"Unravel #5 Continues To Unravel" (Hillary Is 44):
This late in the less than one year for implementation of the Obama health scam and new rules are still being promised, or written, or flim-flammed. On something so relatively simple as the contraception mandate the Obama flim-flammers are now declaring to a court that appears dubious that they never intended to enforce the rule they had stated they had every intention of enforcing. What is going on?:
“First, it’s interesting that the White House hasn’t announced a review of its HHS contraception mandate outside of court. As far as is publicly known, the Obama administration considered its “accommodation” in the spring of this year as its final word, and had every intention of enforcing it. Until now, the suggestion that the rule was under review was an argument intended to delay judicial scrutiny of the administration’s attempt to impose its own definition of “worship” via bureaucratic decree.We are as confused as the celibate nuns (Sisters of the Poor) that will be, or not be, forced to be provided with contraceptives or leave the United States.
This decision forces an end to that strategy. The “intense questioning” forced the administration to make what the appellate court considers a binding submission, and now has to produce a revamped rule that won’t infringe on religious liberty. It’s worth pointing out at this juncture that the Obama administration insisted that its “accommodation” didn’t infringe on religious liberty, so this concession gives the strong impression that the White House’s legal team is admitting that it in fact does infringe on the freedom of religious expression.“
The Sisters of the Poor are not the only ones confused about what is going to happen as Obama’s health scam begins to operate on the helpless populace. At businesses large and small insurance providers are holding question and answer sessions for employees. What is being heard is ugly:
“One of the first things I learned was that some of the employees were bracing for a big hit in terms of their costs. Single person coverage hadn’t changed very much – around $50 each two week pay period – and seemed fairly reasonably priced to me. But the employee plus spouse plan (2 people) had shot up more than 30% and was well over $150 per payday. The full family plan which covers children had taken an even bigger hit and was going to be costing almost $290 per paycheck. One woman who works in the computer graphics section was wandering around afterwards looking stunned, saying to three people in a row, “That’s half of my paycheck. That’s half of my paycheck. What am I going to do?”The insurance provider suggested that people beg their doctors for “samples” of drugs that doctors get from drug companies. Consumers are also advised to take refuge with discount cards. Another cost saving measure was to buy in bulk. Of course Barack Obama made a deal with the drug companies in 2009 to not allow Medicare to negotiate prices – something that would have brought down costs.
There were other changes to the cost structure, with co-pays, deductibles and maximum out of pocket expenses being altered. None of these new price plans seemed to be very popular.”
At last Hillary Is 44 is back -- seven days off? At least the post is worth reading.
And true. That's what we're hearing from HR about the costs for our plans as well.
I'm lucky in a way that most people are not. I will see my premium skyrocket (it covers my three kids and myself). But I don't have the bills most people do.
Here in California, the kids and I live at C.I.'s huge home and she won't take any money for it. So I've been able to put a ton away for the kids' college funds. I was also able to buy a new car without breaking a sweat. So I'm really lucky. I won't do without and the kids won't do without.
But not everybody gets to live rent and utilities free and also doesn't have to worry about the costs of any meals they eat in the house.
If I were back in Atlanta at my house (which is paid for and which a relative's in right now)?
Even with the house being paid for, I'd be unable to make it. No way at all. The utilities and the food budget and other things? I wouldn't be able to make it.
People who meet with HR about ObamaCare and premiums do tend to wander the hall with a look of panic or just dazed.
And I do understand that. And if I weren't so lucky, I'd be that way too.
Even though I won't take a hit because I'm lucky, I still can't believe how much the premium is about to skyrocket.
I wonder, when it does, will idiots still be defending ObamaCare?
(We needed MediCare for all. We needed universal, single-payer. Instead, Obama is forcing us to buy bad insurance from bad carriers.)
"Iraq snapshot" (The Common Ills):
| 
Wednesday,
 December 19, 2012. Chaos and violence continue, Jalal Talabani is said 
to be in better condition and prepping to transfer to Germany, a report 
from UNAMI notes the lack of progress on human rights, rumors float that
 Iraq's failing power grid is actually about to be obsolete, we look at 
the government report about the attack on the US Consulate in Benghazi, 
and more.  
