Monday, January 30, 2006

Harry Belafonte on Democracy Now!

Harry Belafonte on Bush, Iraq, Hurricane Katrina and Having His Conversations with Martin Luther King Wiretapped by the FBI

Democracy Now!
January 30, 2006

We spend the hour with the legendary musician, actor and humanitarian, Harry Belafonte. He joins us in our firehouse studio to talk about why he recently called President Bush "the world's greatest terrorist;" racism and Hurricane Katrina; Martin Luther King and the civil rights movement and wars of imperialism and resistance.

The son of Caribbean-born immigrants, Harry Belafonte grew up on the streets of Harlem and Jamaica. After serving in World War II, he returned to New York and began a successful acting and singing career. Along with his rise to worldwide stardom, Belafonte became deeply involved in the Civil Rights Movement and was close friends with the Rev. Martin Luther King. In the 1980's he helped initiate the "We Are the World" single which helped raise millions of dollars in aid to Africa. He also hosted former South African President Nelson Mandela on his triumphant visit to the United States. Belafonte has been a longtime critic of U.S. foreign policy, calling for an end to the embargo against Cuba, and opposing policies of war and global oppression. [includes rush transcript]

Click here for the DN! interview in video, audio and written transcript formats.

DN! Headlines for January 30, 2006:

- Hamas Asks World Community Not to Cut Off Aid
- Momentum Grows for Filibuster to Block Alito Confirmation
- ABC News Anchor Seriously Injured by Bomb in Iraq
- Haitian Priest Gerard Jean-Juste Released From Prison
- Vet Who Spoke Out About War's Psychological Affects Commits Suicide
- 50,000 Soldiers Forced to Stay in Military Under Stop-Loss Program
- NASA Attempts to Silence Agency's Top Climate Scientist
- 2005: Halliburton's Most Profitable Year Ever
- Pentagon Admits U.S. Public Exposed to Military Propaganda
- Abramoff Tied to South African Apartheid-Era Assassin
- NYT Exposes U.S. Role in Coup of Haiti's Aristide

Click here for today's DN! headlines in video and audio formats.
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Friday, January 27, 2006

Understanding Root Causes — by Charles Sullivan

by Charles Sullivan
Information Clearing House
January 27, 2006

[...] George Bush and his minions are not an aberration. They are the natural and expected fruit of capitalism run amok. Capitalists believe in plutocratic and corporate rule, the concentration of wealth and power. They are the product of a system of economic inequality and privilege that exploits the huge majority of the population and subjugates them into wage slavery as ‘at will’ employees. It preys upon the just—those who play by the rules. The quagmire in Iraq, and the one to come in Iran, and in hundreds of other places, is the result of the social and economic injustice fostered by capitalism. Treating the symptoms will not affect a cure. Only addressing root causes can do that.

By engaging in party politics, the practice of pitting conservative against liberal, liberal against conservative, we are playing into the hands of the status quo. I have been all too guilty of this practice myself. It is an easy trap to fall into. By so doing we are unwittingly creating a diversion, a smoke screen, for the empire builders and power brokers to continue to play the game safely out of public view, assuring the same results, regardless of which party is in power.

To illustrate this point, consider the difference between George Bush and John Kerry in the last presidential election was more a matter of semantics than of substance. Both men are the product of wealth and privilege; neither of them represents the great majority of the people, the working class. Neither do their cohorts in Congress, an increasing number of which are millionaires. The appearance of choice is only an illusion, designed to deceive and to paralyze. By such means the system—capitalism—wins and the people lose by being the unwittingly servants of empire. The ruling class remains in power and the working class remain their obedient servants. We must stop working against ourselves. We have enough to do to overcome the real enemy. [...]

Click here for the full article via Information Clearing House.
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Thursday, January 26, 2006

2006 Human Rights Watch World Report

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Friday, January 20, 2006

Former British Ambassador Craig Murray on Democracy Now!

Introduction by Sean/iNoodle.com:

Please watch, listen to, or read this interview between Democracy Now! host, Amy Goodman, and Craig Murray, the former British ambassador to Uzbekistan. Murray was fired from the post after publicly criticizing the US and UK governments for supporting widespread torture in Uzbekistan, a member of the Coalition of the Willing [to Commit War Crimes] in the so-called "War on Terror" [ ... Terror Liberty, Democracy and Humanity].

*****

Democracy Now!
January 19, 2006

We spend the hour with the former British ambassador to Uzbekistan, Craig Murray. The British government has stopped the publication of his book. In a Democracy Now exclusive, Murray tells why he defied the British Foreign Office by posting a series of classified memos on his website. Murray was fired as ambassador to Uzbekistan after he openly criticized the British and U.S. governments for supporting human rights abuses under the Uzbek regime. [Links and emphasis are Sean/iNoodle.com's]

Click here for the DN! interview in video, audio and written transcript formats.

Click here to visit Craig Murray's website.

Click here for Craig Murray's "Damning documentary evidence unveiled. Dissident bloggers in coordinated exposé of UK government lies over torture" post of December 29, 2005.

Click here for the Human Rights Watch World Report 2006, entitled "U.S. Policy of Abuse Undermines Rights Worldwide" (released January 18, 2006)
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Sunday, January 15, 2006

Google Drops iNoodle.com's Jill Carroll-Related Web Pages

Does a recorded visit from the US Department of Justice in Washington, DC on January 13 (at 15:57:22 GMT) have anything to do with Google's apparent censoring of iNoodle.com? Someone at the DOJ visited iNoodle.com by way of a Google search on "jill carroll". As iNoodle.com regularly receives visits from US and UK government offices, established news bureaus and organizations, researchers at universities, worldwide, etc., I did not suspect that anything was amiss. But in light of my findings, below, I wonder.

By Sean M. Madden
Published on iNoodle.com
January 15, 2006 (22:28 GMT)

On Friday, January 13, a Google search on Jill Carroll resulted in an estimated 3.3 million hits. iNoodle.com coverage of the kidnapping and the subsequent news blackout was page-ranked in the first two to three pages (i.e., in the first 11 to 30 hits) of the resulting 3.3 million hits.

As of Sunday, January 15 (21:36 GMT), the same search results in an estimated 2.1 million hits. The latest iNoodle.com post is presently ranked #34, just after TIME.com's January 10th "The Abduction of Jill Carroll" article which has apparently been moved to a new web location.

So far so good.

Since January 10 when the Christian Science Monitor editors named Jill Carroll as the kidnapped journalist in question — that is, after they could no longer hold the two-day news blackout which they had orchestrated — visits had been regularly streaming in to the various iNoodle.com posts by way of Google searches performed on keywords related to the kidnapping and news blackout stories.

This was occurring well before the Slate article which cites iNoodle.com was published, on Thursday, January 12 at 19:38 ET (Jan 13, 00:38 GMT). Even after the Slate article had been published — and then re-published on Information Clearing House as per my submission to the ICH editor on Friday, January 13 — the majority of hits coming to the kidnapping- and news blackout-related posts on iNoodle.com stemmed from visitors' Google searches. Having had two articles published on ICH since the inception of the iNoodle.com blog on October 31, 2005, I am familiar with the site traffic which such publication can generate.

So when I awoke early yesterday, Saturday morning, I was surprised that I had not received more hits during the night, keeping in mind that US internet users tend to be active on iNoodle.com while most Britons and Europeans are sleeping, given the five-hour time difference between the UK and the East Coast and upwards to an eight-hour time difference with the West Coast. But, with ten years of website administration experience, I am also aware of the unpredictability of site traffic, and so was not particularly concerned.

Also, having worked round-the-clock much of last week, when a dear friend telephoned my wife and asked if we would like to go for a long walk on the Sussex Downs with her and her motley collection of dogs, we enthusiastically agreed. When we returned home around 17:30 GMT, I was even more surprised to see that iNoodle.com traffic had slowed considerably and that incoming Google searches had all but ceased.

This prompted my researching the situation throughout last night, until 06:45 this morning.

The upshot:

Every post which I had published on the kidnapping and news blackout story had been removed from Google's index database, as had all of the iNoodle.com daily-indexed archive files from January 7, the day of the abduction and the start of iNoodle.com's coverage of the story, through to today.

In short, what had previously been indexed and highly ranked no longer existed in Google. On the other hand, no posts unrelated to this story had been removed from Google, nor had any of the indexed archive files from before January 7. I spent the night collecting screen captures of various search results and other data to serve as evidence to prove this was the case. The results are in hand.

A little known Google command (site:http://inoodle.com/) which when executed generates a list of all of the pages of a particular website which reside in Google's index database proved my suspicions as I continued to work through the process of discovery. All of the iNoodle.com posts related to this story had been, for whatever reason, removed from Google's database.

I decided, last night, to republish each of the dropped posts without making any changes to the contents or to the metadata (e.g., headlines, date-time stamps) to see if this would cause Google to re-index the deleted pages.

By this afternoon, the iNoodle.com post of January 13, entitled "Jill Carroll Kidnapping: Slate Cites iNoodle.com — by Jack Shafer", had reappeared in the Google index, but none of the other related posts nor any of the archived pages since the day of the kidnapping and, therefore, the day I began coverage of the story have reappeared in Google.

I will continue to keep a close eye on this phenomenon, and to research the underlying cause. However, I decided to publish, herein, a brief narrative of the situation for two reasons: 1) to provide a publicly available record, and 2) to invite expertise and experience which others may like to share, either publicly on iNoodle.com by way of comments to this post or privately by way of email. My email address is sean@inoodle.com.

