Sunday, October 19, 2008

More Iraqi Refugees flee as Civil War rages on...

UN: Thousands of Iraqi Christians Flee Mosul
By Lisa Schlein, Voice of America News
Geneva
17 October 2008


The U.N. refugee agency says almost half of the Christian population in the Iraqi city of Mosul has fled after attacks and threats. UNHCR says nearly 10,000 people have fled to other areas in the past week. Lisa Schlein reports for VOA from UNHCR headquarters in Geneva.

The U.N. refugee agency says the Ministry of Displacement and Migration in Mosul reports more than 1,500 families have been displaced so far. It says it cannot confirm the exact figure, but is very concerned about the situation in Mosul that is causing this mass displacement of Christians.

U.N. refugee spokesman, Ron Redmond, says at least 10 field assessment missions have gone to areas surrounding Mosul to check on the situation. He says initial reports indicate most Christian Iraqis decided to leave the city following direct as well as indirect threats or intimidation.

"One of those interviewed witnessed the killing of a Christian Iraqi on the street, while several of the displaced told us that they had received printed threats at the university campuses, in their homes and through text messages on their mobile phones," he said. "Several others told our teams that they left when they heard news of 11 reported killings of Christians in Mosul. And, others were warned by family members, friends, neighbors of potential threats and they decided to leave before it was too late."

Redmond says there is no firm indication as to who is issuing these threats. He says the Iraqi authorities reportedly have deployed more than 1,000 additional police to Mosul to protect the Christians.

Mosul is about 390 kilometers north of Baghdad. It remains one of Iraq's more violent cities. The Iraqi authorities and U.S. military say al-Qaida and the Sunni Islamist militant group allied to Osama bin Laden are still active in Mosul.

Redmond says the thousands of Christians who fled Mosul to other areas have many needs.

"Most of those who fled are staying with extended family members. There is an urgent need for food, clothing, non-food items like mattresses, blankets, stoves. They also need access to health facilities, hygiene kits, clean water and their children, of course, are unable to go to school, so things need to be done to get them into classrooms," he said.

Redmond says most of the displaced say they fear for their lives and are not thinking of returning home for now. A few said they would only return if and when their safety and security could be assured by the local authorities.

Make no mistake - the Civil War in Iraq continues and will intensify in the months ahead.~Luis

posted by Luis Carlos Montalvan at 10:55 AM 0 Comments

More Iraqi Refugees flee as Civil War rages on...

UN: Thousands of Iraqi Christians Flee Mosul
By Lisa Schlein, Voice of America News
Geneva
17 October 2008


The U.N. refugee agency says almost half of the Christian population in the Iraqi city of Mosul has fled after attacks and threats. UNHCR says nearly 10,000 people have fled to other areas in the past week. Lisa Schlein reports for VOA from UNHCR headquarters in Geneva.

The U.N. refugee agency says the Ministry of Displacement and Migration in Mosul reports more than 1,500 families have been displaced so far. It says it cannot confirm the exact figure, but is very concerned about the situation in Mosul that is causing this mass displacement of Christians.

U.N. refugee spokesman, Ron Redmond, says at least 10 field assessment missions have gone to areas surrounding Mosul to check on the situation. He says initial reports indicate most Christian Iraqis decided to leave the city following direct as well as indirect threats or intimidation.

"One of those interviewed witnessed the killing of a Christian Iraqi on the street, while several of the displaced told us that they had received printed threats at the university campuses, in their homes and through text messages on their mobile phones," he said. "Several others told our teams that they left when they heard news of 11 reported killings of Christians in Mosul. And, others were warned by family members, friends, neighbors of potential threats and they decided to leave before it was too late."

Redmond says there is no firm indication as to who is issuing these threats. He says the Iraqi authorities reportedly have deployed more than 1,000 additional police to Mosul to protect the Christians.

Mosul is about 390 kilometers north of Baghdad. It remains one of Iraq's more violent cities. The Iraqi authorities and U.S. military say al-Qaida and the Sunni Islamist militant group allied to Osama bin Laden are still active in Mosul.

Redmond says the thousands of Christians who fled Mosul to other areas have many needs.

"Most of those who fled are staying with extended family members. There is an urgent need for food, clothing, non-food items like mattresses, blankets, stoves. They also need access to health facilities, hygiene kits, clean water and their children, of course, are unable to go to school, so things need to be done to get them into classrooms," he said.

Redmond says most of the displaced say they fear for their lives and are not thinking of returning home for now. A few said they would only return if and when their safety and security could be assured by the local authorities.

Make no mistake. The Civil War is spiraling out of
control.~Luis

posted by Luis Carlos Montalvan at 10:47 AM 0 Comments

Friday, October 10, 2008

British Government just as worse as Bush's Administration...











