Please visit our sponsors

Rolclub does not endorse ads. Please see our disclaimer.
Page 1403 of 3762 FirstFirst ... 4039031303135313931401140214031404140514131453150319032403 ... LastLast
Results 14,021 to 14,030 of 37617
  1. #14021
    Investor One Oar's Avatar
    Join Date
    Sep 2006
    Posts
    322
    Feedback Score
    0
    Thanks
    377
    Thanked 718 Times in 109 Posts

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by shotgunsusie View Post
    why does malikis presence alarm everyone all the time?? HE ISNT THE ONE WHO DECIDES, ENACTS, OR ANNOUNCES THE REVALUE!!!

    Would it not make sense that he would be present with the MOF if there was to be an announcement?
    I'm certainly not an expert on the subject- just seems he would at least be in the country. JMO

  2. #14022
    Senior Investor Adster's Avatar
    Join Date
    Jun 2005
    Posts
    5,536
    Feedback Score
    0
    Thanks
    4
    Thanked 148 Times in 10 Posts

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by shotgunsusie View Post
    look, i was informed that my gleefulness is hyping people up for this investment and it was brought to my attention that there are some who are offended by this so i will abstain.
    Fack em Sus, they're a small minority. Keep that enthusiasm going, we know it's not far off and every day is a day closer. With the artice on the amount of oil they're pumping out is anything to go by then we will have our big r/v soon.
    Zubaidi:Monetary value of the Iraqi dinar must revert to the previous level, or at least to acceptable levels as it is in the Iraqi neighboring states.


    Shabibi:The bank wants as a means to affect the economic and monetary policy by making the dinar a valuable and powerful.

  3. #14023
    Banned
    Join Date
    Sep 2006
    Location
    NC
    Posts
    154
    Feedback Score
    0
    Thanks
    524
    Thanked 169 Times in 14 Posts

    Default To be present

    Quote Originally Posted by One Oar View Post
    Would it not make sense that he would be present with the MOF if there was to be an announcement?
    I'm certainly not an expert on the subject- just seems he would at least be in the country. JMO

    The only person who has to be present with the MOF is the Governor of the CBI Sinan Al-Shibibi...

  4. #14024
    Senior Member texaslonghorns's Avatar
    Join Date
    Sep 2006
    Posts
    196
    Feedback Score
    0
    Thanks
    28
    Thanked 32 Times in 3 Posts

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by Adster View Post
    Then reval!!!!!


    Mounting social crisis in Kurdistan Iraq
    [15:55 , 16 Oct 2006]
    Kurdistan ( World Socialist)
    By Joseph Baker

    PNA-While the presence of 800 international companies, including Chrysler, Ford and Exxon Mobil, at a recent international trade show in Erbil, the capital of the semi-autonomous region of Kurdistan in northern Iraq, reflects growing confidence on the part of the international business community in the Kurdish nationalist regime, increasingly broad sections of the region’s population of 5.5 million are prepared to defy the authority of the government.

    Recent media reports from the region indicate a significant increase in anti-government protests. This is the result of many persistent problems such as a lack of basic services, rising inflation, corruption and the violation of democratic rights. Because the two main Kurdish nationalist parties, the Kurdistan Democratic Party (KDP) and the Patriotic Union of Kurdistan (PUK), have failed to deliver on their promise that a major increase in seats in the Iraqi parliament would pave the way for the region’s independence and bring prosperity to all, popular disaffection is growing. In the past several months, at least five strikes, seven demonstrations, and one general strike have been reported.

    The popular independent local newspaper Hawlati recently reported a strike by school teachers in the towns of Kalar and Chamchamal as well as staff at the University of Sulaimaniyah. The strikers demanded higher wages and improved working conditions.

    In late July, the British Guardian reported that 3 workers were killed and another 13 wounded when guards fired on a strike by workers at the Tasloja cement factory. According to other reports, at least 700 workers at the factory, the biggest in the region, went on strike demanding higher wages and the reinstatement of 300 workers laid off by the new management.

    The shooting prompted widespread outrage which led the mayor of Sulaimaniyah to hold a press conference announcing the arrest of 40 guards at the factory. The factory had been sold earlier in the year by the Kurdistan Regional Government (KRG) to an Egyptian company.

    The biggest challenge to the KRG was when thousands of people participated in week-long demonstrations from the 5th to the 13th of August in most towns and cities across the region’s three provinces. Footage of these demonstrations was shown on local TV stations and satellite channels, and pictures were posted on Kurdish Internet sites. The demonstrations came amid the worst crisis to hit the region and Iraq as a whole, while temperatures soared to 45 degrees Celsius.

