Category Archives: News

The Take at Wealthy Theatre

The Take, a film by Naomi Klein about workers in Argentina who occupy their idle suburban Buenos Aeires auto factory and go through the process of setting up a democratic means for self-management, will be airing this weekend at the Wealthy Theatre. The Take uses the occupation of the factory as a symbol for the types of struggles waged by workers in Argentina after ten years of disasterous policies by the International Monetary Fund (IMF) in Argentina, using this occupation as the catalyst for an examination of one of the most vibrant and inovative struggles against neoliberal economic policies. While this crisis gained some attention in the West after the complete collapse of Argentina’s economy in 2001, there has been little recent coverage despite ongoing resistance and protest against IMF policies.

Show Times:

  • March 5 – 7:00pm, followed by a panel discussion
  • March 6 – 1:00pm, 4:00pm, and 7:00pm
  • March 7 – 7:00pm and 9:00pm

All shows take place at the Wealthy Theatre (1130 Wealthy St SE) and are $5 ($2 for students).

More Information:

Book Reviews: We Want Freedom and The Long Detour

Two new book reviews have been added to the book reviews section of the site. The two reviews are of Mumia Abu-Jamal’s insightful new book on the Black Panther Party, We Want Freedom: A Life in the Black Panther Party and James Weinstein’s lackluster history of the American Left, The Long Detour.

Additional book reviews are available in the book review section.

Iraq Watch: Army Pays Bonus to Halliburton Despite Fraud, Journalists Targeted in Iraq, Nader’s Stop the War Campaign

Nader Announces Democracy Rising ‘Stop the War’ Campaign

On Thursday Ralph Nader held a press conference announcing a new “Stop the War” project by the organization Democracy Rising. The purpose of the “Stop the War” campaign is “to bring the troops home and end the occupation of Iraq by empowering activists so they cannot be ignored by decision makers in Washington, DC.” In conjunction with this new project, Democracy Rising has released two new reports related to the war in Iraq: Bush Family War Profiteering and The Institutionalization of Corruption.

The Bush Family War Profiteering report details how various members of the Bush family have personally benefited from the Iraq war. According to the report:

“The extent of Iraq contracts going to corporations which involve members of President George W. Bush’s family is widespread and extensive involving hundreds of millions of dollars. Often these firms receive contracts where the corporations have no expertise and certainly the Bush family members have no expertise or experience in these areas. It is a world not of know how but of know who, marinated in campaign contributions. It seems like Bush family and friends are trading on their relationship to the President. The matrix of government contracts and Bush related corporations invites further investigation by the media and Congress – inquiries that are long overdue.”

The Institutionalization of Corruption report looks at the hidden cost of the war and occupation of Iraq. According to the report:

“Repeatedly, the Iraq War and occupation has led to corrupt practices by U.S. government officials and corporations working with the U.S. government. Despite repeated reports of serious financial irregularities, business continues as usual – the United States keeps doing business with corporate criminals and agency and department heads responsible for this corruption continue to remain in office or go to work with contractors. This is the tip of the iceberg of a major political scandal.”

US Army pays Halliburton Big Bonus despite Massive Fraud

According to an article in Al-Jazeera, The US Army has awarded defense contractor Halliburton more than $9 million in bonuses for some of its work supporting the military in Kuwait and Afghanistan. These bonuses are for contracts being carried out by Halliburton’s subsidiary Kellogg Brown and Root for logistical services. Overall, KBR has earned $7.2 billion under a massive 2001 logistics contract with the US military and is set to earn more than $10 billion under that deal.

The Iraq reconstruction and logistics contracts have come under considerable scrutiny as Halliburton has squandered or “misplaced” billions of dollars. Halliburton’s fleecing of government dollars reached a new low as it was revealed in an article earlier this month that the U.S. Army agreed to pay Halliburton’s KBR subsidiary nearly $2 billion for work that, according to Halliburtonwatch.org, nobody can prove ever took place. The work was allegedly performed in Iraq and Kuwait under the Army’s LOGCAP contract, awarded to KBR in 2001 via competitive bidding. Army auditors determined last year that 43 percent of the $4.5 billion requested by Halliburton under LOGCAP could not be verified under normal accounting procedures

Journalists continue to be targeted in Iraq

Reporters Without Borders reported on Feb. 21 about a new wave of journalist kidnappings in Iraq after Raeda Wazzan, a presenter with the regional public TV station Iraqiya, was kidnapped yesterday in Mosul, 390 km north of Baghdad, probably with her 10-year-old son. Wazzan was the fourth journalist kidnapped in the last two weeks in Iraq. 21 journalists have been kidnapped in Iraq since March of 2003. Wazzan is the only woman presenter at Iraqiya, a TV station that covers the area surrounding Mosul. She and her son were abducted by gunmen while driving. Iraqiya producer Jamal Badrani narrowly escaped a kidnapping attempt in Mosul about a week ago. The headquarters of the TV station has been the target of several attacks, the most recent on 16 February when six mortar shells were fired at the building, injuring three technicians.