Related Links:

Does Google censor search results? [Google's answer in their own words]

"US Internet Censorship" article written by Wayne Madsen, and posted to iNoodle.com on December 12, 2005.
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Friday, January 13, 2006

Jill Carroll Kidnapping: Slate Cites iNoodle.com — by Jack Shafer

How To Cover a Kidnapping
It isn't that easy.

Slate
By Jack Shafer
Posted Thursday, Jan. 12, 2006, at 7:38 PM ET

The Baghdad foreign press corps rallied to the aid of Christian Science Monitor stringer Jill Carroll immediately upon learning that kidnappers had snatched her in the Baghdad neighborhood of Adil on Saturday, Jan. 7.

Washington Post Baghdad Bureau Chief Ellen Knickmeyer forwarded to her colleagues the e-mail from Monitor Managing Editor Marshall Ingwerson. In it he requested "off the record, that all media please honor a news blackout on the kidnapping of a freelance journalist earlier today pending further notice. We ask this out of respect to the journalist and the ongoing, intensive effort to free her." [Emphasis added by Slate.]

Although the blackout pretty much held in the American press until the Monitor lifted it two days later, some Baghdad hands resisted. On the day of the kidnapping, John Fiegener of Fox News wrote the e-mail list to say the press couldn't treat the Carroll story differently than other kidnappings, noting that the news had already hit the wires. The Agence France-Presse reporter e-mailed the same day, "The item has just come up on CNN. We can't keep a blackout if CNN is running it." The day after the kidnapping, NPR's Lourdes Garcia-Navarro sent a measured e-mail to colleagues about her reluctance to play "news police" for very long.

[...]

The blackout prompted little discussion inside or outside the press if you factor out coverage in Editor & Publisher and Slate, despite the principles and precedents at stake.

The Monitor's Ingwerson declines to discuss the blackout. "I'm not ready to engage in the debate in a way that would be useful to you," he says. "I'm in the mode of not trying to amplify the story."

The confusion and debate contained in the Baghdad e-mails prove that there is no orthodox, universally accepted method for reporting on Iraq abductions, whether they are of journalists or nonjournalists. "OK, please can you tell us exactly what we can say," wrote one frustrated British journalist to the Baghdad list.

The Italian wire service ANSA, for which Carroll had worked, published her name in a kidnapping account on the day of her abduction. According to the iNoodle.com blog, Reporters Without Borders posted a story about the kidnapping of a female American journalist that morning. iNoodle also linked to a UPI story, and an AP story from Saturday. Joe Strupp at Editor & Publisher discovered the Saturday AP story about Carroll on the USA Today Web site that was later deleted. The extreme difficulties of unpublishing a story caused the Monitor to lift its blackout request on Monday afternoon, as a spokesman told E&P the kidnapping story had appeared in 40 to 50 outlets abroad.

Were journalists guilty of treating a fellow reporter differently than they would a kidnapped nonreporter? Were there precedents for such an indefinite blackout? (Ingwerson assures me that he and his colleagues were "checking in frequently" to assess the Carroll situation.) Should the blackout have been observed even though CNN had covered the killing and the foreign press had already published news about it? Editors at the Washington Post, the Los Angeles Times, and the New York Times agreed to share their thoughts on the issues and their papers' coverage—and noncoverage—of the Carroll abduction.

[...]

Click here for the full Slate article.
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UN Security Council may be asked to consider action against Iran — by Haaretz

Introduction by Sean/iNoodle.com:

Here we go again ...

*****

Last update - 21:18 11/Jan/2006
By News Agencies

The UN Security Council may be asked to consider action against Iran this month after Tehran spurned international warnings and resumed nuclear fuel research, a key diplomat said on Wednesday.

An expected referral to the council from the governing board of the Vienna-based International Atomic Energy Agency, or IAEA, would put the controversy in the hands of the 15-nation council, which could impose sanctions.

The timeline given by the diplomats, who spoke on condition of anonymity, is the first concrete expectation after intensified statements of concern and a weekend protest to Iran by the five permanent council members - the United States, Britain, France, Russia and China. [...]

Click here for the full Haaretz article.
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Amnesty Releases New Gitmo Torture Testimony

Amnesty International | Press Release
January 10, 2006

Washington - Marking the fourth anniversary of the first transfers of detainees to Guantánamo Bay in Cuba, January 11, 2006, Amnesty International released new testimonies alleging the use of torture and ill treatment against prisoners in the U.S. detention center and additional details on several detainee cases.

The testimonies include that of one of the first detainees to be transferred to Guantánamo, Jumah al-Dossari, a 32-year-old Bahraini national who was taken to the U.S. Naval Base in January 2002 after being held by U.S. forces in the Kandahar airbase in Afghanistan.

Al-Dossari's testimony, corroborated by people who have now been released from Guantánamo, includes several allegations of physical and psychological torture and ill treatment inflicted by U.S. personnel both on him and on other inmates in Afghanistan and Guantánamo.

"Anniversaries usually represent milestones. Today's milestone is a frightening and disheartening one. The situation at Guantánamo is not getting better - in fact, it may be worse. First, the Bush Administration wants all 186 pending habeas corpus petitions filed on behalf of the detainees to be dismissed based on a new law that was not meant to apply to cases filed before the law went into effect. And now, after Congress overwhelming passed the historic Anti-Torture Amendment, President Bush is asserting that he can waive the restrictions on the use of cruel, inhuman and degrading treatment against detainees. When does the hypocrisy of defending democracy around the world while continuing to curtail fundamental due process end?" said Dr. William F. Schulz, Executive Director of Amnesty International USA. [...]

Click here for the full Amnesty International press release via Information Clearing House.
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US Press Squelches Bush Impeachment Drive — by Dave Lindorff

The Missing Polls, Inquiries and Bills...

By DAVE LINDORFF (Rome)
CounterPunch
January 9, 2006

There are now eight members of Congress who have put their names to a bill calling for a special committee of the House to investigate impeachable crimes by the Bush administration. To date, all of them are Democrats.

So far, you'd be hard-pressed to know about any of this--including the very fact that Rep. John Conyers (D-Mich.), the ranking minority member of the House Judiciary Committee, had even submitted such a bill--as well as two companion bills calling for censure of both Bush and Cheney for abuse of power.

Apparently in the editorial cloisters of our official Fourth Estate, where decisions as to what it is safe or appropriate for us in the public to know, it has been determined that we do not need to know that the notion of impeachment of the president is starting to grow.

Most of the major corporate media have yet to let the public know that several respected polls have shown a majority of Americans to favor impeachment if Bush lied about the reasons for going to war against Iraq, which if combined with polls showing that two-thirds of Americans or more think he did lie about those reasons, tells you all you need to know about the public attitude on impeachment.

The same paternalistic and pro-administration mindset was at work when the editor and publisher of the New York Times decided a year ago to squelch for a year a story they had about the NSA warrantless spying program. They felt that we the people didn't need to know about that story in a presidential election year, even if the target of that spying may well have been the administration's electoral opponents, just as it was in the 1972 Watergate spying scandal.

There is a clear slide towards dictatorship taking place in America. The president, it turns out, has been signing executive letters along with many of the bills Congress passes, essentially asserting that as commander-in-chief in his fake "war" on terror, he reserves the right to ignore those bills. The latest such letter was signed by him as he signed the bill banning torture. In other words, he conceded to the bill, but then said he'll authorize torture anyway if he wants to, in his role as commander in chief.

The beauty of this presidential scam is that, since the "war" on terror will never end, neither will his self-claimed draconian powers. And what is the limit of those powers? Well, basically the limit is whatever Congress and the courts tell him those limits are. And are we seeing Congress and the courts setting any limits? No.

A major part of the problem is that the media that are supposed to inform the American public about what is happening are instead dropping the ball, or even hiding it. [...]

Click here for the full CounterPunch article.
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Thursday, January 12, 2006

iNoodle.com: Visitors from 65 Countries

Since November 23rd (when collection of such site statistics began) visitors have, one way or another, found their way to iNoodle.com from the following 65 countries.

Notes: The numbers serve only to tally the number of countries. They are not rankings, though, not surprisingly, at any given time the majority of visitors tend to be from the US and the UK. This is perhaps as it should be, as the policies — rather than the people — of these two countries are the focal points of my political criticism, being as I am an American citizen living as a legal resident in the United Kingdom with my British wife and our British-American daughter. At various times during a twenty-four-hour period, visitors from other countries sometimes take the lead in sheer number of visits, typically while Americans and Britons sleep ... at least those who are not surfing or blogging into the wee hours as I often am. Please read nothing more into the ordering of the following countries. In some cases, they are loosely grouped into regions of the world.

