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Politics : Israel to U.S. : Now Deal with Syria and Iran -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Elmer Flugum who wrote (7162)2/28/2005 2:59:45 PM
From: Emile Vidrine  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 22250
 
Israel/Neo-Con plan to destabilize Iraq coming together:

Opposing agendas snarl Shiite, Kurd cooperation in Iraq

Mon Feb 28,10:05 AM ET World - The Christian Science Monitor


The two groups are at loggerheads on a number of issues.

By Jill Carroll, Contributor to The Christian Science Monitor

BAGHDAD - In the month since Iraqis rushed to the polls in support of democracy, getting anything done has proved a painstaking process of consensus-building that's now focused on two political groups whose interests are diametrically opposed.


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• About the Christian Science Monitor

Reuters
Slideshow: Iraq Elections




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The national assembly that will write the country's permanent constitution cannot meet until key government positions are assigned. And central to determining how power will be allocated are the United Iraqi Alliance (UIA), religious Shiites who hold the majority of seats, and the once-powerless Kurds, who control the second-largest number of seats in the assembly.

The two groups are at loggerheads on a number of issues. The Shiites are determined to use Islam as a legal cornerstone, something the staunchly secular Kurds reject. The Kurds say they will cooperate only with those who offer them control of oil-rich Kirkuk - a promise that Ibrahim al-Jaafari, the Shiite choice for prime minister, has said the UIA will never make.

But the Kurds are showing little inclination, publicly at least, to compromise. "Even if we are forced to fight for our rights" with guns, we will, says Abduljalil Feili, the head of the Kurdistan Democratic Party in central and southern Iraq (news - web sites). "We prefer negotiations and a political solution. [But] we will use all the options we have."

As the political powers continued to jockey for influence, insurgent violence continued with a bomb in Mosul killing eight people Sunday. But the government also announced the detention Sunday of Sabawi Ibrahim al-Hasan al-Tikriti, Saddam Hussein (news - web sites)'s half-brother and No. 36 on the US list of 55 most-wanted figures. On Friday, officials said they had nabbed Abu Qutaybah, described as a key lieutenant of Abu Musab al-Zarqawi, Al Qaeda's leader in Iraq.

The Kurds' assertiveness flows from their legal trump card. Under the transitional administrative law (TAL), written last spring by the Interim Governing Council with US guidance, a permanent constitution can be vetoed if three provinces do not ratify it. The Kurds control Iraq's three northern provinces.

"At the rate they are going, they will have to ask for an extension," in writing the constitution, says Nathan Brown, a professor of political science at George Washington University. "The really difficult issues are ones where we just don't have any idea how flexible they will be."

The current political wrangling has its source in laws designed to force disparate political groups to work together, and to prevent another authoritarian regime by giving significant power to minority groups.

Among other consensus-building mechanisms, the TAL requires two-thirds of the national assembly to approve the president, a new government, and a new constitution.

Those requirements have allowed small groups to play spoiler in order to extract promises of influence.

No decisions have been made on filling the presidency, vacancies for two deputies, and the cabinet. But one official from the Supreme Council of the Islamic Revolution in Iraq (SCIRI), a main group in the UIA, said they hope to meet this week with leaders of the UIA, Kurds, Interim Prime Minister Iyad Allawi, and President Ghazi Yawar, a leading Sunni politician, to negotiate.

The UIA wants to give moderate Sunnis at least three leading positions, possibly one of the deputy presidents, the speaker of the national assembly, and control of a key ministry, such as defense. Most Sunnis boycotted the election and there are fears the Sunni insurgency will worsen if they aren't included in the government.

"The train of democracy is starting down the line," says the SCIRI official. "Maybe we will stay in the station a few minutes, but the train is moving."

UIA officials are also proposing to create a national security position for Mr. Allawi, who has made an aggressive if unlikely bid to keep his job.

Andres Arato, a constitutional expert at the New School University in New York, says Kurdish demands and the two-thirds vote required to approve the new government and permanent constitution may delay the constitution longer than anyone expected. In that event, the country will have to continue to use the TAL, which he says could be destabilizing over the long term. "The very high threshold means you [may] never have a government," Mr. Arato says.

David Phillips, a senior fellow at the Council on Foreign Relations, says that while Iraq is on an uncharted path, similar experiences in other countries have shown the importance of decentralizing authority. He says it is important to spread power among the country's governorates and local government. While the process is slow, it will probably continue to move forward, he says.

"It's definitely taking time for Iraqis to find common ground, but when you look at each threshold moment [previously] ... they waited until the 11th hour and cut deals," Phillips says. "That's what happening now."



• Wire material was used in this report.