Earlier in the week, two Indonesian reporters who were taken hostage were released. The kidnappers, the Jaish al-Mujahedeen, or Army of Warriors said that they “freed the two Indonesian journalists after checking their identity and offered its apology for the operation to the Indonesian people”.

Proposed Downtown Development Targets Low to Middle Income People

A new downtown apartment complex called Metropolitan Park Apartments is being proposed in the Heartside neighborhood. The 24 apartment building would offer two and three bedroom apartments between $549 and $749. The apartment complex would be built across Ionia Street from the new Heartside Park, a park that gained media attention recently back in September 2004 for its housing of many local homeless people.

While a new apartment complex targeting people working in the downtown service industry as a part of the “Cool Cities” initiative dubbed “Avenue of the Arts” may sound like another “hip” project that will usher in changing neighborhood dynamics and possibly gentrification, the proposed apartment complex is a vast improvement over much of the recent development in the downtown area. Over the past year development plans have consisted largely of projects aimed at the wealthy, including the renovation of formerly low-income housing at the YMCA into “upscale condominiums,” the proposed construction of a new luxury hotel by Amway (Alticor), the opening of several upscale restaurants targeting suburbanites that come to the downtown area for entertainment, and “sexploitation clubs” such as Showgirl Galleria and Tini Bikinis. These development projects have been largely endorsed by the city and the local media as harbingers of a new downtown–awarding developers with tax breaks and laudatory coverage, while there has been little serious discussion about how development in the downtown area and its impact on existing residents, both those with homes and those without. Proposed development plans offer little low-income housing and no space has been formally set aside for those without homes, demonstrating that much remains to be done before development projects cater to the needs of all city residents.

With Kyoto in Effect, US Continues to Downplay Global Warming

After 13 years of negotiations, the Kyoto Protocol on global warming went into effect on February 15. The treaty was ratified by 141 nations, requiring the 34 of the industrialized countries that have signed on to cut the output of greenhouse gases by 5.2 percent before 2012, with targets set for each nation based on their 1990 levels. The United States and Austrailia were the only two major industrialized countries to reject the treaty, together accounting for 30% of the world’s greenhouse gas emissions.

While the Bush administration pulled out of the treaty in 2001 citing a variety of reasons–the fact that rapidly growing economies such as China and India have no obligations under Kyoto, that it may harm US businesses and cost jobs, that similar reductions could be made using a voluntary system, and that the science on climate change is still a matter of debate. These assertions have been widely rejected by the world community as research continues to find that global warming is indeed a fact and that its effects may be felt more rapidly than originally believed, as indicated by recent tempature changes in the ocean. Admittingly, Kyoto is far from perfect, with the scientific community calling for reductions of 60% below 1990 levels rather than the paltry 5.2% agreed upon with Kyoto, yet signing onto the treaty should be a basic international obligation.

Update on Iran

A few weeks ago Media Mouse posted an update about United States actions against Iran, specifically referencing an article by Seymour Hersch revealing that the United States had begun flying combat planes over Iran. Since that time there has been a great degree of speculation about the Bush administration’s possible plans, although most of the reporting on the subject has not advanced beyond this rudimentary level.

While the President George W. Bush and Condoleeza Rice have recently used harsh words to warn Iran to stop its nuclear program, they claim that the United States wants to use diplomacy and that the use of force is not currently an option. Critics of the Bush administration have pointed out that the rhetoric is similar to what was used at this stage of the Iraq war, but such an attack remains military and logistically unfeasible in light of insurgency in Iraq and the United States’ failure to provide any proof of its allegations against Iran. Much of the public discourse on military actions against Iran has pointed to a huge backlash in the region, whether that be via nuclear means from Iran as former United Nations weapons inspector Hans Blix has suggested or via other means as suggested in rhetoric coming from Israel and Iran. Vice President Dick Cheney first raised the possibility that Israel might choose to preemptively attack Iranian nuclear reactors as it did Iraq’s in the 1980s, an observation that has gained some credence in light of comments by the head of the Israeli Air Force warning that the IAF must be ready for such strikes, a move that would even further undermine the United States’ position in the region. Iran, for their part, has made their own threats–warning the United States not to play with “fire” and to let the diplomatic negotiations with Europe work while entering into a mutual defense pact with Syria and is preparing for the defense of its territory with public military excercises