1. US
2. UK (Britain/N. Ireland)
3. Ireland
4. Canada
5. Germany
6. Austria
7. Belgium
8. Luxembourg
9. the Netherlands
10. Estonia
11. Sweden
12. Norway
13. Finland
14. Denmark
15. Iceland
16. Switzerland
17. France
18. Spain
19. Portugal
20. Italy
21. Greece
22. Malta
23. Turkey
24. Poland
25. Hungary
26. Slovakia
27. Slovenia
28. Ukraine
29. Romania
30. Japan
31. Thailand
32. Hong Kong
33. Taiwan
34. Singapore
35. Philippines
36. Indonesia
37. Malaysia
38. Vietnam
39. Bangladesh
40. India
41. Sri Lanka
42. Australia
43. New Zealand
44. Brazil
45. Chile
46. Peru
47. Bolivia
48. Mexico
49. Guatemala
50. Costa Rica
51. Colombia
52. Cuba
53. Jamaica
54. Pakistan
55. Jordan
56. Kuwait
57. Saudi Arabia
58. United Arab Emirates
59. Syrian Arab Republic (Syria)
60. Israel
61. Egypt
62. Morocco
63. Zambia
64. South Africa
65. Mauritius
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All the News That's Fit(ball) to Print

Introduction by Sean/iNoodle.com:

Below is an email I sent earlier today to the thirty-odd wonderful folk with whom I shared twelve months of round-the-clock inquiry into the various strains of thought of India, China and Japan. They were fellow students at the Graduate Institute at St. John's College in Santa Fe, New Mexico. When I say these men and women are wonderful I mean it both in the common-usage, and literal, sense — that is, they are full of wonder, the prerequisite for philosophy. They stand in awe of the universe and question the world in which they live. In short, they are seekers of truth, philosophers.

Interested as I am in philosophy of education, and philosophy generally speaking, I have thought much about what I mean when I speak of a critical, or liberal arts, education. Recently, while discussing my fourteen-year-old daughter's schoolwork with her, a thought arose which I shared with Luka, then, and which follows, below:

"To the extent that you question the question you will be [liberally or critically] educated instead of trained [by the state or whomever]."

Both the thought and my discussion with Luka arose because her Year 9 (8th-grade US equivalent) classmates were asked to decide whether Wilfred Owen, Siegfried Sassoon and Rupert Brooke were patriotic or unpatriotic poets of the First World War.

Not surprisingly, the class consensus was that Brooke was patriotic and Sassoon and Owen were unpatriotic.

I asked Luka if her class had discussed what was meant by the term patriotic before coming to their conclusion.

Again, not surprisingly, they had not. Clearly, if Owen and Sassoon wrote critically of the Great War, they must have been unpatriotic, period.

Luka and I continued our conversation, leaving the relative warmth of our kitchen, having, as we were, our afternoon tea, to make our way to the New Forest mare which we care for. Lulu (not Luka) lives at an organic farm, just up the road from us.

Always trying to serve as an antidote to her state education, whether the state is Texas, Massachusetts, Maryland or the United Kingdom, I talked with Luka along the way about the importance of always questioning the question. Having radical parents who have shared serious, adult conversation with her since she was a pipsqueak (in size but not significance) she understood.

This — questioning the question (as well as proferred answers) — is a key pursuit for a student at St. John's College. The thirty-odd recipients of my below email shared in this process for twelve jam-packed months. We lived, read, wrote, argued, partied, danced and, literally, wrestled with, and loved, one another for a year uncommonly spent. A year in which we made room for the spiritual as well as the intellectual, and during which we tried to find a way to bring these too-often dichotomized pursuits together, to create a whole.

From January, 2002 through December, 2003, I shared much the same pursuit with another group of wonder-ful St. John's students in Annapolis, Maryland, where the College's original campus, established as King William's School in 1696, is located. In Annapolis we delved into various strains of thought of the Western tradition. But, still, the emphasis was on open-ended intellectual, and spiritual, inquiry.

St. John's is not the end all when it comes to a critical education, but to the extent that students and tutors, alike, are encouraged to question the question, the school comes as close as I have seen. However, to the extent that considerations which may underlie the educational philosophy at SJC go unsaid, unquestioned, the College stands, like any other such institution, in defiance of its publicized aims.

At any rate, below is the aforementioned email, written, as will be apparent, as a reply to an earlier email.

*****

A brief note (though perhaps not brief enough for some) to all and sundry that I concur with the lovely Ms. Vlcek that yoga fitballs make fine office chairs.

Rebecca and I used one in our home office back when we were helping corporations to conspire against society in their quest for maximized shareholder value. We did this with a clear conscience, for a number of years, because we knew, sort of, that "enlightened self-interest" served society. We now know the catch-phrase to be oxymoronic.

We bought a new fitball this past autumn, an early birthday purchase for yours truly. Now, instead of conspiring with CEOs and CFOs -- call me a conspiracy realist -- I'm raging against the machine atop my fitball, blogging throne. It's a bit wobbly, requiring continual small corrections, but so, too, does my thinking, writing, blogging, political activism and life in general. Indeed, the continual small corrections are part of the joy inherent in the process.

Continual small corrections are just the thing when, in essence, things are right.

Continual small corrections are not the thing when, in essence, things are wrong.

As I observe the US and UK slip-sliding away into fascism, I think it incumbent upon us, if we are to sustain life, goodness and our sanity, to make major corrections to our fundamental way of being and to the fundamental institutions which govern our lives: corporate capitalism, anti-democratic political systems, a mass media which has poisoned our collective consciousness, an education system which has done the same, and all the many other aspects of our society which are included, already, within the first in the list, corporate capitalism.

Thank you, Nico, for compiling this email list before we hatched and flew our separate ways. I am always very happy to hear from all of you, and to know you're all always easily accessible, just a few clicks away, in thought if not in person.

Love to all,

Sean
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Wednesday, January 11, 2006

Urgent Appeal to Save Iraq's Academics — by the BRussells Tribunal

Call for action to save Iraq's Academics

[ English ] - [ Arabic ] - [ Nederlands ] - [ Portuguese ] - [ Japanese ]

URGENT APPEAL TO SAVE IRAQ'S ACADEMICS.
A little known aspect of the tragedy engulfing Iraq is the systematic liquidation of the country's academics. Even according to conservative estimates, over 250 educators have been assassinated, and many hundreds more have disappeared. With thousands fleeing the country in fear for their lives, not only is Iraq undergoing a major brain drain, the secular middle class - which has refused to be co-opted by the US occupation - is being decimated, with far-reaching consequences for the future of Iraq.

Already on July 14, 2004, veteran correspondent Robert Fisk reported from Iraq that: "University staff suspect that there is a campaign to strip Iraq of its academics, to complete the destruction of Iraq's cultural identity which began when the American army entered Baghdad."

The wave of assassinations appears non-partisan and non-sectarian, targeting women as well as men, and is countrywide. It is indiscriminate of expertise: professors of geography, history and Arabic literature as well as science are among the dead. Not one individual has been apprehended in connection with these assassinations. [...]

Click here to read and sign the full petition.
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US Officials Open Private Mail — by Reuters

Introduction by Sean/iNoodle.com:

Slowly, [our US and UK governments] turn, step by step, inch by inch ... fascist. Tip o' the hat to The Three Stooges, Moe and Larry in particular. The "Niagara Falls" episode was always one of my brother's and my favorites, for some strange reason. Was it, against all odds, the watching of countless reruns of The Three Stooges as a kid that planted within me that all-important seed of critical thinking which leads to dissent?!? Curly (posthumously) says, "Soitenly!"

*****

by Reuters
January 9, 2006 (10:38 PM GMT)

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - U.S. officials can open personal mail arriving from abroad as part of the fight against terrorism, and do so when they deem it necessary to protect the country, a Customs and Border Protection spokeswoman said on Monday.

News of the little-known practise follows revelations that the government approved eavesdropping on U.S. citizens without judicial oversight after the September 11 attacks, which sparked concern from civil liberties advocates and some lawmakers who called for congressional hearings.

[...]

Grant Goodman, an 81-year-old retired University of Kansas history professor, drew attention to the policy after a letter he received from a colleague in the Philippines was opened and resealed by Customs and Border Protection, and only then sent on to him.

He said he was shocked and amazed that the letter -- which he received last month from another retired history professor with whom he has corresponded for 50 years -- had been screened.

[...]

Click here for the full Reuters article.
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Tuesday, January 10, 2006

NSA Spied on Baltimore Peace Group — by Kevin Zeese

by Kevin Zeese
Raw Story
Published January 10, 2006

The National Security Agency has been spying on a Baltimore anti-war group, according to documents released during litigation, going so far as to document the inflating of protesters' balloons, and intended to deploy units trained to detect weapons of mass destruction, RAW STORY has learned.

According to the documents, the Pledge of Resistance-Baltimore, a Quaker-linked peace group, has been monitored by the NSA working with the Baltimore Intelligence Unit of the Baltimore City Police Department. [...]

Click here for the full Raw Story article.

Tip o' the hat to Desi at Mia Culpa for this story. As a recent (Jan 2002-Dec 2003) former resident of, and peace activist in, Annapolis (Anne Arundel County), Maryland this hits home.
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News Blackout on Jill Carroll Kidnapping: Email to FAIR

Introduction by Sean/iNoodle.com:

I sent the following email to Fairness and Accuracy In Reporting (FAIR) at 16:09 GMT (10 Jan 06). FAIR is a national media watch group in the US. I also cc:'d their UK counterpart, Media Lens.

*****

(cc: Media Lens, UK)

Dear FAIR Folk,

I just posted the below comment to a blog and thought I would forward my concerns to you as well.

Sincerely yours,

Sean M. Madden
[contact info removed]

Like Desi, I fully understand Jill Carroll's safety being the priority; but, I am concerned about how the mainstream media, en masse, collaborated with such efficacy to not only keep the journalist's name and news organization unidentified, but agreed, moreover, to a news blackout on the incident/situation/story itself.

As I had also figured out, Sunday, that Jill Carroll was likely the kidnapped journalist, I had to make some editorial decisions in my coverage of the story on my blog, iNoodle.com, but, ultimately, decided to leave two earlier articles online which did not identify either her name or newspaper.