Today
 a report was released on the September 11, 2012 attack on the US 
Consulate in Benghazi that resulted in the deaths of Tyrone Woods, Sean 
Smith, Glen Doherty and Chris Stevens. The Senate Foreign Relations 
Committee had a classified briefing today on the report. The 
unlcassified version has been [PDF format warning] posted online at the State Dept's website.  
It's
 a damning and disturbing report that will probably most disturb those 
State Dept employees stationed overseas and their families -- including 
the largest State Dept mission overseas, the one in Iraq. As noted on 
page two of the report, "With State Department civilians at the 
forefront of U.S. efforts to stabilize and build capacity in Iraq, as 
the U.S. military draws down in Afghanistan, and with security threats 
growing in volatile environments where the U.S. military is not present 
-- from Peshawar to Bamako -- the Bureau of Diplomatic Security (DS) is 
being stretched to the limit as never before." 
It's
 hard to tell which details are the most disturbing? Take the death of 
the Ambassador Chris Stevens. His body can't be found -- is he alive or 
dead, at this point no one knows -- and, page 25 notes, after "many and 
repeated attempts to retrieve the Ambassador having proven fruitless and
 militia members warning them the SMC could not be held much longer, the
 Annex team departed the SMC, carrying with them the body of IMO [Sean] 
Smith." They left before Stevens was found -- dead or alive. Six people 
(presumably Libyans, labeled "good Samaritans" in the report) would find
 him later in the same area that "many and repeated attempts" failed to 
find him. He would be taken to the Benghazi Medical Center (the report 
states he was dead when he arrived but doctors attempted to revive him 
for 45 minutes) and when the US Embassy in Tripoli was notified that 
Stevens had been taken to the hospital? "There was some concern that the
 call might be a ruse to lure   American personnel into a trap. With the
 Benghazi Medical Center (BMC) believed to be dangerous for American 
personnel due to the possibility attackers were being treated there, a 
Libyan contact of the Special Mission was dispatched to the BMC and 
later confirmed the  
Ambassador's identity and that he was deceased." 
It
 was not safe for American diplomats and those working with the 
diplomatic coprs to be stationed in Libya. It was not safe and they 
should not have been there. Magnify that 100 times and you have Iraq 
where the State Dept has its largest presence. 
It
 was so dangerous in Libya that when the call came in that Ambassador 
Stevens was at the hospital -- remember, his whereabouts were unknown 
for hours -- the US was unable to send an American to a hospital to see 
if it was Stevens and if was alive or dead. That is appalling. That is a
 sign of how tremendously unsafe it was.  
The
 report notes that Glen Doherty and Tyrone Woods were killed in "an 
Annex building," which "came under mortar and RPG attack." Sean Smith 
and Chris Stevens apparently died from smoke inhalation. The description
 of the two of them them in a so-called safe house which was under fire 
and with only one ARSO-I (Assistant Regional Security 
Officer-Investigator) to attempt to protect them is shocking and 
chilling. 
Among
 the findings in the investigation led by former Ambassador Thomas 
Pickering and Retired General Mike Mullen (former Chair of the Joint 
Chiefs)? 
The
 attacks were security related, involving arson, small arms and machine 
gun fire, and the use of RPGs, grenades, and mortars against U.S. 
personnel at two separate facilities -- the SMC [Special Mission 
Compound] and the Annex -- and en route between them. Responsibility for
 the tragic loss of life, injuries, and damage to U.S. facilities and 
property rests solely and completely with the terrorists who perpetrated
 the attacks. The board concluded that there was no protest prior to the
 attacks, which were unanticipated in their scale and intensity.  
There is so much incompetence on display. Let's note one section. 
About
 2150 local [time], the DCM was able to reach Ambassador Stevens, who 
briefly reported that the SMC was under attack before the call cut off. 
The Embassy notified Benina Airbase in Benghazi of a potential need for 
logistic support and aircraft for extraction and received full 
cooperation. The DCM contacted the Libyan Presidnt and Prime Minister's 
office to urge them to mobilize a rescue effort, and kept Washington 
apprised of post's efforts. The Embassy also reached out to Libyan Air 
Froce and Armed Forces contacts, February 17 leadership, and UN and 
third country embassies, among others. Within hours, Embassy Tripoli 
charted a private airplane and deployed a seven-person secruity team, 
which included two U.S. military personnel to Benghazi.  