To: Elmer Flugum who wrote (7162)2/28/2005 4:45:50 PM
From: Crimson Ghost  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 22250
 
Zionists have one thing in common with Catholics. Namely a litany of sins are forgiven if some of the loot goes for a favored cause -- the church for Catholics and Israel for Zionists.

But the church is not threatening world peace

Such famed jewish gangsters as Meyer Lansky and Moe Dalitz were big Israel donors.



To: Elmer Flugum who wrote (7162)3/1/2005 3:27:17 AM
From: GUSTAVE JAEGER  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 22250
 
Europe to Turkey: NO! You can't be a EU member! You're too soft on the Gypsies! Kill 'em... push them around! Then, maybe --maybe!-- you'll join us....

End Europe's ugly racism toward Roma

Claude Cahn International Herald Tribune

Tuesday, March 1, 2005

BUDAPEST
Decades after the Holocaust, which counted them among its victims, Roma, or Gypsies, remain at the extreme margins of European societies, despised and excluded.

Roma are a people of Indian origin whose thousand-year history in Europe has been marked by oppression, slavery and raw, systematic persecution. In recent years, Roma in Europe have faced lynchings, pogroms, racist denial of access to services, and other serious violations of fundamental human rights.

When Bosnian Serb forces overran eastern Bosnia in April 1992, Roma were targeted for attacks. One Romani man in a refugee camp in Debrecen, Hungary, told the European Roma Rights Center in 1996: "The whole Romani community of Zvornik was slaughtered. Our houses were destroyed. ... It was a bear hunt."

In 1999, after the NATO bombing and the withdrawal of Yugoslav forces from Kosovo, a large number of Roma were ethnically cleansed from the province, together with Serbs and other ethnic minorities, by ethnic Albanians. Before 1999, Roma in Kosovo had achieved the greatest advances of Roma anywhere: There was Romani radio, there were Roma in the public administration and an apparently integrated class of Romani intellectuals. But as the conflict between Serbs and Albanians heated up, Roma were, as one Romani activist from Kosovo put it, "caught between two fires."

Much of the Kosovo Romani population today lives in Serbia and Montenegro, often in appalling conditions, unable to return to Kosovo and denied even rudimentary compensation for their suffering.

Racially motivated violence against Roma is not confined to war zones. Since the end of Communism in Eastern Europe, Roma have born the brunt of a rise in racism and racist violence. After the fall of the Ceausescu regime, a wave of pogroms broke out in Romania, with more than 30 Romani communities subjected to expulsion, arson and killing. Similar episodes have taken place in Bulgaria, the Czech Republic, Hungary, Poland, Slovakia, Ukraine and the former Yugoslavia since the end of Communism.

When Roma fall victim to racist violence, European criminal justice systems often fail to provide adequate remedy. Roma are especially unlikely to receive justice when the perpetrators are police officers.

Today, Roma are subjected to grinding discrimination all over Europe. Most countries in Central and Eastern Europe have effectively segregated school systems. In some countries, Roma are more likely to be found in schools for the mentally disabled than non-Roma by factors that are simply obscene. In Romania, many Romani children are simply not in school at all.

Unemployment among Roma throughout Central and Eastern Europe outpaces unemployment among the population at large by five to 10 times. Total joblessness is reported in some areas.

Roma also fall victim to discriminatory treatment in public administration, are often not served in pubs, restaurants and discotheques, are likely to be denied housing on ethnic grounds and to live in substandard settlements with few or no public services. Residential segregation is also reported in a number of areas.

Racism and racist violence toward the Roma is not new. Roma were the targets of medieval persecution in Western Europe and were reduced to slavery in Eastern Europe. Persecution of the Roma culminated again during World War II, when hundreds of thousands of Roma lost their lives in the Holocaust. Clumsy policies of assimilation in the modern era have destroyed Romani culture, crafts and way of life, leaving a confused and divided people in their wake.

In recent years, Roma have begun fighting their oppression, often using strategies inspired by the U.S. civil rights movement. Groups such as the European Roma Rights Center have recently won victories, including an award of more than $1 million for 74 Romani victims of a 1995 pogrom in Montenegro and a ruling by Britain's House of Lords, in a case involving Roma from the Czech Republic, declaring British border policy racist and illegal.

For the time being, however, such progress has been a mere drop in the bucket compared with the scope and intensity of forces ranged against the Roma - the racism and racial discrimination, the contempt and suspicion in which European publics hold "Gypsies."

This year, 60 years after the Nazi death camps were liberated, Europe remembers the Holocaust dead. The continued suffering today of the Roma victims and their descendants also deserves attention.

iht.com