Given the complicity to-date of the mainstream media in US war crimes, as well as illegal domestic surveillance going unreported for a year by the NYT despite their knowledge, I remain highly skeptical of the mainstream media's explanations and justifications.

Additionally, as E&P reports, the Christian Science Monitor made no mention in their January 10 story -- which named, for the first time, Jill Carroll as the journalist in question -- of having requested that other media outlets agree to the news blackout. This, at least, should have been explained within the story when the newspaper went public today.

Sean M. Madden | Homepage | 01.10.06 - 11:07 am | #
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News Blackout on Jill Carroll Kidnapping

Introduction by Sean/iNoodle.com:

The below is an excerpt from a January 10 Associated Press article written by Patrick Quinn and published in full at the Chicago Tribune:

"After initial reports of the kidnapping on Saturday, news organizations honored a request from the newspaper [the Christian Science Monitor] in Boston and a journalists' group in Baghdad for a news blackout. The request was made to give authorities an opportunity to try to resolve the incident during the early hours after the abduction."

UPDATE (12 Jan 06, 16:54 GMT): As I am receiving quite a number of hits to this post, I decided to include, herein, a link to a later post which includes an email I sent to Fairness & Accuracy In Reporting (FAIR) in the US and Media Lens in the UK.
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Kidnapped American Journalist: Jill Carroll — by Scott Peterson and Peter Ford

Introduction by Sean/iNoodle.com:

The below Christian Science Monitor article names the American journalist about whom two earlier articles had been posted to iNoodle.com. Jill Carroll is a freelance journalist who was on assignment with the CS Monitor when she was kidnapped.

One article, from Reporters Without Borders, was posted to iNoodle.com on Saturday, January 7. The other article, from the Gulf Times (Qatar), was posted to iNoodle on Sunday.

Reporters Without Borders had pulled their original story sometime before 10:56 pm GMT on Saturday. Some other online news sources had, likewise, removed the story, apparently as a means to help protect the journalist's life and security.

I, too, had figured out by researching the story on the web throughout the day, Sunday, that the reporter was likely Jill Carroll, but decided not to identify her on iNoodle.com, particularly after reading a plea in a Daily Kos post from a reported friend of hers who had asked that a post on that website be deleted or at least her name removed given that Jill's editors at the CS Monitor had apparently decided to not publish her identity. I decided, however, to leave online the two articles previously posted to iNoodle.com as neither identified the journalist.

The original Reporters Without Borders article which had been removed from their website is now available online again, updated, now, to include Jill's identity and additional information concerning the abduction.

UPDATE (12 Jan 06, 16:28 GMT): As I am receiving quite a number of hits to this post, I decided to include, herein, a link to a later post which includes an email I sent on January 10 to Fairness & Accuracy In Reporting (FAIR) in the US and Media Lens in the UK.

UPDATE: On Jan. 12 (7:38 PM ET), Slate published an article, written by Jack Shafer, which cites iNoodle.com's coverage of the Jill Carroll kidnapping story in the context of the news blackout requested of the media by the Christian Science Monitor.

*****

Reporter abducted in Iraq

By Scott Peterson and Peter Ford | Staff writers of The Christian Science Monitor
January 10, 2006

BAGHDAD AND PARIS - Jill Carroll, a freelance journalist currently on assignment for The Christian Science Monitor, was abducted by unknown gunmen in Baghdad Saturday morning. Her Iraqi interpreter was killed during the kidnapping.

"I saw a group of people coming as if they had come from the sky," recalled Ms. Carroll's driver, who survived the attack. "One guy attracted my attention. He jumped in front of me screaming, 'Stop! Stop! Stop!' with his left hand up and a pistol in his right hand."

One of the kidnappers pulled the driver from the car, jumped in, and drove away with several others huddled around Carroll and her interpreter, said the driver, who asked not to be identified. "They didn't give me any time to even put the car in neutral," he recounted.

The body of the interpreter, Allan Enwiyah, 32, was later found in the same neighborhood. He had been shot twice in the head, law enforcement officials said. There has been no word yet on Carroll's whereabouts.

The kidnapping occurred within 300 yards of the office of Adnan al-Dulaimi, a prominent Sunni politician, whom Carroll had been intending to interview at 10 a.m. Saturday local time, the driver said.

Mr. Dulaimi, however, turned out not to be at his office, and after 25 minutes, Carroll and her interpreter left. Their car was stopped as she drove away. "It was very obvious this was by design," said the driver. "The whole operation took no more than a quarter of a minute. It was very highly organized. It was a setup, a perfect ambush."

No group has yet claimed responsibility for the kidnapping, which is under investigation by Iraqi and US officials.

Richard Bergenheim, editor of the Monitor, appealed to Carroll's abductors to let her go immediately. "Jill's ability to help others understand the issues facing all groups in Iraq has been invaluable. We are urgently seeking information about Ms. Carroll and are pursuing every avenue to secure her release," he said.
Her family's plea

Carroll's relatives also pleaded for her release, urging her captors to "consider the work she has done to reveal the truth about the Iraq war."

Carroll, who has been working in Iraq since October 2003, has been contributing articles regularly since last February to The Christian Science Monitor, according to World News Editor David Clark Scott. "She has proved an insightful, resourceful, and courageous reporter," he said. "But Jill is not the kind of person to take undue risks."

When five or six men, including a large, mustachioed man with short hair waving a Glock handgun, stopped Carroll's car, the driver said he thought the men were from Dulaimi's security detail, so he slowed down.

On his knees on the ground, after having been pulled roughly from the driver's seat, he turned to see his car, a red Toyota Cressida, accelerating away "with a lot of heads inside." Carroll and Enwiyah were clearly alive at that point, he said.

One remaining kidnapper, standing calmly in the middle of the road as the others left, told him to "get away, bastard."

"He spoke to me as a father to a boy [but] in a very dirty way, like a traitor," the driver said.

It was then, he said, that the kidnapper shot once at him, the only time a firearm was used during the kidnapping. "When he shot at me [and missed], I understood this was an abduction. I jumped behind an electrical pole and then ran down an alley," he recalled, before seeking shelter at a joint Iraqi-US Army base.

Since arriving in Baghdad, Carroll has worked for the Italian news agency ANSA, the San Francisco Chronicle, and other US dailies, as well as the Monitor. She had previously worked as a reporter for The Jordan Times in Amman after graduating with a degree in journalism from the University of Massachusetts at Amherst.

31 reporters abducted

Jill is the latest of 31 journalists to have been kidnapped in Iraq since the beginning of the war according to Reporters Sans Frontières, an advocacy group in Paris. Thousands of Iraqis and more than 250 foreigners have been abducted, some by gangs seeking ransom, others by insurgents demanding the departure of US troops from Iraq. Four Christian peace activists are among the dozen or so foreigners still being held captive.

Click here for the original CS Monitor article.
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Attn Readers: MetaNoodle Modifications

I have made a few metadata changes to iNoodle.com, as follows:

* Instead of 30 days' worth of posts on the home page, only the 10 latest posts now appear. I did this so that: 1) the iNoodle.com home page loads more quickly and 2) the home page is easier to peruse.

To find earlier posts, you may do any of the following:
- Do a keyword search using the Blogger "SEARCH THIS BLOG" feature at the top of iNoodle.com. NOTE: Google/Blogger has fixed this tool such that it now works well.

- Link from the "Previous Ten Posts" listing located in the right-hand column.

- Dip into the "iNoodle.com Archives" located in the right-hand column. The archives are indexed by day and date.
* The metadata shown at the bottom of each post has been changed to include an explicitly marked permanent link ("PERMALINK") to the post. This is useful for bloggers who wish to link to an iNoodle.com post, and for readers to bookmark or copy-and-paste the URL for a particular post into a document, email message, etc. Note, too, that the small white envelope with the black arrow enables you to email a post directly from iNoodle.com.

* In the "Recommended Links" section, located in the right-hand column, I added a link to John Pilger's page on ZNet. I heartily recommend your sifting through the list of his current and archived articles available via his ZNet page. Here are a few notables:
The Quiet Death Of Freedom (Posted to iNoodle.com on 01/06/06)

In Britain, An Absurdity: Persuading People They Have A Political Choice (04/27/05)

Inevitable ring to the unimaginable (Note the date: 09/14/01)
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Sunday, January 08, 2006

The Army of Good Americans — by Manuel Valenzuela

by Manuel Valenzuela
Valenzuela's Veritas
January 4, 2006

Marching Forward

Festering in our midst like a toxic cloud of pollution the army of good Americans exists, living and working among us, inhabiting our neighborhoods and cities, co-existing peacefully with us, though perceiving an utterly different conception of reality than the rest of us. Their numbers, though dwindling more every day with the almost weekly revelations of corporatist lies built upon corporatist lies and government deceptions meshed with corporate criminality, remain high, thanks to those unable to escape the clouds of 9/11 and the manipulative propaganda of the corporatist media. The Kool-Aid drinking brigades remain strong, still ardent supporters of frivolous, fictitious and diminishing deceptions, still hypnotized to the dim-witted, slurred speech of their great Commander in Chief, still spewing the talking points they hear emanating from the corporatist media and still clinging to the ingrained and unenlightened selfishness that permeates their existence.