At
 the direction of the U.S. military's Africa Command (AFRICOM), DoD 
moved a remotely piloted, unarmed surveillance aircraft relieved the 
first, and monitored the eventual evacuation of personnel from the Annex
 to Benghazi airport later on the morning of September 12. 
Let's
 again note this is the unclassified report. Additional details are in 
the classified report. If there are additional details to the above, 
they need to be revealed immediately because, as it stands, everything 
in the two paragraphs above except for Chris Stevens' phone call, is 
wrong -- not a little wrong, life-threatening wrong. 
The
 scramble being described above is for an extraction. As the public 
report reads, extraction was the priority. A US Ambassador is on the 
phone with you telling you that his consulate is under attack and the 
line goes dead and your first throught is "extraction"? 
No,
 not if you're following protocol. Protocol wasn't followed as the 
unclassified report presents events. Let's be clear, even with the 
extraction, protocol wasn't followed. The scramble being described for 
several hours inside Libya but outside Benghazi? Did no one receive 
training or did they just ignore training? There are SOPs in writing 
[Standard Operation Procedure outlines] of what to do in these cases. 
There should have been no scramble on extraction, the existing SOP 
should have been followed and if someone was too stupid to know what 
that was, again, it is written down. But extraction shouldn't have been 
the Tripoli staff's chief concern. A consulate was under attack and the 
safety of the people at the consulate (and annex) should have been the 
primary concern. Doesn't matter if a number of them were CIA (and there 
were a number of CIA present). Attempting to secure their safety should 
have been the primary focus for Tripoli with   extraction being the 
secondary focus -- a distant second. 
There
 was no knowledge of what was going on, who was alive, who was dead, and
 you're focused on extraction? Let's remember too that Tripoli wasn't 
under attack. 
Valerie
 Plame's husband, former Ambassador Joe Wilson, wouldn't have made the 
mistakes that appear to have been made (the classified report will have 
more details and may explain the above). When he was going up against 
Sadam Hussein, he wouldn't have been channeling all efforts into an 
extraction while other Americans in the country were under attack. This 
is appalling. 
This is disgusting for the message it 
currently sends State Dept employees who are overseas. Let's take Iraq. 
There's an attack on the US in Basra. Baghdad gets the call and instead 
of addressing the attack and trying to ensure the security and safety of
 those under attack, Baghdad runs around like a chicken with its head 
cut off trying to figure out how to order an extraction for Baghdad. 
That
 is insane. Public hearings start tomorrow. This needs to be addressed 
and US diplomatic staff and those working to protect them in foreign 
countries need to know that, if an attack takes place, the response will
 be to rescue them, not for the unattacked to figure how to quickly 
leave the country. 
As we move over to Iraq, let's stay with government reports. The Kuwait Times offers
 "US reducing military presence in Kuwait" and that's misleading. Their 
report is based on a Congressional Research Services report [PDF format 
warning] entitled "Kuwait: Security, Reform, and US Policy."
 In fairness to them, they are documenting a report -- not about the US 
leaving Kuwait -- that is either sloppily written or intentionally 
misleading. Has the number of US troops in Kuwait (which borders Iraq) 
gone down? They've dropped down to 13,500 which is what was expected. 
The CRS report notes, "A staff report of the Senate Foreign Relations 
Committee published June 19, 2012, said that the United States will keep
 about 13,500 troops in   Kuwait as of mid-late 2012 -- somewhat less 
than 25,000 there during the U.S. presence in Iraq." We covered that 
report in the June 19th snapshot, it's [PDF format warning] "The Gulf Security Architecture: Partnership With The Gulf Co-Operation Council." So what has changed since that report was published? 
Nothing.
 Nothing has changed the Senate Foreign Relations Committee report was 
published. If there was news to be found, it was some time ago. 15,000 
as the high point has been true throughout 2012. The report in the 
Kuwait paper makes you believe there's been a development -- and that 
attitude can be found in the CRS report but that's not accurate. 