The London Times
October 10, 2008

Iraqi who risked all for Britain is left to his fate in Basra
Deborah Haynes in Baghdad

An interpreter employed by the Army in Basra for five years has been refused a place on a scheme to resettle Iraqi employees in Britain because he is deemed to be a security risk.

Mohammed Motlag, 47, had been told that he and his family could be among the first to be relocated to Britain under a fast-track programme to offer asylum to current Army employees. He has learnt, however, that his application for asylum has been rejected for “security reasons”.

Mr Motlag, whose five-year-old son was kidnapped because of his work for the British, said: “It was very shameful to learn that the British did not accept me. My wife had to be taken to hospital because she fainted upon hearing the news.

“I cried. I have liked Britain since I was a child. I grew up reading Shake-speare and used to think, ‘What a civili-sation’.”

The resettlement scheme was introduced by David Miliband, the Foreign Secretary, last October after a campaign in The Times about the plight of Iraqi interpreters who had been killed or intimidated by militias because of their work.Officials have from the outset attempted to restrict its scope, however, to limit the numbers of those able to benefit while doing just enough to “respond to perceptions” that the Government had a moral obligation to its local staff.

Mr Motlag, who has two children, learnt of his fate when he was summoned to the Labour Support Unit, which handles the military’s Iraqi workers. He was told: “Mohammed, we are very sorry but the British Government does not accept you for asylum in the United Kingdom.” The decision to deny the application for asylum has surprised Mr Motlag’s employers in Basra, who appear to have nothing but praise for him.

In a letter of reference written in April 2004 by Brigadier Julian Free, then a lieutenant-colonel, who went on to become one of Britain’s top commanders in Basra, Mr Motlag is said to have “proved to be extremely reliable and hard working, putting in many extra hours and accompanying troops on house searches and operations, which other local employees would not attend”.

A British officer who has worked with Mr Motlag told The Times: “He is absolutely fantastic. He has been an important servant and done an important service to our country.”

Mr Motlag, like many interpreters, has paid dearly for his devoted service and has first-hand experience of the tactics used by Shia militants to frighten local people who work for the British Army.

His house was attacked by armed men one night when his wife and two young children were there. In another incident, his five-year-old son was kidnapped and later released.

Mr Motlag was part of an Iraqi delegation that visited Leicester two years ago as part of a project to forge relations with al-Zubayr, the second city of Basra province.

Sandra Rieger, Leicester City Council’s international development officer, said that the interpreter, whose official title is cultural adviser, accompanied the mayor of al-Zubayrand and the head of the local council on the five-day trip in October 2006.

“He also assisted Zubayr City Council in implementing some of the recommendations in the report,” she said. Mr Motlag is in the process of drafting a constitution for al-Zubayr using elements of Leicester’s constitution.

The Home Office declined to comment on individual cases when asked why Mr Motlag’s application had been rejected.

It is understood, however, that the screening process to establish whether a person would pose a threat in Britain is more rigorous than the checks carried out by British soldiers on the ground when hiring someone to work for them, for example, in Iraq or Afghanistan.

The Home Office said: “We carefully consider all applications in line with immigration rules and take in to account all relevant circumstances.”

More than 70 people, comprising locally employed staff and their families, have been resettled in Britain since the assistance scheme was announced, a spokesman added.

In another twist to the interpreter saga, a British civilian source in Basra said that the Foreign Office and Department for International Development had not been hiring any more Iraqi employees because it had been made clear to them that this would be frowned upon by London.

“There was never an official edict on not engaging new folk, just a clear steer that hiring recommendations would not be supported because of the potential liabilities and the risks for the people themselves,” the source said.

A military source speaking to The Times last month also indicated that this was the case. This was denied repeatedly, however, by the Ministry of Defence.

Shortly after The Times had requested clarification of the situation the same military source said: “I don’t think there is an absolute ban . . . It’s just our applications ‘weren’t supported’. Your questions might have had an impact because we’ve just been allowed to take on three people officially that we have been hiring unofficially [through the Iraqis] for the past three months.”

A spokesman for the Ministry of Defence insisted that there had never been a “recruitment freeze”. He said that when vacancies arose, the military tried to give precedence to former staff who had been made redundant as the British mission evolved.

In addition, he said, Basra’s economy was picking up, creating other opportunities for qualified English speakers, which made it harder to recruit interpreters.

This is absolutely despicable. The British are no better than the Bush Administration for not harboring Iraqi interpreters who helped them when they needed them.