Today they are harder to recognize than in previous years, their once proud bumper stickers and car magnets on pickup trucks and SUVs praising their Dear Leader now nowhere to be seen, evaporating like a morning fog, thrown into trash bins or stored inside closets, lest they be fingered as part of the ignorant legions of automatons that helped steer America directly towards its present predicament. Gone are the large W’s emblazoned on their vehicles, that blue “Wastika” showcasing blind loyalty to criminality and fascism, while advertising mental fragility and propensities to be the followers of incompetence. Missing from the giant trucks and monstrous SUV’s masking quite apparent deficiencies below the belt are the plethora of patriotism-laced and nationalism-filled slogans that reeked of machismo yet betrayed delicate insecurity, now conveniently hidden from view as their precious war for fictitious democracy and freedom continues its decent into quagmire and debacle.

Yet this vast army of sheeple lingers throughout the American landscape, for they have not quite surrendered to truth or reality, two concepts as unfamiliar to them as reason and logic. They have simply retreated back to the canopied forests where barbarians live, crawling under rocks and boulders, returning home only to await the beckoning calls of further war through the trumpets of fear and hatred. Like fair-weathered fans, hiding at the first sign of defeat, rising with the arrival of victory, wanting only to be seen with winners and associated with success, this army of followers abandons ship when trouble can be seen and defeat smelled, forgetting that a war and quagmire exists in Iraq, evading their complicity in furtherance of criminality, finding it easy to whitewash from their minds war crimes and the murder of over 120,000 Iraqi and American lives.

For they are the Army of Good Americans, fearing what they do not know or understand, easily led into the dark expanses of human nature, ignorant to the ease with which they are manipulated and made blind to the power they willingly cede to the criminals and murderers in power. Birthed from the rubble of the World Trade Center, rising like a phoenix on 9/11 to claim dominion over America, this army has been the oxygen-rich blood maintaining alive the criminals in office. They are the defenders of war crimes and the apologizers of corruption. Filled with the emotions and passion of mammalian instinct, making them unthinking, uncritical, illogical and without reason, the army of good Americans has become the key used by corporatists to unlocking imperial aspirations abroad and destroying freedoms and rights at home. It is this army – a large part of American society – that has become an oasis to corporatists whose ambitions would have otherwise perished in the deserts of the Middle East.

Their legions, marching lock step behind their Dear Leader, filled to the rafters with the fear, hatred, xenophobia and patriotism needed by authoritarian regimes to thrive, have become the conduits of destruction, violence, rape and murder, the co-conspirators of illegality and death. Easily they answered the call to scapegoat and hate that which they did not know, their fear magnified and manipulated by their puppeteers, becoming the pawns of expendability and the tools of power, their emotions abused, their religious beliefs manipulated, their vote exploited, their majority numbers used to invade and occupy foreign lands and pilfer the treasury at home.

To them 9/11 was their call to arms, that transcendental moment where imploding towers falling birthed trance-like obedience and blind faith to criminals, though preferring the cowardice of chicken hawks, the timidity of yellow elephants and the comfort of armchair warriors rather than the bravery of enlistment and deployment. After all, in the demented mind of the army of good Americans, those less fortunate, those relegated to the lower castes of society due to the weaknesses espoused by the failed theories of social Darwinism are destined to become the cannon fodder of America, returning either dead or maimed for life serving their role where “survival of the fittest” governs.

Sitting comfortably on their couches, engorging themselves with microwave dinners, watching reality television and the latest exploits of sensationalist news reports while thousands of innocents die in order to appease their thirst for vengeance, the army of good Americans pretends to support the troops through car magnets and ribbons, hiding behind the red, white and blue, hiding insecurities through the bravado of tough talk, yet in reality sacrifices nothing both for a war they asked for or for the soldiers their loud voices sent to hell on Earth.

Instead, they bask in the glow of American comfort, kneeling down and praying nightly to the monitor in the center of their households, becoming the obedient drones of propaganda, absorbing and taking as their own the cocktail of talking points spewed by corporate media and its clusters of lackeys and hacks. On weekends they can be spotted playing with the many adult toys purchased through maxed out credit cards, thinking themselves beneficiaries of the mirage called the American Dream, not realizing their role in exponentially increasing the debt they will forever be enslaved to pay. After work they can be seen visiting the famed cathedrals of consumerism, those monstrous malls of materialism surveying suburbia, teeming with the products of overindulgence and the goods of escapism, sadly having become the center of American society and culture.

It is this army of good Americans that will, upon the next happenstance bogeyman atrocity, once again rise up in a fear-induced, hate-engendered frenzy, waving Old Glory, hiding behind its colors, its xenophobia metastasized to a rabid-filled, vengeance-seeking wickedness of blindness of reason and deafness of wisdom, asking, begging government and its corporatist masters to further usurp its civil liberties, freedoms and rights, gladly sacrificing the future of their children for the chance to be protected and be made secure from evildoers, both real and concocted, demanding, in its infinite ignorance, the full spectrum of the American police state.

Bubbles of Comfort and Fantasies of Deception

The army of good Americans would rather live in the slavery of ignorance rather than the freedom of knowledge, preferring shackles of fiction to the liberty of reality. Loyal followers to lies and deceit, easily manipulated and corralled, addicted to being misled and loving the exploitation of their emotions, they would rather not know truth than stop believing in fantasy, choosing to remain inside the bubble of comfortable deceptions rather than sit atop the mountain of concerns. Merrily they drink the Kool-Aid that enables them to remain unknowing, unconcerned and unrepentant sheeple, wishing to remain embedded into the same system that abuses, exploits and subjugates them. They would rather subsist in ignorance than thrive in truth, preferring to maintain the illusions and fictions manufactured by propagandists that allow them to escape the reality that is the human condition.

[...]

Click here for the full article at Manuel Valenzuela's blog. The above excerpt is roughly one-third of the whole essay.
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The Opposite of Good is Apathy — by Cindy Sheehan

"The apathy of the people is enough to make every statue leap from its pedestal and hasten the resurrection of the dead."
~William Lloyd Garrison


By Cindy Sheehan
[Published widely on the Internet; original source unknown]
January 6, 2006

The apathy of most of America is stunning and appalling to me. When I found this quote I was filled with wide-eyed wonder that there is one statue left in America complete with statue, or one grave or tomb still occupied.

On October 26th, as MoveOn.org was holding its candlelight vigils across the country to mourn the death of the 2000 th American soldier in Iraq, I, and two dozen others, were being arrested in front of the White House protesting the carnage done in our name by the illegitimate residents therein.

Now, counting the 11 American soldiers who were pointlessly killed in George's unconscionable and brainless war of terror in the Middle East, the American "official" death toll is up to 2193: 200 more families ruined in less than three months!

My son, Casey, was in the first 1000 to be killed in Iraq. We reached that dismal mark by September 2004. MoveOn.org conducted candlelight vigils for that occasion. Then a little over a year later, MoveOn.org conducted candlelight vigils to commemorate the 2000th soldier. If we don't get off of our collective apathetic and complacent backsides to stop the barbaric killing in Iraq, when will the next candlelight vigil be? George Bush and the evil neocons are killing our precious soldiers at the rate of 2.78 per day. By my calculations, we should be lighting our candles again and singing "Kum bah ya" by October.

This article is not intended to be an indictment of MoveOn.org which does some amazing work and were big supporters of Camp Casey. But my point is this, America: the longer we let the illegitimate pretender to the White House and his conniving and callous gang of co-conspirators to continue, the more our collective humanity is damaged. Apparently, candlelight vigils do very little to stop, or even slow down a little, the carnage committed by the war criminals in DC.

Then we have the unfortunate innocents of Iraq. I have heard reports of up to as many as 200 of them killed yesterday. So if 200 were reported, one has to really wonder what the true count was. Bill O'Reilly and George Bush define a terrorist as someone who "kills innocent men, women and children." Am I the only one who sees the irony and stunning hypocrisy in this statement?" Who do Bill and George think are being killed in Iraq? Well-trained and an organized Army? Terrorists? We all know that is false. This is who is being killed in Iraq: living breathing human beings, identical to Americans, or any other human beings on earth, who are just trying to go about their lives trying to survive in a war torn country that was no threat to America or our way of life.

"I would say 30,000 more or less have died as a result of the initial incursion and the ongoing violence against Iraqis," said George on December 12, 2005. Even if one accepts this very low guess-ti-mate by George, his policies have been responsible for ten times the 3000 deaths on September 11, 2001. By his own admission, he is ten times the terrorist that Osama ever was. If George says 30,000…who knows what the truthful total is. It fills me with sorrow and hurts my heart to even contemplate the number.

America: this is what you are allowing your government to do in your name:

Detain and torture prisoners without due process. Use chemical weapons on other members of humanity. Spy on Americans without a court order (I hope my conversations put them in a coma of boredom). Carpet bomb cities filled with human beings like yourselves. Destroy the infrastructure of other countries. Destroy the infrastructure of American cities. Cut taxes on the rich while pouring money and blood into the thirsty sands of the Middle East. Decimate our treasury. Rape the environment. Et cetera, et cetera, ad nauseum.

Hillary Clinton told me that the "wheels of government grind slowly." This is a tired cliché and it is unacceptable blather while the war machine is grinding the bones of our children. It is time for us wide awake Americans to make our elected officials speed up the timetable for withdrawal from Iraq.

If I hear one more rendition of "We Shall Overcome" and then watch the vigilers or marchers go home and turn on their TV's and crack open a brewsky content in the fact that they have done something for peace that day, I am going to scream! We can't overcome unless we take the proverbial bull by the horns and overcome!