Another issue -- and like the one before, it came up in the e-mails to the public account. DM raises this job listing on Kolkata.
 The listing is under the heading "Labor jobs for US Army in Kurdistan."
 It's full time, requires knowledge of English (but not Kurdish) and 
promises "Labor jobs in Kurdistan for US Army good salary Free food 
Accomadtion reasonable service charge . . ." This isn't a job for a 
member of the US Army. That of course wouldn't be posted by a third 
party. DoD would do the assingments. What it appears to be is a job (or 
jobs) in the KRG that would be assisting the US Army. And, if the ad is 
correct (and I have no reason to believe it's not), what it appears is 
that the US government is looking for cheap labor to work with the US 
Army in the KRG. 
The
 Kurdistan Regional Government is three semi-autonoumous provinces in 
nothern Iraq. Many people live there and it is where Iraqi President 
Jalal Talabani and First Lady Hero Ibrahim Ahmed make their home. 
Today's Iraqi news cycle continues to be dominated by news and 
speculation about Jalal. The 79-year-old was rushed to a hospital in 
Baghdad late Monday evening. Nouri al-Maliki's spokespeople have stated 
Talabani was suffering a stroke. Talabani's people have not identified 
the health issue.  
This morning, All Iraq News reported
 that First Lady Hero Ibrahim Ahmed issued a statement on her husband's 
condition noting that it is improving and crediting Divine Providence 
and the medical team for the improvements. She denied that he was in a 
coma and stated that a team of doctors from Germany were due to arrive 
shortly and that they would be working with local doctors (led by the 
Chief of ICU Dr. Ayad Abass) and a team of British doctors who had 
already arrived. She stated that there was no plan to transfer her 
husband to another country for medical treatment. Hurriyet Daily News notes
 that "Turkish Prime   Minister Erdogan offered to send ambulance plane 
to Iraq to bring Talabani for treatment in Turkey." Despite the 
assertion of the First Lady, All Iraq News quoted one of Talabani's doctors saying they are planning to move him to Germany on Thursday. Kitabat also reports that there is a plan to transfer Talabani. Hours later, everyone was reporting that transfer would take place. Al Jazeera quoted
 Najmaldin Karim ("governor Iraq's Kirkuk city who is also part of the 
president's medical team) stating that the move would take place "within
 24 hours." BBC News quotes Talabani's spokesperson Barazan Sheikh Othman stating that he will leave Baghdad for Germany either tomorrow or Friday. 
Al Mada notes
 that most recently he was in Germany (back in June) and stayed there 
until September. At the time, it was stated that he was having knee 
surgery. (Which may be true.) The Iraq Times and Kitabat
 are both reporting that insiders are saying the collapse Monday night 
followed a verbal altercation with Nouri al-Maliki. According to an 
unnamed source or unnamed sources with Talabani's office, Nouri arrived 
last Monday evening at Talabani's office and as the political crisis was
 discussed, Jalal called for Nouri to lower the rhetoric (as he has done
 publicly) but he was referring to what Nouri was stating to him at that
 moment. This call to lower the rhetoric was met by a "violent 
explosion" from Nouri who called into question whether Jalal was able to
 be impartial or neutral. Nouri is said to have brought up the effort 
last spring to seek a no-confidence vote on Nouri in Parliament. Jalal 
is   said to have remained civil, asked that Nouri consider the options 
for resolving the crisis, Nouri was shown out and as soon as he was out 
of the office, Jalal complained of ill health. Naseer al-Ani is part of the president's staff and Kitabat reports on the press conference he held Turesday evening at Baghdad's Medical City Hospital noting Talabani remained in intensive care but stated he was doing better. In the press conference, he continued the policy of not identifying the president's condition and of not using the term "stroke." As Turkish Weekly notes, "a health emergency" is the popular term used by Talabani's staff. Adam Schreck (AP) observes, "Talabani's doctors have not formally said that the 79-year-old statesman suffered a stroke, though several government officials have publicly confirmed that is the case." Citing an unnamed medical source, All Iraq News states that Jalal moved his hand this morning and that this is seen as a good sign by his team of doctors. The Voice of Russia quotes one of Jalal's staff, media official Barzan Sheikh Othman, stating this morning, "Thanks be to God, the president is in good condition and he is improving hour after hour." 