Negroponte Appointed Intelligence Chief

Despite, or perhaps because of, a history of subverting human rights and democracy, U.S. ambassador to Iraq John Negroponte has been appointed by the Bush Administration as the first National Intelligence Director. While Negroponte’s resume contains many low points, he is most well known for overseeing massive human rights abuses while U.S. Ambassador to Honduras from 1981 to 1985. Human Rights groups were almost unanimous in their disapproval of Negropontes appointment, a fact almost entirely absent in the local media coverage of this story. The GR Press ran an A.P article which mentioned only one reference to Negroponte’s involvement in the Iran -Contra Scandal, briefly noting that “His U.N. nomination was held up for half a year in 2001 over criticism regarding his record as ambassador in Honduras from 1981 to 1985.” Interestingly, in the original version of the A.P. article, the reporter does note that “Human rights groups also alleged that Negroponte acquiesced in rights abuses by Honduran death squads funded and partly trained by the CIA.” This sentence was left out of the GR Press version of the article.

For more on John Negroponte, check out the following links:

Iraq Watch: Prisoner Dies during CIA Torture, Abuses by Contrators, US Working against Al-Jazeera

Iraqi Prisoner Died in Handcuffs During CIA Torture

(From Democracy Now! 2/18/2005)

A major expose by the Associated Press has revealed that an Iraqi whose corpse was photographed with grinning U.S. soldiers at Abu Ghraib died under CIA interrogation while suspended by his wrists, which had been handcuffed behind his back. The death of the prisoner, Manadel al-Jamadi, became known last year when the Abu Ghraib scandal broke. The U.S. military said back then that it had been ruled a homicide. But the exact circumstances of the death were not disclosed at the time.

According to investigative documents reviewed by the AP, the prisoner died in a position known as “Palestinian hanging.” It is unclear whether that position- which human rights groups condemn as torture – was approved by the Bush administration for use in CIA interrogations. The Justice Department and the CIA refused to comment on the story.

Al-Jamadi was one of the CIA’s so-called “ghost” detainees at Abu Ghraib -prisoners being held secretly by the agency. His death in November 2003 became public with the release of photos of Abu Ghraib guards giving a thumbs-up over his bruised and puffy-faced corpse, which had been packed in ice. According to the documents, Al-Jamadi died in a prison shower room during about a half-hour of questioning, before interrogators could extract any information. The documents consist of statements from Army prison guards to investigators with the military and the CIA’s Inspector General’s office.

One Army guard, Sgt. Jeffery Frost, said the prisoner’s arms were stretched behind him in a way he had never before seen. Frost told investigators he was surprised al-Jamadi’s arms “didn’t pop out of their sockets.” Frost and other guards had been summoned to reposition al Jamadi, who an interrogator said was not cooperating. As the guards released the shackles and lowered al-Jamadi, blood gushed from his mouth “as if a faucet had been turned on,” according to the interview summary.

Navy SEALs apprehended al-Jamadi as a suspect in the Oct. 27, 2003, bombing of Red Cross offices in Baghdad that killed 12 people. His alleged role in the bombing is unclear. According to court documents and testimony, the SEALs punched, kicked and struck al-Jamadi with their rifles before handing him over to the CIA early on Nov. 4. By 7 a.m., al-Jamadi was dead.

According to the documents seen by the AP, Al-Jamadi was brought naked below the waist to the prison with a CIA interrogator and translator. A green plastic bag covered his head, and plastic cuffs tightly bound his wrists. Guards dressed al-Jamadi in an orange jumpsuit, slapped on metal handcuffs and escorted him to the shower room, a common CIA interrogation spot.

Abuses by Private Contractors in Iraq Reported

There are new allegations that heavily armed private security contractors in Iraq are brutalizing Iraqi civilians. In an interview with NBC News, four former security contractors told that they watched as innocent Iraqi civilians were fired upon, and one crushed by a truck. The contractors worked for an American company named Custer Battles, hired by the Pentagon to conduct dangerous missions guarding supply convoys. They were so upset by what they saw, three quit after only one or two missions. Said one of the four men, “What we saw, I know the American population wouldn’t stand for.”

These abuses by private contractors would seem to be the product of a lack of a vetting process by the U.S. government. Though contractors can use lethal force, the U.S. government does not vet who is hired. The Pentagon says it does watch how companies perform and investigates any alleged misconduct. According to some military experts, discipline varies greatly among these hired contractors. “[It varies] greatly from highly professional contractors to flat-out dangerous guys,” says Col. Thomas Hammes, a Marine instructor at the National Defense University in Washington.

Hammes spent two months working alongside Iraqis. He says some contractors showed outright contempt for civilians. And even good contractors sometimes used tactics that turned Iraqis against the United States. “If the government is hiring people that are running them off the road and intimidating them, that really undercuts your message,” says Hammes.