Hold your vigils and marches in relevant places: such as warmongering local Congressional offices. So many Senators and Congresspeople come to mind. Or in front of a recruiting station. Or Federal Buildings. Or military bases. Then instead of going home and cracking open a beer, or uncorking a bottle of wine, sit down and say "we aren't leaving until you call for an immediate end to the occupation of Iraq." Put your butt on the line for humanity.

Change will not happen until we make it happen. We can't make change happen by wishing or praying that it will happen.

We actually have to do something.

Cindy Sheehan is a co-founder of Gold Star Families for Peace.
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US Journalist Abducted in Iraq — Gulf Times

Gulf Times Newspaper (Doha, Qatar)
Published: Sunday, 8 January, 2006, 11:23 AM Doha Time

BAGHDAD: A US woman journalist was kidnapped by gunmen in the Iraqi capital yesterday and her translator killed, the latest Westerner to be held by insurgents in the war-torn country.

“An American journalist is missing. We are investigating,” said US embassy spokeswoman Elizabeth Colton, who declined to name her.

Iraqi security officials said a US woman journalist was abducted by armed men in the Adl district of western Baghdad and that her translator had died.

An Iraqi defence ministry official said the interpreter was able to tell soldiers before he died that the journalist was kidnapped.

Officials said the reporter was seized on her way to interview prominent Sunni Arab politician Adnan al-Dulaimi.

A guard outside Dulaimi’s office said he heard gunshots fired a short distance away and rushed to find the body of a slain man.

Dulaimi himself said he had no appointment to meet a Western journalist.

People living in the neighbourhood, which has been cordoned off by US and Iraqi security forces, were frightened and refused to talk to journalists.

Some 250 foreigners have being kidnapped over the past two years by insurgents in Iraq. Some have been released, some murdered while others remain missing.

Hundreds of Iraqis have also been abducted, often for ransom, or by rebels seeking to discredit the government. One of the latest such victims was a sister of Interior Minister Bayan Jabr Solagh.

Meanwhile, US officials have sought to downplay the surge in violence that on Thursday alone claimed the lives of more than 115 Iraqis and 11 US servicemen.

“These attacks are very clearly designed to try to divide the Iraqi people. They are very clearly designed to try to derail the political development of Iraq,” State Department spokesman Sean McCormack said.

“What is important ... is that (Iraqi leaders) try to move beyond identity politics and really engage in cross-sectarian, cross-ethnic activities in looking to build those coalitions and to do what is right for all Iraqis,” he added.

General George Casey, commander of the US-led forces in Iraq, described the rise in insurgent attacks this week as an “anomaly”.

Clashes broke out early yesterday between insurgents and US troops in Fallujah amid reports of one US soldier killed, police said.

The police said that gunmen positioned themselves on top of the roof of a building in Wahda neighbourhood in the centre of the restive city. They opened fire on a US patrol, killing one soldier and injuring three.

The police said the troops opened fire to protect themselves, injuring two bystanding women and a man.

In another incident, a mortar fell on a US base in the Shurta neighbourhood of Fallujah. No information on the incidents was immediately available from the US military.

Assailants earlier opened fire at a doctor working at the city clinic in Fallujah. Health sources said the assailants shot Ali Hussein at the clinic and he died at the hospital later.

In Baquba, northeast of Baghdad, gunmen attacked a police patrol, injuring six policemen, the police said.

Also in Baquba, gunmen attacked a family whose father reportedly works as a contractor with US troops, killing a child and injuring an elderly man.

Hospital sources said the incident took place in Tarfa village in the Buhriz district of Baquba.

In Baghdad, a car bomber struck a police checkpoint yesterday, injuring five policemen. The incident took place in Baghdad Jadida, a neighbourhood in the east of the capital.

Click here for the Gulf Times article.
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MySpace bloggers rage at Murdoch — by Nicholas Wapshott

By Nicholas Wapshott in New York
The Independent Online Edition
Published: 8 January 2006

Angry members of MySpace, the personal file-sharing website for young adults, are accusing Rupert Murdoch's News Corporation of censoring their postings and blocking their access to rival sites.

The 38 million subscribers to MySpace, which News Corp bought for $629m (£355m) last July, discovered that when they wrote to each other about rival video-swapping site YouTube, the words were automatically deleted, and attempts to download video images from YouTube led to blank screens.

The intervention by News Corp in the traditionally open-access world of the web - in particular the alteration of personal user profiles - provoked a storm of angry posts in online "blogs". [...]

Click here for the full Independent article.
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Saturday, January 07, 2006

American journalist kidnapped, her Iraqi interpreter shot dead — by Reporters Without Borders

January 7, 2006

Reporters Without Borders said it was extremely worried by the reported abduction of an American woman journalist this morning in Baghdad and appalled by the news that her interpreter was shot dead by her abductors. The US authorities have not yet named the journalist.

“Journalists working in Iraq have once again been caught in a deadly ambush,” the press freedom organisation said. “The interpreter’s death confirms that the Iraqi press continues to be the chief victim of the infernal climate for the media in this country. Our thoughts go out to his family and friends and to all Iraqi journalists, who are paying the highest price in the war ravaging their country.”

Reporters Without Borders added : “There is still a life that can be saved today. We appeal to all those who, like us, reject injustice to do everything possible to ensure that the kidnapped journalist is freed as soon as possible. Experience has shown that an energetic campaign is decisive in the first days of an abduction.”

The unidentified American journalist was going to meet Sunni political leader Adnan al-Dulaimi when, according to the Iraqi police, she was kidnapped by gunmen near the Malik bin Anas mosque in the district of Adel, in western Baghdad at about 10 a.m. today. Her interpreter’s body was found near the site of the abduction.

At total of 55 journalists and 21 media assistants have been killed since the start of war in Iraq in March 2003. Of the 76 fatal victims, 56 (73 per cent) were Iraqi and four (five per cent) were American. Baghdad continues to be Iraq’s most dangerous city, with 27 journalists and assistants killed, followed by Mosul, with 12. The pan-Arab satellite TV station Al-Iraqiya has been the worst hit news media with a total of 10 journalists and assistants killed.

The American journalist kidnapped today is the 31st media worker to have been kidnapped in Iraq since the start of the war. Five of the kidnap victims (four Iraqis and Enzo Baldoni of Italy) were killed by their abductors. The others were released safe and sound. Twenty-three of the abductions took place in or near Baghdad.

Click here for the article on the Reporters Without Borders website.

UPDATE: As of 22:56 GMT (7 Jan 06), this article is no longer available via the Reporters Without Borders site. I do not know if they have decided to pull the story, to do so pending an update, or if this may be a technical issue. However, in the interest of accuracy, I have researched the following additional news sources:

Associated Press (AP) article published by the Toronto Star (7 Jan 06, 8:20 am local time) and the Boston Globe.

United Press International (UPI) article published 7 Jan 06, 9:13 am GMT-5.

UPDATE: On Jan. 12 (7:38 PM ET), Slate published an article, written by Jack Shafer, which cites iNoodle.com's coverage of the Jill Carroll kidnapping story in the context of the news blackout requested of the media by the Christian Science Monitor. As iNoodle.com is receiving quite a number of hits to this and other related posts, I have decided to include, herein, a link to a later post which includes an email I sent on January 10 to Fairness & Accuracy In Reporting (FAIR) in the US and Media Lens in the UK.
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2005 Worldwide Press Freedom Index — by Reporters Without Borders

Western democracies slip back, with the US falling more than 20 places

Introduction by Sean/iNoodle.com:

This report is issued by Reporters Without Borders each May 3rd, in celebration of World Press Freedom Day. Therefore, the 2005 report has been available for more than eight months; however, as I just stumbled upon it today and consider the information contained therein to remain relevant, I decided to post this to iNoodle.com. Note, too, that we can expect the 2006 report to become available in less than four months.

The US (in American territory) is ranked #44 of 167 countries. The lower the ranking number, the greater the relative press freedom. The US (in Iraq) is ranked #137. Iraq itself is ranked #157. The United Kingdom is ranked #24. I am interested in learning how these rankings may change in the coming 2006 report.

Tied for #1 are the following seven countries: Denmark, Finland, Iceland, Ireland, the Netherlands, Norway and Switzerland.

The following excerpt from the report contradicts two generally accepted truisms:
Press freedom, economic development and independence

Countries that have recently won their independence or have recovered it are very observant of press freedom and give the lie to the insistence of many authoritarian leaders that democracy takes decades to establish itself. Nine states that have had independence (or recovered it within the past 15 years) are among the top 60 countries - Slovenia (9th), Estonia (11th), Latvia (16th), Lithuania (21st), Namibia (25th), Bosnia-Herzegovina (33rd), Macedonia (43rd), Croatia (56th) and East Timor (58th).

The Index also contradicts the frequent argument by leaders of poor and repressive countries that economic development is a vital precondition for democracy and respect for human rights. The top of the Index is heavily dominated by rich countries, but several very poor ones (with a per capita GDP of less than $1,000 in 2003) are among the top 60, such as Benin (25th), Mali (37th), Bolivia (45th), Mozambique (49th), Mongolia (53rd), Niger (57th) and East Timor (58th).