Dar Addustour points out the conflicting reports yesterday and it most likely will be that way again today. Deutsche Welle notes,
 "He has suffered poor health in recent years, traveling to the US for 
heart surgery in 2008 and being treated for dehydration and fatigue in 
Jordan in 2007." Deutsche Welle also notes,
 "As a Kurd, he is seen as a mediator to bridge divisions between the 
country's majority Shiite and minotiry Sunni Muslim communities." And 
that role being empty has some worried. As Ruth noted last night: 
Jalal
 Talabani is a Kurd. The top positions of power in Iraq are the prime 
minister, the speaker of Parliament, and the president. Since 2006, 
Iraq's Constitution is voted into effect at the end of 2005 and 
Parliamentary elections are held then as well, the presidency has gone 
to Mr. Talabani (a Kurd), the Speaker has been a Sunni (since 2011 it 
has been Osama al-Nujaifi), and a Shi'ite has been prime minister (Nouri
 al-Maliki). Because of that division, which is not required in the 
Constitution, it is assumed that should Mr. Talabani step down before 
his term expire or should he pass away, the replacement selected by 
Parliament (not the temporary one before Parliament can vote) should be a
 Kurd. As C.I. explains in the snapshot, leading contenders are said to 
include Hoshyar Zebari who is the current Foreign Minister and the 
deputy in Mr. Talabani's political party (Patriotic Union of Kurdistan) 
Barham Salhi. 
Last night, Nayla Razzouk (Bloomberg News) reported: 
If
 Talabani has to step down and isn't replaced by a Kurd, that could 
cause tensions, said Marina Ottaway, a senior associate in the Middle 
East program at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, a 
Washington policy group.  "Talabani was a mediating influence because he managed to keep a foot in both camps," Ottaway said in a telephone interview. "There's no doubt he's a Kurdish nationalist, but he also was Iraq's president and he managed to straddle the line." 
Talabani's health, UPI noted,
 is an issue now because there is a "risk of a deterioration in Iraq's 
fractious and often violent politics centers of a simmering 
confrontation between government forces controlled by Prim Minsiter 
Nouri al-Maliki and Peshmerga fighters of the semiautonomous Kurdish 
enclave over disputed territory in nothern Iraq." Tensions between 
Baghdad and Erbil have never been greater. You have the unresolved issue
 of oil because Nouri never passed that oil and gas law he promised he 
would back in 2007 when he signed off on the White House benchmarks. Oil
 companies prefer the KRG at this point. That angers Nouri. The 
Constitution decreed, Article 140, that disputed areas in Iraq would be 
resolved by census and referendum..Nouri became prime minister in 2006, 
the constitution   mandated he fix the issue by 2007. He refused to 
implement Article 140. His promise had been written into the Erbil 
Agreement (US-brokered contract that ended the 8 month political 
stalemate during which Nouri threw a public tantrum because Iraqiya got 
more votes than Nouri's State of Law). On top of those crises, Nouri 
recently sent the Tigris Operation Command forces into the disputed 
areas which the Kurds saw as Nouri attempting to use force to claim the 
disputed provinces for Baghdad. 
Nuri
 al-Maliki's government in Baghdad, dominated by Shia Muslims, has 
unwisely pushed Turkey into this oily Kurdish embrace. Mr Maliki's close
 ties to Iran and support for President Bashar Assad in Syria have 
angered Turkey's government and convinced it not to rely on Iraq. The 
refuge offered by Turkey to Tariq al-Hashemi, Iraq's vice-president, who
 was sentenced to death in absentia by a court in Baghdad in September, 
has also upset Mr Maliki, who has duly insulted Turkey's leaders. In 
November his government expelled Turkey's state oil company from a block
 in Iraq, plainly out of political spite. In December he ordered his 
air-traffic controllers to deny landing rights to Turkey's energy 
minister, Taner Yildiz, who was en route to Erbil for an investor 
conference. 