The Iraq Veterans' Refugee Aid Association is going to do everything we can to help brave Iraqis like Mohammed.~Luis

posted by Luis Carlos Montalvan at 2:25 PM 0 Comments

Monday, September 22, 2008

The "Surge" of Ethnic Cleansing

Satellite images show ethnic cleanout in Iraq
By Maggie Fox, Health and Science Editor

Reuters, 19 September 2008

Satellite images taken at night show heavily Sunni Arab neighborhoods of Baghdad began emptying before a U.S. troop surge in 2007, graphic evidence of ethnic cleansing that preceded a drop in violence, according to a report published on Friday.

The images support the view of international refugee organizations and Iraq experts that a major population shift was a key factor in the decline in sectarian violence, particularly in the Iraqi capital, the epicenter of the bloodletting in which hundreds of thousands were killed.


Minority Sunni Arabs were driven out of many neighborhoods by Shi'ite militants enraged by the bombing of the Samarra mosque in February 2006. The bombing, blamed on the Sunni militant group al Qaeda, sparked a wave of sectarian violence.

"By the launch of the surge, many of the targets of conflict had either been killed or fled the country, and they turned off the lights when they left," geography professor John Agnew of the University of California Los Angeles, who led the study, said in a statement.

"Essentially, our interpretation is that violence has declined in Baghdad because of intercommunal violence that reached a climax as the surge was beginning," said Agnew, who studies ethnic conflict.

Some 2 million Iraqis are displaced within Iraq, while 2 million more have sought refuge in neighboring Syria and Jordan. Previously religiously mixed neighborhoods of Baghdad became homogenized Sunni or Shi'ite Muslim enclaves.

The study, published in the journal Environment and Planning A, provides more evidence of ethnic conflict in Iraq, which peaked just before U.S. President George W. Bush ordered the deployment of about 30,000 extra U.S. troops.

The extent to which the troop build-up helped halt Iraq's slide into sectarian civil war has been debated, particularly in the United States, with supporters of the surge saying it was the main contributing factor, and others arguing it was simply one of a number of factors.

"Our findings suggest that the surge has had no observable effect, except insofar as it has helped to provide a seal of approval for a process of ethno-sectarian neighborhood homogenization that is now largely achieved," Agnew's team wrote in their report.

Agnew's team used publicly available infrared night imagery from a weather satellite operated by the U.S. Air Force.

"The overall night light signature of Baghdad since the U.S. invasion appears to have increased between 2003 and 2006 and then declined dramatically from 20 March 2006 through 16 December 2007," their report said.

They said the night lights of Shi'ite-dominated Sadr City remained constant, as did lights in the Green Zone government and diplomatic compound in central Baghdad. Lights increased in the eastern New Baghdad district, another Shi'ite enclave.

Satellite studies have also been used to help document forced relocations in Myanmar and ethnic cleansing in Uganda.

(Reporting by Maggie Fox, editing by Ross Colvin)

The "Surge Success" is a Lie fabricated and propagated by the generals in Baghdad and the leaders in Washington.

When will they be held accountable?~Luis

posted by Luis Carlos Montalvan at 4:17 PM 0 Comments

The "Surge" of Ethnic Cleansing & Civil War...

Satellite images show ethnic cleanout in Iraq
By Maggie Fox, Health and Science Editor

Reuters, 19 September 2008

Satellite images taken at night show heavily Sunni Arab neighborhoods of Baghdad began emptying before a U.S. troop surge in 2007, graphic evidence of ethnic cleansing that preceded a drop in violence, according to a report published on Friday.

The images support the view of international refugee organizations and Iraq experts that a major population shift was a key factor in the decline in sectarian violence, particularly in the Iraqi capital, the epicenter of the bloodletting in which hundreds of thousands were killed.

Minority Sunni Arabs were driven out of many neighborhoods by Shi'ite militants enraged by the bombing of the Samarra mosque in February 2006. The bombing, blamed on the Sunni militant group al Qaeda, sparked a wave of sectarian violence.

"By the launch of the surge, many of the targets of conflict had either been killed or fled the country, and they turned off the lights when they left," geography professor John Agnew of the University of California Los Angeles, who led the study, said in a statement.

"Essentially, our interpretation is that violence has declined in Baghdad because of intercommunal violence that reached a climax as the surge was beginning," said Agnew, who studies ethnic conflict.

Some 2 million Iraqis are displaced within Iraq, while 2 million more have sought refuge in neighboring Syria and Jordan. Previously religiously mixed neighborhoods of Baghdad became homogenized Sunni or Shi'ite Muslim enclaves.

The study, published in the journal Environment and Planning A, provides more evidence of ethnic conflict in Iraq, which peaked just before U.S. President George W. Bush ordered the deployment of about 30,000 extra U.S. troops.

The extent to which the troop build-up helped halt Iraq's slide into sectarian civil war has been debated, particularly in the United States, with supporters of the surge saying it was the main contributing factor, and others arguing it was simply one of a number of factors.