Meanwhile, Custer Battles and the Coalition Provisional Authority are under investigation for the manner in which contracts were awarded and paid for. Franklin Willis, a former official with the Coalition Provision Authority, told the Senate Democratic Policy Commmittee that Iraq, after the fall of Saddam Hussein, was “like the Wild West — awash in $100 bills.” Willis described how, during one point in the summer of 2003, Middletown-based contractor Custer Battles was paid with $2 million in fresh U.S. bills, stuffed into a gunnysack. Willis said the cash was a partial payment on a $16-million contract that Custer Battles had won to provide security for eventual civilian flights at the Baghdad International Airport.

This hearing came just two weeks after an audit of the CPA by the special inspector general for Iraqi reconstruction found the agency had failed to provide proper oversight of ministry spending, issued unauthorized contracts and lost track of $9 billion in Iraqi funds. In response to that criticism, L. Paul Bremer III, the former administrator of the authority, had strongly defended the agency’s financial practices. Bremer said auditors mistakenly assumed that “Western-style budgeting and accounting procedures could be immediately and fully implemented in the midst of a war.”

In another development concerning security contractors, it has been revealed that at least 10 South African companies and businessmen are being investigated on suspicion of recruiting former specialized police officers and soldiers to work in Iraq. Information given to the Cape Argus reveals that at least 10 South African companies may be recruiting South Africans for work in Iraq, contrary to South African law. This work includes close protection of Iraqi government officials and contract workers such as engineers.

US Accused of Plan to Muzzle Al-Jazeera Through Privatization

According to reports in the US and the Gulf, the Qatari government, owner of al-Jazeera since its foundation in 1996, has ordered privatization plans for the station to be speeded up. Many al-Jazeera employees fear this could lead to a loss of editorial freedom. America and its key ally Saudi Arabia are being accused of quietly seeking to muzzle al-Jazeera, the Arab satellite news station that has often incurred Washington’s ire for its coverage of Iraq and President George Bush’s “war on terror”.

US officials reject all charges of meddling despite the fact that Vice-President Dick Cheney and Donald Rumsfeld, the Defense Secretary, have fiercely criticized al-Jazeera for what they say is biased and inflammatory reporting. Washington has been particularly irritated by the station’s coverage of civilian casualties and destruction caused by US troops in Iraq, and by its airing of messages from Osama bin Laden, the al-Qa’ida leader. In Iraq and some other Arab countries, al-Jazeera offices have been shut down.

Disarmament, Extradition and Amnesty

The Future of Colombia’s Paramilitary Death Squads

By SAMUEL LOGAN and JOHN MEYERS

Bogotá.

Born and raised in the slums of Medellín, Diego Fernando Murillo became known in the crime world as a ruthless killer. In 1992, he narrowly escaped Colombian authorities when his boss, Pablo Escobar, went into hiding. The resulting manhunt eventually killed Mr. Escobar but launched Diego Murillo’s career in the Colombian drug world. After switching alliances between various drug cartels, he has arrived at the top of the pyramid power structure of Colombia’s right wing paramilitary forces, known as the Autodefensas Unidas de Colombia (AUC).

Mr. Murillo, now known by his alias “Adolfo Paz,” is among a group of AUC negotiators expecting to make an amnesty deal with the Colombian government as part of a peace process that began in December of 2002. Since the signing of the Santa Fe de Ralito Accord in July of 2003, the government has established a 115 square mile demilitarized zone in the department of Córdoba to negotiate with the AUC. Unfortunately for Mr. Paz, currently the AUC’s “inspector general,” he is one of ten AUC officials whose extradition has been ordered by the United States government. He and several of his colleagues are considered to be international “narco-terrorists” responsible for up to 40 percent of Colombia’s prolific trade in illicit drugs.

For the rest of the article, click here.

Iraq Watch for 2/18/2005

Media Mouse has posted this week’s Iraq Watch news update. This week’s update looks at the following topics:

  • Iraqi Prisoner Died in Handcuffs During CIA Torture – A major expose by the Associated Press has revealed that an Iraqi whose corpse was photographed with grinning U.S. soldiers at Abu Ghraib died under CIA interrogation while suspended by his wrists, which had been handcuffed behind his back.
  • Abuses by Private Contractors in Iraq Reported – There are new allegations that heavily armed private security contractors in Iraq are brutalizing Iraqi civilians. In an interview with NBC News, four former security contractors told that they watched as innocent Iraqi civilians were fired upon, and one crushed by a truck. The contractors worked for an American company named Custer Battles, hired by the Pentagon to conduct dangerous missions guarding supply convoys.
  • US Accused of Plan to Muzzle Al-Jazeera Through Privatization – According to reports in the US and the Gulf, the Qatari government, owner of al-Jazeera since its foundation in 1996, has ordered privatization plans for the station to be speeded up. Many al-Jazeera employees fear this could lead to a loss of editorial freedom.

Read More: Iraq Watch.