Iraq's central government seems
 bent on wrecking the Kurds' thriving oil industry, saying that their 
regional government has no legal authority to export oil independently 
or sign contracts with developers. The government in Baghdad has delayed
 payments to Iraqi Kurdistan's oil producers, who say they are owed 
about $1.5 billion. Some explorers fret that they will never recoup 
their cash. Pars Kutay, an executive at Genel Energy, a Turkish 
oil-producer in Kurdistan, says that depending for payment on Iraq's 
central authorities is like "pumping oil into a black hole". Kurdish oil
 exports are now said to have collapsed to around 30,000 b/d. 
For six long years, Nouri al-Maliki has been prime minister and Iraq's got very little to show for it. In terms of investment? Joao Peixe (Oil Price) observes,
 "It has been nine years since US-led forces toppled Saddam Hussein's 
dictatorship in Iraq and yet due to various deep-routed problems few 
have capitalised on plan's to revive the nation's economy or rebuild its
 infrastructure. Even specialists in frontier markets are giving the 
Middle Eastern state a wide berth." Back in the early days of the war, 
after the US bombing had destroyed (further destroyed) Iraq's 
infrastructure, there were promises about how it would be fixed and 
fixed quickly. Iraqis still lack basic public services today. Alsumaria reports
 that the electriticy crisis has become the puzzle with no solution and 
that Iraq continues to depend upon Iran for importing electricity. 
Meanwhile the Iraq Times reports
 that despite claims that next year will see a marked improvement in 
electricity, officials are saying the reality is that the power grid is 
in danger of collapsing and that the Dawa political party (Nouri's 
political party) is decieving the people about the coming problems. The Gulf News observes,
 "Yet, despite being a country with large oil reserves wealthy enough to
 guarantee a steady income for its people, Iraq has failed to utilise 
this resource efficiently. As a matter of fact, the political changes in
 the country have only brought about an increase in corruption and an 
alarming misuse of public funds." 
Nouri certainly hasn't brought safety to Iraq. Nor has he protected human rights. UNHCR released the "Report on Human Rights in Iraq: January to June 2012" today. We'll cover the report tomorrow. Today, we'll note this from the UN News Centre: 
The
 United Nations human rights chief today called on Iraq to move towards 
abolishing the death penalty, saying – in response to the latest 
periodic report on Iraq's human rights record – that the rate of 
executions in the country this year "cannot be justified." 
"I
 would like to stress that, under international law, the death penalty 
is permitted in very limited circumstances, including after trial and 
appeal proceedings that scrupulously respect all the principles of due 
process," said the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights, Navi Pillay, in her comments on the Report on Human Rights in Iraq: January to June 2012, released today. 
"The
 number of executions so far in 2012, and the manner in which they have 
been carried out in large batches, is extremely dangerous, cannot be 
justified, and risks seriously undermining the partial and tentative 
progress on rule of law in Iraq outlined in this report," she added, 
according to a news release from the Office of the UN High Commissioner 
for Human Rights (OHCHR) and the UN Assistance Mission in Iraq (UNAMI). 
Iraq,
 which retains the death penalty for a large number of crimes, executed 
70 people in the first six months of this year, compared to 67 for the 
whole of 2011, and 18 in 2010, according to the 46-page report, produced
 by UNAMI – a UN political mission established by the UN Security 
Council in 2003 at the invitation of the Government of Iraq – in 
cooperation with OHCHR. 
"I encourage the 
Iraqi Government to declare a moratorium on all executions, with a view 
to abolishing the death penalty in the near future," Ms. Pillay said. 
The
 human rights chief also called on the Iraqi authorities to address 
other "serious human rights violations" highlighted in the report, 
which, as with earlier reports, reflects information gathered by UNAMI 
from the mission's on-site monitoring. 
Dropping back to yesterday's snapshot: 
Kitabat reports
 that, according to Nineveh Province Governor Ethel Nujaifi, a young 
girl was raped by a lieutenant in the Iraqi military. A judge ordered 
the officer's arrest but the Iraqi military has refused to turn him 
over. The Ministry of Defense is the one refusing. (The Ministry of 
Defense is headed by Nouri al-Maliki since he refused to nominate 
someone for the post and allow Parliament to confirm the nomineee.) 