"Our findings suggest that the surge has had no observable effect, except insofar as it has helped to provide a seal of approval for a process of ethno-sectarian neighborhood homogenization that is now largely achieved," Agnew's team wrote in their report.

Agnew's team used publicly available infrared night imagery from a weather satellite operated by the U.S. Air Force.

"The overall night light signature of Baghdad since the U.S. invasion appears to have increased between 2003 and 2006 and then declined dramatically from 20 March 2006 through 16 December 2007," their report said.

They said the night lights of Shi'ite-dominated Sadr City remained constant, as did lights in the Green Zone government and diplomatic compound in central Baghdad. Lights increased in the eastern New Baghdad district, another Shi'ite enclave.

Satellite studies have also been used to help document forced relocations in Myanmar and ethnic cleansing in Uganda.

(Reporting by Maggie Fox, editing by Ross Colvin)

This report among others, and any serious-minded and honest subject matter expert would know that the "Surge" was a failure and that the leaders in Baghdad and Washington are pathological liars who should be court-martialed and tried for dereliction of duty among other high crimes.~Luis

posted by Luis Carlos Montalvan at 4:09 PM 0 Comments

Thursday, September 11, 2008

Saving Ali...













Dear Friends,

Below is a link to a newly published interactive online magazine piece titled, Saving Ali, which I collaborated on with the incredible team at FLYPmedia.com.

The interactive piece is about my former Iraqi translator, Ali, and his/our journey to get him asylum to the US now that he and his family can no longer return to Iraq. It is also about the humanitarian crisis that continues to be neglected.

To view the article got to: http://www.flypmedia.com/issues/13/#1/1

Separately, I would like to extend an invitation to you to attend the World Premier of a short film by Todd Wiseman titled, Manifesto. The premier will be held at The Cantor Film Center which is a part of the famous NYU Tisch School of the Arts.

Manifesto is a short reality-based fictional film about the Iraq War. I provided military technical advisement to Todd Wiseman and his stellar crew on and off set. Currently, it is making the rounds at all the major film festivals and will continue to do so in the months ahead. Assuredly, it will do very well. It is hauntingly realistic.

I will be attending the premier of Manifesto on Saturday, September 20, 2008, with my great Iraqi friend, Hamza, who is the very recently resettled brother of Ali, my former Iraqi translator, whom I am still fighting for successful asylum in the US. Hamza and I will offer some remarks at the premier at the request of Director Todd Wiseman.

Lastly, please consider making a donation to the Iraq Veterans’ Refugee Aid Association so that we may continue our mission of providing humanitarian assistance to Iraq’s millions of refugees.

To make a donation please visit our new website at:

http://www.iraqveteransrefugeeaidassociation.com/

Very best regards and blessings to all,
Luis

posted by Luis Carlos Montalvan at 7:31 PM 0 Comments

Monday, September 1, 2008

The Real Measure of Iraq's Situation...

The data below is from the Brookings Institution's Iraq Index as of July 2008: http://www.brookings.edu/saban/~/media/Files/Centers/Saban/Iraq%20Index/index20080731.pdf

INTERNALLY DISPLACED PERSONS IN IRAQ57
Since April 2003
2003 - 400,000
2004 - 800,000
2005 - 1,200,000
2006 - 2,000,000
2007 - 2,740,000
2008 - 2,770,000


NOTE: Numbers are cumulative, but DO NOT include those displaced prior to March 2003 (approximately 1 million).

MIGRATION INDICATORS58
September 2007
Iraqi Refugees living abroad 2.2-2.4 million
Iraqi Refugees in Syria 1.4-1.5 million
Iraqi Refugees in Jordan 700,000 – 750,000
Iraqi Refugees in Egypt, Lebanon, Iran 175,000 – 200,000
Iraqi Refugees in the Gulf States 200,000
NOTE: Not all Iraqis refugees fled because of the current war.

REFUGEES AND ASYLUM SEEKERS59
2003-2004 366,000
2005 889,000
2006 1,800,000
2007 2,400,000
NOTE: Figures in the above table are cumulative.
NOTE ON ALL DISPLACED IRAQIS: According to the International Organization of Migration only about 78,180 of theestimated 5.1 million Iraqis uprooted from their homes- less than 1%- had returned by March 31, 2008.60

This is the real metric of Iraq's situation. There are more
refugees in 2008 than in previous years. Victory?
Hardly. ~Luis

posted by Luis Carlos Montalvan at 9:15 AM 0 Comments

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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  • More Iraqi Refugees flee as Civil War rages on...
  • More Iraqi Refugees flee as Civil War rages on...
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  • The "Surge" of Ethnic Cleansing
  • The "Surge" of Ethnic Cleansing & Civil War...
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  • The Real Measure of Iraq's Situation...
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