    Fox News reported in August that the country was facing a fuel shortage and that the price of a gallon of gasoline had reached $4.92, eight times higher than the official price. The demonstrations erupted first in Kalar and Darbandikhan, where people protested the lack of basic services such as electricity and water as well as the soaring price of fuel. Soon residents of other cities joined the protests and demands were extended to include a curb on corruption and an expansion of democratic rights such as free speech and the right to strike.

    On August 8, a committee was established to organize these protests at the national level and a general strike was called for the entire region. On August 13th, despite the government’s threat to punish those defying its warning not to strike, hundreds of thousands of people stayed home and shops and offices were closed. Thousands demonstrated in the city center of Sulaimanyia, the second largest city in the region.

    Although leaders from both the Patriotic Union of Kurdistan (PUK) and the Kurdistan Democratic Party (PDK), who have in effect been ruling the region since 1992, have conceded the right of the people to demonstrate, the security police (Asayesh), together with a riot police unit established this spring in response to the increase in anti-government protests, have used excessive force to suppress these protests and have even fired upon demonstrators in many towns.

    According to a final estimate by Hawlati, in Sulaimaniyah alone one person was killed and more than 280 arrested. Among the detainees were many journalists, such as Doctor Hakim sabir Aziz and Ali Hama-Salih, a correspondent of Hawlati. The London-based Kurdish Media reported on August 15 that security forces were still doing house-to-house searches for the leaders of the demonstrations.

    Among those arrested was Baxtyar Hama-Saaed, a lawyer and member of the Sulaimaniyah strike committee. On August 20th, about 110 lawyers went on strike and demanded his immediate release. Hushyar Abdullah, vice-president of the Sulaimaniyah Branch of the lawyer’s Association, told Hawlati “we will continue this strike until our colleague is unconditionally released.”

    Fearing that the lawyers’ strike would further ignite the anti-government sentiment already at levels unprecedented for the past 15 years of the Kurdish nationalist regime, the Asayesh released Baxtyar and all other detainees that night. Asayesh later issued a public statement condemning the lawyers’ strike in the Kurdistani Nwe, the PUK’s main newspaper.

    Speaking to the World Socialist Web Site about the charges laid against him and about the arrests, Baxtyar said he had been arrested in the late afternoon of August 13 by Asayesh on charges of organizing the demonstration. He added that “along with 65 other demonstrators, later reduced to 32, I was put in prison for about 7 days.”

    When asked why the masses are opposing the Kurdish government, he replied that “people in Kurdistan have witnessed an incredible rift between poor and rich in the past two years . . . and small numbers of the rich, who are either members or affiliated with the two Kurdish parties—the PUK and the PDK—with support from the US administration in Iraq have gained substantial control over the wealth generated in the region.” He added that “people have no expectation anymore that their living conditions will improve and have no choice but to demonstrate.”

    Despite the recent discovery by a Norwegian company of oil in the region and an increase in the regional government’s share from the central government’s annual budget—from $1 billion a year before the invasion to about $5.6 billion in 2006 (according to figures from the Iraqi Central Bank)—along with the imposition of a 15 percent tax on personal and company incomes, the KRG has done nothing to improve basic services or less social inequities.

    Spero News reported in mid-July that “drivers have to wait days to get their petrol shares.” As for electricity supply, the newspaper reported that the “local authorities announced that they would cut power from 16 to 9 hours per day.”

    Soran Mohammad, a 27-year-old from Chwarqurnna told the newspaper that “in the heat of summer they cut power, but they [officials] have it for 24 hours.” In July, the United Nations news agency reported a lack of power for schools and hospitals in Erbil.

    An article published in mid-September in the Peyamner Daily News, a news agency affiliated with the PDK, said of the protests, “[A]lthough the spark may have come from the fuel crisis, in principle frustrations have been brewing slowly in the region. House prices increased significantly without a real increase in wages in key sectors, with many accusing the government of corruption.”

    In March, a report from the World Bank estimated that a total of $37.4 million is needed to ease the current power supply deficit in the two main power stations of the region—Dokan and Derbandikhan—which produce a combined total of 649 megawatts. According to KRG officials, 1000 megawatts is needed to meet local demands.

    The PUK and PDK have been controlling the region since 1992 when the Iraqi government withdrew its forces so as to avoid confrontation with the US and allied powers, which had declared the region a no-fly zone. Yet the nationalist parties have failed to allocate enough revenue to meet the local demand for electricity.

