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Posts Tagged ‘Syria’
Zaineb Alani: My Speech at the National Assembly to End the Iraq and Afghanistan Wars and Occupations Conference.
Iraqis to sue UK for compensation
By Angus Crawford
BBC News

More than 20 Iraqis who worked for British forces are to sue the UK government, the BBC has learned.
Most were interpreters, who say they were not given adequate protection from attack by extremist militias.
They claim they were owed a duty of care, and later this week will begin their legal actions in a bid to gain compensation from the UK.
The government says it has helped hundreds of Iraqis settle in the UK through an assistance scheme.
It also says "many thousands" of Iraqis have worked for British forces since 2003.
Some became targets for local militias who saw them as collaborators.
As the security situation deteriorated some were murdered, others fled to Syria and Jordan, some went into hiding in southern Iraq.
"[After] my loyal and faithful service to the British army, I am alone without any help"
"Jamal"
Jamal – not his real name – knew he couldn’t go on working for the British after his best friend was killed.
"He was tortured, severe, merciless torture and was killed and thrown into a remote place," he said.
Jamal, who is 28, worked for the British army from March 2005 to December 2005, but now lives secretly in Basra. His says his family constantly worry about him.
"It was like a daily nightmare for them, whenever I was going out they were thinking of me, they were fearing and expecting the worst for me."
Jamal now sees no option but to take legal action against the government which he feels let him down.
"I feel so disappointed. [After] my loyal and faithful service to the British army, I am alone without any help. It is devastating to me."
Legal action
Jassim – who also does not want to use his real name – decided he had to give up work and take his family to Syria because of the anonymous death threats he received on his mobile.
"They said ‘we know where you are working, we know your house, we know what time you came into the base’," he said.
Both applied to come to Britain under the Locally Engaged Staff Assistance Scheme (LESAS), set up to help local staff employed by the British.
But neither had served continuously for 12 months, so their applications failed.
The two men, along with more than 20 others, are expected to start legal action this week to sue the government.
Sapna Malik is a partner at the solicitors Leigh Day and is co-ordinating the actions.
"The MoD could certainly have taken better steps to protect the identities of interpreters and in certain cases they should have housed the interpreters on the bases," she said.
There are 25 claims in total, and most of them are interpreters. Three are the wives or mothers of men who were murdered by militias.
Duty of care
She says the British government owed local staff a duty of care.
"Financial compensation will go a significant way to reduce the hardship they’ve been suffering.
"They are also hoping that this will help shape the policy if Britain gets involved in any future conflicts."
IRAQIS IN UK UNDER LESAS- Resettled in the UK – 201 former and current employees
- Total including dependents – 612
- Rejected – 694
Two years ago the prime minister announced help for Iraqis who had served for a year – they were offered financial assistance or resettlement.
The scheme closed for former employees in May this year.
Of those eligible, 201 have come to Britain. Hundreds of others have taken the money. But almost seven hundred have been told they do not qualify.
The Foreign Secretary David Miliband praised the "dedication and commitment" of local staff in a recent statement.
"The scheme for assistance is designed to reflect our enduring debt to them. I am pleased it has proved popular and effective," he said.
A Foreign and Commonwealth Office spokesman said: "We have made a decision to focus assistance on those staff who have had a sustained association with us in the most difficult circumstances."
"Wherever we draw the line, there will be difficult cases."</p
This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.
Muted opposition
By Lina Sinjab
BBC News, Damascus
In a quiet neighbourhood in the centre of Damascus Michel Kilo sits in his small flat sipping coffee as his wife shells beans for lunch.

His TV is tuned to an Arabic news channel, his reading glasses sitting on his nose as he catches the latest developments from Tehran.
Weeks after finishing a three-year prison sentence, Mr Kilo dedicates his time to family life, while the enthusiasm that characterised his writing before his arrest is now directed solely at articles focusing on pan-Arab and regional issues, rather than local ones.
In 2006, Mr Kilo and 10 other activists were arrested after signing the Damascus-Beirut declaration.
The statement, backed by Lebanese and Syrian intellectuals, called for normalising bilateral relations after decades of Syrian domination of its smaller neighbour Lebanon.
International thaw
At the time, with Syria under severe international pressure, the authorities’ tolerance of the move was very limited.
Damascus faced accusations of supporting insurgency in Iraq, and involvement in the assassination of former Lebanese Prime Minister Rafik Hariri.