Still on the topic of rape, Kitabat reports
 that Iraqiya MP Hamid al-Mutlaq revealed today that federal prosecutors
 have presented pre-liminary evidence to the Supreme Judicial Council 
that, prosecutors argue, prove that women are being raped and tortured 
in Iraqi prisons. As we noted when this scandal was breaking, Nouri has 
been very lucky and able to walk away from many scandals unscathed but 
Iraqis will not let this one pass by. Instead of attacking those who 
brought it up publicly, Nouri should have been announcing that he was 
addressing it and fixing it.  
On the rape, Alsumaria reports
 Major General Ali Furaiji, commander of the Iraqi army's second 
division, declared today that the rape is being exploited for political 
purposes. They need to learn how to damage control. The first words out 
of your mouth are sympathies for the rape victim -- especially when 
she's under the age of 18. At CounterCurrents, Dirk Adriaensens covers the prison issue noting: 
On
 12 December the Sadrist movement submitted a request to the Public 
Prosecutor to issue an arrest warrant against the Minister of Justice 
Hassan Shammari and other officials in the ministry, for preventing the 
Iraqi MP's from visiting prisons after they received information about 
the existence of torture and rape of some of the inmates.    
Justice
 Minister Hassan Shammari responded on 13 December by filing a lawsuit 
against the Liberal bloc deputies for "overriding" the staff of the 
ministry during performing their duties, demanding the political blocs 
to "refrain from pushing the ministry into their conflicts," he said, 
and added that "the ministry will not remain silent on abuses against 
its staff."    
Despite
 the fact that the House of Representatives voted on 20 November to form
 a committee to investigate the situation of female detainees, the 
problem has not been solved. Although there are leaked judicial reports 
that indicate the involvement of security personnel in systematic 
torture and rape of women prisoners, the Committee didn't find a real 
case of rape, only "threats of rape".    
The
 Iraqi Interior Ministry denied in a report of 28 November that women 
are arrested without arrest warrants and tortured to extract confessions
 against their husbands. The Ministry said that all detainees had been 
lawfully arrested with legal arrest warrants issued by the judiciary 
system, and invited the local and international committees to visit its 
detaining centers to verify these "lies and false allegations."    
The
 Parliamentary Commission on Human Rights held on 28 November the 
executive bodies of prisons fully responsible for the proven cases of 
torture against detainees, and called on women who were released to 
start legal proceedings to condemn the officers and persons who 
assaulted them. The Interior Ministry denied the accusation of such 
"heinous acts" and called upon the local and international committees to
 verify the allegations related to the conditions in detention.    
On
 21 November The Ministry of Justice denied it is responsible for the 
torture and rape of women to obtain confessions, indicating that the 
interrogation operations conducted in prisons are the responsibility of 
the Ministries of Defence and Interior.    
And
 that is Nouri's Iraq. And that is Nouri's fault. And if the Ministry of
 Defense or Interior is responsible, who would be the person 
responsible? Did you guess Nouri? You're right. Back in July, Mohammed Tawfeeq (CNN) observed,
 "Shiite Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki has struggled to forge a lasting 
power-sharing agreement and has yet to fill key Cabinet positions, 
including the ministers of defense, interior and national security, 
while his backers have also shown signs of wobbling support." Those 
positions have remained empty. So he is in charge of the ministries. Are
 you starting to get why, a few weekends back, Nouri threatened to have 
MPs discussing the abuse arrested? 
Through Monday, Iraq Body Count
 counts 186 people killed by violence in Iraq so far this month. IBC's 
count for this (ongoing) month is already greater than the official 
count by the Iraqi government ministries for November's death toll. 
Violence continued today. Alsumaria reports 1 Peshmerga and 1 civilian were killed in a Kirkuk attack, 1 employee of the Ministry of Industry was shot dead outside of Baghdad, and that, in
 Anbar Province, assailants who kidnapped 1 contractor and six oil 
workers got into a clash with Iraqi soldiers leaving two soldiers 
injured. | 
 