    Both parties were also responsible for the 1991 looting, following the first Gulf War, of the $2 billion Bexma dam project near the town of Rania, close to the Iranian border. UN reports had estimated that the project was in its final stages and would have been capable of producing enough electricity for the entire region.

    The frustration of the public with the lack of power is not surprising, especially given the fact that Iraq in the early 1980s had enough electricity for all its regions and was even able to export $20 million of electricity annually to neighbouring Turkey.

    During the recent protests, the masses demanded a quick reaction from the government to fight rising inflation and corruption. According to the Iraqi Central Bank, inflation had risen to 70 percent by the end of July, compared to 52.5 percent in June. This increase amounts to almost 125 percent relative to the inflation rate in 2005, according to the estimate of the World Bank. This significant increase prompted the International Monetary Fund to declare, in its latest report about the state of the Iraqi economy, that “the overall economy is sinking in what is called stagflation.”

    The unprecedented increase in the cost of living and the level of corruption in the region have even forced TV and radio programs to devote some attention to these issues in the past two months. The popular comedy program “Barnamay Barnama” (the Program) of the KURDSAT, the PUK’s TV satellite channel, ridiculed the KRG’s explanation for soaring inflation and demanded that the government take full responsibility.

    Massoud Barzani, the president of the KRG, recently acknowledged the pervasive corruption within his government, but the KRG has refused to take any responsibility for the deterioration of basic services and the growth in social inequality. Barzani told the Kurdish radio of the Voice of America in early August that “if corruption persists, I don’t want to be the president of a corrupt government.”

    Facing enormous pressure from the public, and having failed to improve basic services even after two weeks of protests, the KRG has tried to deflect public attention by launching a political war with the federal government in Baghdad. On September 1, a decree issued by the president of the KRG ordered that all Iraqi flags be removed from government offices in the region, stating that the flag represents the era of the Saddam Hussein regime, under which the Kurds suffered much.

    This “flag war” prompted a strong reaction from both Shiite and Sunni politicians, who accused the KRG of seeking independence. The federal prime minister’s office issued a statement rejecting the Kurd’s proposal and demanding that “Iraqi flags should be the only flags raised over any square inch of Iraq.”

    In another development, the Associated Press reported that Saleh Mutlaq, a leading Sunni lawmaker, responded harshly to the KRG position and warned the Kurds that “what is taken by force today will be returned by force another day.” Media reports also indicate increasing calls from clerics in Baghdad and other cities to oppose harshly to any move by the Kurds to separate. Hawlati also reported in a recent edition that thousands of Kurds who study in universities outside the region have been seeking alternative universities after receiving death threats.

    The KRG does not intend to separate. In a political campaign to salvage the image of the KRG among Arab politicians, the leaders of the PDK and PUK, Massoud Barzani and Jalal Talabani, have repeatedly expressed their surprise at the campaign against them and offered their reassurances that they are strong defenders of federalism. The main aim of the KRG was to use an emotional topic such as an independent Kurdistan (supported by 95 percent of Kurds according to a 2004 poll) in order to deflect public attention away from the current social and economic crisis.

    The KRG has repeatedly blamed the central government for the shortage of fuel and electricity supplies. Local media reported Kurdish officials complaining that the current crisis was due to Baghdad’s decision on June 25 to cut supplies to the region by half.

    Jamal Abdullah, the deputy prime minister of the KRG, recently told the Kurdistan TV, the PDK’s main TV channel, that “95 percent of the problems that led to public frustration are from outside and we have no control over them.”

    Abdullah’s solution to the lack of basic services was to press for the full-scale privatization of the region’s economy. He claimed that if privatization is expanded, the 1.1 million employees currently on the government’s payroll will leave government posts and reduce the pressure on the budget. This is in line with the policy of the Bush administration, which has pushed relentlessly to impose its profit-driven policies and destroy the public sector.

    In the past three years, the KRG has been actively privatizing much of what remains of public institutions such as water, electricity and fuel distribution agencies. In late July, the Kurdish parliament passed a law that allows foreign investors to own 100 percent of local companies, with a tax break for up to 10 years. It is no small wonder that foreign companies were enthusiastic about participating in this year’s Erbil trade show, especially after the news that 100 million barrels of reserve of oil had been discovered in a town close to Turkish border.

    While the Shiite elites are pushing for legislation in the Iraqi parliament to introduce a regional government in the south of the country similar to the one in the north, the experience of the last three years has shown that such a regional government, even if it survived sectarian violence and insurgency, would bring nothing but hardship for the overwhelming majority of the population. But for the rich, such a regional authority would be “an oasis of peace and prosperity”—the words used by US Congressman Gil Gutknecht of Minnesota during his visit to the Kurdish region last July.