But today, the situation has changed. The country is no longer isolated by the West and key Western leaders have approached Syrian President Bashar al-Assad to help stabilise the region.
The country has attracted both foreign investment as well as tourism – signs it is beginning to come in from the cold.
But the authorities show no sign of relinquishing the tight control which the Baath Party has exerted since it took power in a 1963 coup and banned all opposition.
"The priority is not to have any opposition or independent voices and it is successful in oppressing this scene," says Yassin Haj Saleh, a writer and human rights activist.
Clampdown
A campaign of arrests has left an estimated 6,000 people in jail as political prisoners.
Meanwhile, about 400-450 people are subject to official travel bans, although the real number could be in the thousands, human rights groups say.
The measures are extended to young bloggers and some internet users, as well as civil society activists and some artists.
"Civil society needs to be revived and reactivated and this is only in the hands of the authorities""
Mohannad al-Hassani
Lawyer and human rights activist
"There is a continuous deterioration in the human rights situation in Syria," says lawyer and head of Syrian Human Rights Organization Mohannad al-Hassani.
But the worst situation is suffered by the Islamists, according to Yassin Haj Saleh.
"There are many young people who are arrested for their Islamic affiliation, but they are not organised. They are mostly villagers and their families are being harassed and pressured," he says.
The crackdown has attracted little media attention, especially in suburbs and rural areas.
Last year, riots erupted in Sadnaya prison. A number of prisoners were reported killed. The government said then the prisoners were Islamists.
Human Rights Watch recently called on the Syrian government to provide information on the incident.
"The Syrian government should end the anguish of the prisoners’ families, disclose the names of those injured or killed, and immediately grant them access to their loved ones," said Sarah Leah Whitson, Middle East and North Africa director at Human Rights Watch.
‘Lack of vision’
There is no organised opposition in Syria, just individuals who oppose government policies.
And even these figures are fragmented and lack vision says Omar Amirallai, an intellectual and filmmaker.

"The opposition in Syria is in need of self-criticism, reform and reconciliation," he says.
But others believe that even with more vision and organisation, their efforts will come to nothing under current government restrictions.
The streets of Damascus have the feel of a relaxed and bustling city.
Around cafe and restaurant tables, discussions are heated about global and regional politics – but no one talks about the political situation in Syria.
Mohannad al-Hassani believes the country should embrace international and regional changes with its own progress on the level of civil and human rights.
"Civil society needs to be revived and reactivated and this is only in the hands of the authorities.
"They should look into these needs seriously as it is difficult for Syria to continue in isolation from what the whole world is moving towards."</p
This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.
Iraqi footballers win on return

The Iraqi football team has celebrated a victory in the first international football match to be held in Iraq since the US-led invasion of 2003.
The final score in the match played in the northern town of Irbil against a Palestinian team was 3-0.
The game has been hailed as a symbol of the promise of better times ahead for Iraq, and players released a number of white doves before kick-off.
The last time Iraq played at home was in 2002 in a 2-1 win over Syria.
Since then the team – one of the best in the Asian region – has led a nomadic existence.
The country celebrated when Iraq’s players won a notable victory in the Asian Cup tournament in 2007, beating Saudi Arabia in the final by one goal to nil.
The players have since struggled to rediscover that championship-winning form, although they put in a creditable performance in the recent Confederations Cup in South Africa.
During that competition, which pits the champion nation from each continent against each other, Iraq drew with New Zealand and South Africa – the hosts of the upcoming 2010 World Cup – and lost narrowly to European Champions Spain.
Nevertheless, the BBC’s Gabriel Gatehouse in Baghdad says a win at home is a rare and welcome good news story.
The Palestinian players are themselves no strangers to conflict.
But the very fact the game took place inside Iraq, speaks of a country desperately trying to move beyond violence and insecurity, our correspondent says.
This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.
Gunfire Mars Arafat Rally
GAZA CITY – At least seven people were killed and 150 were injured after
Hamas security forces opened fire yesterday as hundreds of thousands
gathered (picture) to mark the third death anniversary of Palestinian
leader Yasser Arafat.
The shots brought an abrupt end to the largest public display of support
for the rival Fatah movement since Hamas seized control of the Gaza Strip
in June.
Shots rang out after the crowds started chanting “Shia, Shia” – accusing
Hamas of being a proxy for Shia Iran and its ally Syria, witnesses said.
Television images showed protesters and armed men running through the
streets and opened fire at random.
The city had been filled with a sea of yellow flags, the colour of the
Fatah party that Mr Arafat had founded.
The crowds waved Palestinian flags and held portraits of the iconic leader
as Fatah party officials called for unity.
“We say to Hamas and these armed militias, stop your crimes. “These crimes
will not shake our determination,” said Mr Zakaria Al Agha, chief of Fatah
in Gaza, reading a statement from Fatah leader President Mahmoud Abbas.
Senior Fatah official Ahmed Hellis said the event had drawn up to 500,000
people.
The Hamas-run Executive Force, a paramilitary group that has policed Gaza
since taking power, was out in force and had earlier confiscated tens of
thousands of portraits of Mr Arafat and Mr Abbas.
Mr Arafat died on Nov 11, 2004, and remains a symbol of Palestinian
unity. – Agencies