Click here for the full report from Reporters Without Borders. I also keep a link on iNoodle.com (in the "Links" section in the right-hand column) to Reporters Without Borders' home page.
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Ariel Sharon — by Robert Fisk

Israel's Prime Minister was a ruthless military commander responsible for one of the most shocking war crimes of the 20th century, argues Robert Fisk. President George Bush acclaims Ariel Sharon as 'a man of peace', yet the blood that was shed at Sabra and Chatila remains a stain on the conscience of the Zionist nation. As Sharon lies stricken in his hospital bed, his political career over, how will history judge him?

by Robert Fisk
January 6, 2006
The Independent

I shook hands with him once, a brisk, no-nonsense soldier's grip from Sharon as he finished a review of the vicious Phalangist militiamen who stood in the barracks square at Karantina in Beirut. Who would have thought, I asked myself then, that this same bunch of murderers - the men who butchered their way through the Palestinian Sabra and Chatila refugee camps only a few weeks earlier - had their origins in the Nazi Olympics of 1936. That's when old Pierre Gemayel - still alive and standing stiffly to attention for Sharon - watched the "order" of Nazi Germany and proposed to bring some of this "order" to Lebanon. That's what Gemayel told me himself. Did Sharon not understand this. Of course, he must have done.

Back on 18 September that same year, Loren Jenkins of The Washington Post and Karsten Tveit of Norwegian television and I had clambered over the piled corpses of Chatila - of raped and eviscerated women and their husbands and children and brothers - and Jenkins, knowing that the Isrealis had sat around the camps for two nights watching this filth, shrieked "Sharon!" in anger and rage. He was right. Sharon it was who sent the Phalange into the camps on the night of 16 September - to hunt for "terrorists", so he claimed at the time.

The subsequent Israeli Kahan commission of enquiry into this atrocity provided absolute proof that Israeli soldiers saw the massacre taking place. The evidence of a Lieutenant Avi Grabovsky was crucial. He was an Israeli deputy tank commander and reported what he saw to his higher command. "Don't interfere," the senior officer said. Ever afterwards, Israeli embassies around the world would claim that the commission held Sharon only indirectly responsible for the massacre. It was untrue. The last page of the official Israeli report held Sharon "personally responsible". It was years later that the Israeli-trained Phalangist commander, Elie Hobeika, now working for the Syrians, agreed to turn state's evidence against Sharon - now the Israeli Prime Minister - at a Brussels court. The day after the Israeli attorney general declared Sharon's defence a "state" matter, Hobeika was killed by a massive car bomb in east Beirut. Israel denied responsibility. US Defence Secretary Donald Rumsfeld traveled to Brussels and quietly threatened to withdraw Nato headquarters from Belgium if the country maintained its laws to punish war criminals from foreign nations. Within months, George W Bush had declared Sharon "a man of peace". It was all over.

In the end, Sharon got away with it, even when it was proved that he had, the night before the Phalangists attacked the civilians of the camp, publicly blamed the Palestinians for the murder of their leader, President-elect Bashir Gemayel. Sharon told these ruthless men that the Palestinians had killed their beloved "chief". Then he sent them in among the civilian sheep - and claimed later he could never have imagined what they would do in Chatila. Only years later was it proved that hundreds of Palestinians who survived the original massacre were interrogated by the Israelis and then handed back to the murderers to be slaughtered over the coming weeks.

So it is as a war criminal that Sharon will be known forever in the Arab world, through much of the Western world, in fact - save, of course, for the craven men in the White House and the State Department and the Blair Cabinet - as well as many leftist Israelis. Sabra and Chatila was a crime against humanity. Its dead counted more than half the fatalities of the World Trade Centre attacks of 2001. But the man who was responsible was a "man of peace". It was he who claimed that the preposterous Yasser Arafat was a Palestinian bin Laden. He it was who as Israeli foreign minister opposed Nato's war in Kosovo, inveighing against "Islamic terror" in Kosovo. "The moment that Israel expresses support...it's likely to be the next victim. Imagine that one day Arabs in Galilee demand that the region in which they live be recognised as an autonomous area, connected to the Palestinian Authority..." Ah yes, Sharon as an ally of another war criminal, Slobodan Milosevic. There must be no Albanian state in Kosovo.

Ever since he was elected in 2001 - and especially since his withdrawal of settlements from the rubbish tip of Gaza last year, a step which would, according to his spokesman, turn any plans for a Palestinian state in the West Bank into "formaldehyde" - his supporters have tried to turn Sharon into a pragmatist, another Charles de Gaulle. His new party was supposed to be proof of this. But in reality, Sharon had more in common with the putchist generals of Algeria.

He voted against the peace treaty with Egypt in 1979. He voted against a withdrawal from southern Lebanon in 1985. He opposed Israel's participation in the Madrid peace conference in 1991. He opposed the Knesset plenum vote on the Oslo agreement in 1993. He abstained on a vote for peace with Jordan in 1994. He voted against the Hebron agreement in 1997. He condemned the manner of Israel's retreat from Lebanon in 2000. By 2002, he had built 34 new Jewish colonies on Palestinian land.

And he was a man of peace.

[...]

Only a month earlier, the Americans rolled out their first S-70A-55 troopcarrying Black Hawk helicopter to be sold to the Israelis. Israel had purchased 24 of the new machines, costing $211m - most of which would be paid for by the United States - even though it had 24 earlier-model Black Hawks. The log book of the first of the new helicopters was ceremonially handed over to the director general of the Israeli defence ministry, the notorious Amos Yaron, by none other than Alexander Haig - the man who gave Begin the green light to invade Lebanon in 1982.

[...]

The most terrible incident - praised by Sharon at the time as a "great success" - was the attack by Israel on Salah Shehada, a Hamas leader, which slaughtered nine children along with eight adults. Their names gave a frightful reality to this child carnage: 18-month-old Ayman Matar, three-year-old Mohamed Matar, five-year-old Diana Matar, four-year-old Sobhi Hweiti, six-year-old Mohamed Hweiti, 10-year-old Ala Matar, 15-year-old Iman Shehada, 17-year-old Maryam Matar. And Dina Matar. She was two months old. An Israeli air force pilot dropped a one-ton bomb on their homes from an American-made F-16 aircraft on 22 July 2002.

What war did Sharon think he was fighting? And what was he fighting for? Sharon regarded the attack as a victory against "terror". Al-Wazzir, now an economic analyst in Gaza, believed that people who did not believe themselves to be targets were now finding themselves under attack. "There's a network of Israeli army and air force intelligence and Mossad and Shin Bet that works together, feeding each other information. They can cross the lines between Area C and Area B in the occupied territories. Usually they carry out operations when IDF morale is low. When they killed my father, the IDF was in very low spirits because of the first intifada. So they go for a 'spectacular' to show what great 'warriors' they are. Now the IDF morale is low again because of the second intifada."

[...]

Palestinian security officers in Gaza were intrigued by the logic behind the Israeli killings. "Our guys meet their guys and we know their officers and operatives," one of the Palestinian officials tells me. "I tell you this frankly - they are as corrupt and indisciplined as we are. And as ruthless. After they targeted Mohamed Dahlan's convoy when he was coming back from security talks, Dahlan talked to foreign minister Peres. "Look what you guys are doing to us," Dahlan told Peres. "Don't you realise it was me who took Sharon's son to meet Arafat?" Al-Wazzir understands some of the death squad logic. "It has some effect because we are a paternalistic society. We believe in the idea of a father figure. But when they assassinated my dad, the intifada didn't stop. It was affected, but all the political objectives failed. Rather than demoralising the Palestinians, it fuelled the intifada. They say there's now a hundred Palestinians on the murder list. No, I don't think the Palestinians will adopt the same type of killings against Israeli intelligence.

"An army is an institution, a system; murdering an officer just results in him the great war for civilisation 573 being replaced..." The murder of political or military opponents was a practice the Israelis honed in Lebanon where Lebanese guerrilla leaders were regularly blown up by hidden bombs or shot in the back by Shin Bet execution squads, often - as in the case of an Amal leader in the village of Bidias - after interrogation. And all in the name of "security".

Throughout the latest bloodletting, the one distinctive feature of the conflict - the illegal and continuing colonisation of occupied Arab land - was yet again a taboo subject, to be ignored, or mentioned in passing only when Jewish settlers were killed. That this was the world's last colonial conflict, in which the colonisers were supported by the United States, was undiscussable, a prohibited subject, something quite outside the brutality between Palestinians and Israelis which was, so we had to remember, now part of America's "war on terror". This is what Sharon had dishonestly claimed since 11 September 2001. The truth, however, became clear in a revealing interview Sharon gave to a French magazine in December of that year, in which he recalled a telephone conversation with Jacques Chirac. Sharon said he told the French president that: "I was at that time reading a terrible book about the Algerian war. It's a book whose title reads in Hebrew: The Savage War of Peace. I know that President Chirac fought as an officer during this conflict and that he had himself been decorated for his courage. So, in a very friendly way, I told him: 'Mr. President, you have to understand us, here, it's as if we are in Algeria. We have no place to go. And besides, we have no intention of leaving.'"

Sana Sersawi speaks carefully, loudly but slowly, as she recalls the chaotic, dangerous, desperately tragic events that overwhelmed her almost exactly 19 years ago, on 18 September 1982. As one of the survivors prepared to testify against the Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon - who was then Israel's defence minister - she stops to search her memory when she confronts the most terrible moments of her life. "The Lebanese Forces militia had taken us from our homes and marched us up to the entrance to the camp where a large hole had been dug in the earth. The men were told to get into it. Then the militiamen shot a Palestinian. The women and children had climbed over bodies to reach this spot, but we were truly shocked by seeing this man killed in front of us and there was a roar of shouting and screams from the women. That's when we heard the Israelis on loudspeakers shouting, "Give us the men, give us the men." We thought: "Thank God, they will save us." It was to prove a cruelly false hope.