    It looks to me like the Iraqi government wants this country to implode for some reason. These leaders can't be this dumb! Everything stated in this artcle can be fixed with a influx of cash. Reval the currency and solve the peoples problems.....preferrably before you give out 10,000 dinars to everyone and piss them off even more. Especially the Kurds.

  5. #14025
    Can read but not post. motomachi's Avatar
    Join Date
    Sep 2006
    Posts
    466
    Feedback Score
    0
    Thanks
    7
    Thanked 67 Times in 9 Posts

    Exclamation Chevez messing with you too?

    Quote Originally Posted by shotgunsusie View Post
    look, i was informed that my gleefulness is hyping people up for this investment and it was brought to my attention that there are some who are offended by this so i will abstain.
    Dang, that boy, BOY, BOY is getting around!

    Last time I had checked, our flag was still flying from the courtroom square!

    Seems we need to take care of some light-work! Oh! We need a site quick and some news, otherwise, I have to ban myself again!


    Translated version of http://www.aladalanews.com/
    And stand strongly against terrorist plots

    He ... Political Council in permanent session
    Baghdad / justice (Front page on the site above, read rest of article there!)
    Vice President Adel Abdel Mahdi also said that the political council of national security will remain in permanent session as of yesterday, Sunday, and the next few days to follow up on the important issues and not leave them without a suitable solutions. He said in a press statement : "

  6. #14026
    Can read but not post. motomachi's Avatar
    Join Date
    Sep 2006
    Posts
    466
    Feedback Score
    0
    Thanks
    7
    Thanked 67 Times in 9 Posts

    Default Stay the course? Yeah, just get back on it!

    Stay the course? (My words: Yeah, just get back on it!)
    [15:53 , 16 Oct 2006]
    Kurdistan, Iraq ( bitterlemons-international )
    By Khaled Salih
    .:: Peyamner Daily NEWS::.

    PNA-Last August, Britain's Prime Minister Tony Blair stated that however difficult the situation in Iraq is, "stay the course, stand up for those people who want democracy, stand for those people who are fighting sectarianism, stand up for a different vision of the Middle East based on democracy, liberty and the rule of law.

    (Left the rest of the article on the site! Some folks like reading negative and minority opinionated and political read-da-rickati-crap, I leave it like where I leave my doggies business!)

    {Lets look at the bright side! Look below! They are turning into Americans! My opinion, but then, I counted and I am a majority here, with no manorities counted, si`, si`, senorita! )

    .:: Peyamner Daily NEWS::.
    Mounting social crisis in Kurdistan Iraq
    [15:55 , 16 Oct 2006]
    Kurdistan ( World Socialist)
    By Joseph Baker

    PNA-While the presence of 800 international companies, including Chrysler, Ford and Exxon Mobil, at a recent international trade show in Erbil, the capital of the semi-autonomous region of Kurdistan in northern Iraq, reflects growing confidence on the part of the international business community in the Kurdish nationalist regime, increasingly broad sections of the region’s population of 5.5 million are prepared to defy the authority of the government.

    Recent media reports from the region indicate a significant increase in anti-government protests. This is the result of many persistent problems such as a lack of basic services, rising inflation, corruption and the violation of democratic rights. Because the two main Kurdish nationalist parties, the Kurdistan Democratic Party (KDP) and the Patriotic Union of Kurdistan (PUK), have failed to deliver on their promise that a major increase in seats in the Iraqi parliament would pave the way for the region’s independence and bring prosperity to all, popular disaffection is growing. In the past several months, at least five strikes, seven demonstrations, and one general strike have been reported.

    The popular independent local newspaper Hawlati recently reported a strike by school teachers in the towns of Kalar and Chamchamal as well as staff at the University of Sulaimaniyah. The strikers demanded higher wages and improved working conditions.

  7. #14027
    Senior Member doublescorpio's Avatar
    Join Date
    Oct 2006
    Location
    In the middle of B.F.E Iowa
    Posts
    144
    Feedback Score
    0
    Thanks
    0
    Thanked 31 Times in 4 Posts

    Default Everybody Cheer Up!!!!

    This si going to happen..when is the big question. Let's get this back on topic...does anybody know for sure when and how they are disbursing the 10000 dinar. I have read the articles and it seems a little murky to me. If they are not handing it our until the 24th then we have no reason to be upset!!

  8. #14028
    Senior Investor
    Join Date
    Sep 2006
    Posts
    720
    Feedback Score
    0
    Thanks
    5,345
    Thanked 934 Times in 88 Posts

    Thumbs up Hey this is good!

