care for Rural 
Veterans 
  
Wednesday, April 25, 2012 
10 am EST 
Senate Dirksen Office Building Room 138 
VA Mental Health Care: Evaluating Access and Accessing 
Care 
  
Matthew T. Lawrence 
Chief Clerk/System Administrator 
Senate Committee on Veterans Affairs 
202-224-9126 
  
  
  
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