Mrs Sersawi, three months pregnant, saw her 30-year-old husband Hassan, and her Egyptian brother-in-law Faraj el-Sayed Ahmed standing in the crowd of men. "We were all told to walk up the road towards the Kuwaiti embassy, the women and children in front, the men behind. We had been separated. There were Phalangist militiamen and Israeli soldiers walking alongside us. I could still see Hassan and Faraj. It was like a parade. There were several hundred of us. When we got to the Cité Sportive, the Israelis put us women in a big concrete room and the men were taken to another side of the stadium. There were a lot of men from the camp and I could no longer see my husband. The Israelis went round saying "Sit, sit." It was 11 o'clock. An hour later, we were told to leave. But we stood around outside amid the Israeli soldiers, waiting for our men."

Sana Sersawi waited in the bright, sweltering sun for Hassan and Faraj to emerge. "Some men came out, none of them younger than 40, and they told us to be patient, that hundreds of men were still inside. Then about four in the afternoon, an Israeli officer came out. He was wearing dark glasses and said in Arabic: "What are you all waiting for?" He said there was nobody left, that everyone had gone. There were Israeli trucks moving out with tarpaulin over them. We couldn't see inside. And there were Jeeps and tanks and a bulldozer making a lot of noise. We stayed there as it got dark and the Israelis appeared to be leaving and we were very nervous.

"But then when the Israelis had moved away, we went inside. And there was no one there. Nobody. I had been only three years married. I never saw my husband again."

The smashed Camille Chamoun Sports Stadium was a natural "holding centre" for prisoners. Only two miles from Beirut airport, it had been an ammunition dump for Yasser Arafat's PLO and repeatedly bombed by Israeli jets during the 1982 siege of Beirut so that its giant, smashed exterior looked like a nightmare denture. The Palestinians had earlier mined its cavernous interior, but its vast, underground storage space and athletics changing-rooms remained intact.

It was a familiar landmark to all of us who lived in Beirut. At mid-morning on 18 September 1982 - around the time Sana Sersawi says she was brought to the stadium - I saw hundreds of Palestinian and Lebanese prisoners, perhaps well over 1,000 in all, sitting in its gloomy, cavernous interior, squatting in the dust, watched over by Israeli soldiers and plainclothes Shin Beth agents and a group of men who I suspected, correctly, were Lebanese collaborators. The men sat in silence, obviously in fear.

From time to time, I noted, a few were taken away. They were put into Israeli army trucks or jeeps or Phalangist vehicles - for further "interrogation". Nor did I doubt this. A few hundred metres away, up to 600 massacre victims of the Sabra and Chatila Palestinian refugee camps rotted in the sun, the stench of decomposition drifting over the prisoners and their captors alike. It was suffocatingly hot. Loren Jenkins of The Washington Post, Paul Eedle of Reuters and I had only got into the cells because the Israelis assumed - given our Western appearance - that we must have been members of Shin Beth. Many of the prisoners had their heads bowed.

Arab prisoners usually adopted this pose of humiliation. But Israel's militiamen had been withdrawn from the camps, their slaughter over, and at least the Israeli army was now in charge. So what did these men have to fear?

Looking back - and listening to Sana Sersawi today - I shudder now at our innocence. My notes of the time contain some ominous clues. We found a Lebanese employee of Reuters, Abdullah Mattar, among the prisoners and obtained his release, Paul leading him away with his arm around the man's shoulders. "They take us away, one by one, for interrogation," one of the prisoners muttered to me. "They are Haddad militiamen. Usually they bring the people back after interrogation, but not always. Sometimes the people do not return." Then an Israeli officer ordered me to leave. Why couldn't the prisoners talk to me? I asked. "They can talk if they want," he replied. "But they have nothing to say."

All the Israelis knew what had happened inside the camps. The smell of the corpses was now overpowering. Outside, a Phalangist Jeep with the words "Military Police" painted on it - if so exotic an institution could be associated with this gang of murderers - drove by. A few television crews had turned up. One filmed the Lebanese Christian militiamen outside the Cité Sportive. He also filmed a woman pleading to an Israeli army colonel called "Yahya" for the release of her husband. The colonel has now been positively identified by The Independent. Today, he is a general in the Israeli army.

Along the main road opposite the stadium there was a line of Israeli Merkava tanks, their crews sitting on the turrets, smoking, watching the men being led from the stadium in ones or twos, some being set free, others being led away by Shin Beth men or by Lebanese men in drab khaki overalls. All these soldiers knew what had happened inside the camps. One, Lt Avi Grabovsky - he was later to testify to the Israeli Kahan commission - had even witnessed the murder of several civilians the previous day and had been told not to "interfere".

And in the days that followed, strange reports reached us. A girl had been dragged from a car in Damour by Phalangist militiamen and taken away, despite her appeals to a nearby Israeli soldier. Then the cleaning lady of a Lebanese woman who worked for a US television chain complained bitterly that Israelis had arrested her husband. He was never seen again.

There were other vague rumours of "disappeared" people. I wrote in my notes at the time that "even after Chatila, Israel's 'terrorist' enemies were being liquidated in West Beirut." But I had not directly associated this dark conviction with the Cité Sportive. I had not even reflected on the fearful precedents of a sports stadium in time of war. Hadn't there been a sports stadium in Santiago a few years before, packed with prisoners after Pinochet's coup d'état, a stadium from which many prisoners never returned?

Among the testimonies gathered by lawyers seeking to indict Ariel Sharon for war crimes is that of Wadha al-Sabeq. On Friday 17 September 1982, she said, while the massacre was still - unknown to her - under way inside Sabra and Chatila, she was in her home with her family in Bir Hassan, just opposite the camps. "Neighbours came and said the Israelis wanted to stamp our ID cards, so we went downstairs and we saw both Israelis and Lebanese forces on the road. The men were separated from the women." This separation - with its awful shadow of similar separations at Srebrenica during the Bosnian war - was a common feature of these mass arrests. "We were told to go to the Cité Sportive. The men stayed put." Among the men were Wadha's two sons, 19-year-old Mohamed and 16-year-old Ali and her brother Mohamed. "We went to the Cité Sportive, as the Israelis told us," she says. "I never saw my sons or brother again."

The survivors tell distressingly similar stories. Bahija Zrein says she was ordered by an Israeli patrol to go to the Cité Sportive and the men with her, including her 22-year-old brother, were taken away. Some militiamen - watched by the Israelis - loaded him into a car, blindfolded, she says.

"That's how he disappeared," she says in her official testimony, "and I have never seen him again since." It was only a few days afterwards that we journalists began to notice a discrepancy in the figures of dead. While up to 600 bodies had been found inside Sabra and Chatila, 1,800 civilians had been reported as "missing". We assumed - how easy assumptions are in war --that they had been killed in the three days between 16 September 1982 and the withdrawal of the Phalangist killers on 18 September, and that their corpses had been secretly buried outside the camp. Beneath the golf course, we suspected. The idea that many of these young people had been murdered outside the camps or after 18 September, that the killings were still going on while we walked through the camps, never occurred to us.

Why did we journalists at the time not think of this? The following year, the Israeli Kahan commission published its report, condemning Sharon but ending its own inquiry of the atrocity on 18 September, with just a one-line hint - unexplained - that several hundred people may have "disappeared around the same time". The commission interviewed no Palestinian survivors but it was allowed to become the narrative of history.

The idea that the Israelis went on handing over prisoners to their bloodthirsty militia allies never occurred to us. The Palestinians of Sabra and Chatila are now giving evidence that this is exactly what happened. One man, Abdel Nasser Alameh, believes his brother Ali was handed to the Phalange on the morning of 18 September. A Palestinian Christian woman called Milaneh Boutros has recorded how, in a truck-load of women and children, she was taken from the camps to the Christian town of Bikfaya, the home of the newly assassinated Christian President-elect Bashir Gemayel, where a grief-stricken Christian woman ordered the execution of a 13-year-old boy in the truck. He was shot. The truck must have passed at least four Israeli checkpoints on its way to Bikfaya. And heaven spare me, I had even met the woman who ordered the boy's execution.

Even before the slaughter inside the camps had ended, Shahira Abu Rudeina says she was taken to the Cité Sportive where, in one of the underground "holding centres", she saw a retarded man, watched by Israeli soldiers, burying bodies in a pit. Her evidence might be rejected were it not for the fact that she also expressed her gratitude for an Israeli soldier - inside the Chatila camp, against all the evidence given by the Israelis - who prevented the murder of her daughters by the Phalange.

Long after the war, the ruins of the Cité Sportive were torn down and a brand new marble stadium was built in its place, partly by the British. Pavarotti has sung there. But the testimony of what may lie beneath its foundations - and its frightful implications - will give Ariel Sharon further reason to fear an indictment.

I had been in the Sabra and Chatila camps when these crimes took place. I had returned to the camps, year after year, to try to discover what happened to the missing thousand men. Karsten Tveit of Norwegian television had been with me in 1982 and he had returned to Beirut many times with the same purpose. Lawyers weren't the only people investigating these crimes against humanity. In 2001, Tveit arrived in Lebanon with the original 1982 tapes of those women pleading for their menfolk at the gates of the Cité Sportive. He visited the poky little video shops in the present-day camp and showed and reshowed the tapes until local Palestinians identified them; then Tveit set off to find the women - 19 years older now - who were on the tape, who had asked for their sons and brothers and fathers and husbands outside the Cité Sportive. He traced them all. None had ever seen their loved ones again.

Extracted from The Great War For Civilisation: The Conquest of the Middle East, by Robert Fisk.

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