    Quote Originally Posted by TheBrain View Post
    Anyone ever hear this clip with Bush talking about seven guys with their hands cut off because the currency devalued.
    It starts at 57 seconds into the video.

    YouTube - Bush- Let Me Finish

    Bush interviewed in Ireland!

    This is the best interview of him that I have seen!!!!!!!!!!!

    Let me finish is said a lot!!!!!!!!!!!!!!


  9. #14029
    Senior Investor wciappetta's Avatar
    Join Date
    Sep 2006
    Posts
    613
    Feedback Score
    0
    Thanks
    409
    Thanked 805 Times in 40 Posts

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by CharmedPiper View Post
    (Voice of Iraq) - 10-16-2006 | This issue was sent to a friend

    The presidency of the parliament demanding the closure of the eastern channel and the newspaper Azzaman
    Baghdad - (Voices of Iraq)
    A statement issued by the House today, Monday, Iraqi Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki intervention and the closure of the Eastern Canal newspaper space and time because of the way their coverage of the parliamentary session, which saw passage of the law of the provinces last week.
    The statement said, which received news agency (Voices of Iraq) independent copy of today, , "The presidency of the Chamber of Deputies rejected the media coverage of the channel space and Eastern Azzaman newspaper Battaftha International Adoption of the House of Representatives on the executive procedures for the formation of regions in the meeting last Wednesday."
    He added that "television and newspaper coverage in recent arguments that the law leads to the division of Iraq and engaging in a civil war Mdaitan the presence of four members of the House of Representatives of the Iraqi List, has helped to pass this project."
    The statement pointed out that the presidency of the Council expressed "the deep resentment and anger of how they have been dealt with the news, which showed the trends are far from professional, objective and impartial manner that raises suspicion of sedition and creates tension in the Iraqi street, without the slightest regard for the sensitive stage and the circumstances through which it DNA Aziz. "
    He said that "the presidency of the Chamber of Deputies warned Canal East and Azzaman newspaper and other media and satellite channels, which adopts the same method in dealing with the situation and the political events taking place in the Iraqi arena of the media to repeat this behavior unacceptable."
    The statement called on the Iraqi government to "consider this irresponsible media practices and take appropriate action to reckoning."
    The Iraqi Parliament had voted last week in favor of the territories after weeks of controversy and the differences between the parliamentary blocs in the corridors of the Council.
    She described several blocks parliamentary draft resolution as "a step towards the division of Iraq.
    Wa-h n

    Sotaliraq.com

    Hmmmmm Must be a ME branch of the lying American Media. Close the sucker down.....they are just tools of the insurgents-- Media outlets like that are equally responcible for every ounce of blood spilled over there....

  10. #14030
    Senior Investor
    Join Date
    Jul 2006
    Location
    Pennsylvania
    Posts
    2,572
    Feedback Score
    0
    Thanks
    79
    Thanked 3,245 Times in 143 Posts

    Default

    (Voice of Iraq) - 10-16-2006 | This issue was sent to a friend

    A statement issued by the House today, Monday, Iraqi Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki intervention and the closure of the Eastern Canal newspaper space and time because of the way their coverage of the parliamentary session, which saw passage of the law of the provinces last week.


    The statement said, , "The presidency of the Chamber of Deputies rejected the media coverage of the channel space and Eastern Azzaman newspaper Battaftha International Adoption of the House of Representatives on the executive procedures for the formation of regions in the meeting last Wednesday." He added that "television and newspaper coverage in recent arguments that the law leads to the division of Iraq and engaging in a civil war Mdaitan the presence of four members of the House of Representatives of the Iraqi List, has helped to pass this project."

    The statement pointed out that the presidency of the Council expressed "the deep resentment and anger of how they have been dealt with the news, which showed the trends are far from professional, objective and impartial manner that raises suspicion of sedition and creates tension in the Iraqi street, without the slightest regard for the sensitive stage and the circumstances through which it DNA Aziz. "

    He said that "the presidency of the Chamber of Deputies warned Canal East and Azzaman newspaper and other media and satellite channels, which adopts the same method in dealing with the situation and the political events taking place in the Iraqi arena of the media to repeat this behavior unacceptable." The statement called on the Iraqi government to "consider this irresponsible media practices and take appropriate action to reckoning."


    Sotaliraq.com

  11. Sponsored Links
Page 1403 of 3762 FirstFirst ... 4039031303135313931401140214031404140514131453150319032403 ... LastLast

Thread Information

Users Browsing this Thread

There are currently 1 users browsing this thread. (0 members and 1 guests)

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •  
Share |