Tuesday, October 13, 2020

Jimmy

charm

 

From Sunday, that's Isaiah  THE WORLD TODAY JUST NUTS  "Outreach."

 

Did you catch this YouTube video from Jimmy Dore?

 

 

 The illusion of Barack Obama was a fantasy pimped by many including the press.  What's really sad is that the further we get from his presidency, the less number of people are vested in pretending he was so wonderful.  The next Democratic president we get?  Barack's numbers are going to fall even lower.

Here's C.I.'s "Iraq snapshot:"

 

 Monday, October 12, 2020.  NYT and CNN correspondents cover their outlets with something other than glory, the Day of the Girl goes unnoticed by the US press, Grand Ayatollah Ali al-Sistani calls for the militias to disband, and much more.


Sunday, the UN mission in Iraq noted:


Today is #DayOfTheGirl
"This year’s theme, “My Voice: Our Equal Future” calls on us to amplify the voices of adolescent girls, and put their needs at the forefront of laws, policies and practices in every country and community around the world" -
Secretary-General on the International Day of the Girl [scroll down
This year, we mark the International Day of the Girl against the backdrop of the COVID-19 pandemic, an


The OHCHR, UNFPA and UNICEF issued the following:


11 October marks the International Day of the Girl Child, a day dedicated to girls' empowerment, fulfilment of girls' rights and solving challenges that they face.

This year, the global theme is "My Voice, Our Equal Future," a reminder to listen to girls , understand the changes they want to see and to ensure that all of them have an equal opportunity for a bright, safe and healthy future.

In Iraq, the challenges experienced by girls and boys are many and complex. Violence against children, including young people is unacceptably high in Iraq, with 80 per cent facing violence at home and in schools. Many girls in Iraq, like millions of girls around the world, suffer from female genital mutilation, child marriage, sexual harassment and abuse, and other harmful practices.

Girls across Iraq continue to be particularly affected by increased insecurity, which in turn has imposed restrictions on movement that affects their access to education, protection and jobs. Young girls are keen to make the most of opportunities, have specific interests, identities and experiences and are keen to share accountability in their development, exercise of human rights and ensure their gender-differentiated needs.

The COVID-19 pandemic and restrictions on movement have elevated risks for girls to be violated and abused. The number of gender-based violence cases has increased since the onset of COVID19 pandemic in Iraq according to the Protection Cluster Monitoring in Response to COVID-19 (August 2020)

According to the GBV Information Management System's data of the first two quarters of 2020, 23 per cent of the incidents of violence reported to the service providers were among children and adolescents, of which 6 per cent were aged between 0 and 11 years, and 17 per cent were aged between 12 and 17 years old.

Interviews conducted by the United Nations with families living in displacement camps across Nineveh governorate, affirm that child marriage remains a frequent practice and a coping mechanism for families living in poverty to reduce the financial strain.

Education and learning are some of the best ways to empower girls and protect them against violence, exploitation and social exclusion by providing them with the opportunity to build a better life for themselves, their families and their communities. To make education and learning accessible and empowering for girls, it needs to be safe and gender sensitive.

Having zero tolerance to bullying, cyberstalking, sexting and harassment should be a priority for all as part of the national COVID-19 efforts to reimagine school systems and learning, we must address violence against girls of all ages in and around classrooms and on digital learning platforms. Because girls have higher risk than boys to experience violence, verbal and sexual abuse, a multi-sectoral approach is needed to address all risk factors and cases. Youth-friendly, accessible and quality education and learning, health and social services are essential for girls' empowerment and their development.

Ending gender-based violence is not a far-fetched dream; this is a real possibility. All that is needed is for girls to have access to formal education, , skilled, civically engaged, healthy, supported, and protected at home, in institutions and at the community. The alternative is devastating with a lasting negative and damaging impact to the health, education and well-being of Iraqi girls.

We call on the government, civil society organisations, the private sector, faith-based groups and the international community to accelerate their efforts to:

  • Improve equal access to quality primary and secondary education including life-skills
  • Promote access to alternative learning opportunities for out of school adolescents and youth, in the form on life skills and citizenship education, including social and business entrepreneurship for improved learning to work transition;
  • Increase capacity of the health sector to provide adolescents and youth-friendly health services across the country, with focus on girls; Ensure that girls - survivors of GBV access free and quality specialised services anchored in survivor-centred and age-appropriate approaches
  • Mobilise girls, boys, parents and leaders through civic and social engagement to challenge discriminatory gender norms and create real social, economic and civic opportunities for all girls;
  • Draft and enforce legislation, such as the anti-domestic violence law and child law, to protect girls and prosecute those who harm them;
  • Implement the recommendations by the Committee on the Elimination of Discrimination against Women, including to criminalise, forced, temporary and child marriage;
  • Increase availability of child protection services for girls and young women.

Girls can be powerful agents of change, and nothing should keep them from participating fully in all areas of life. We must come together and show our commitment by dedicating resources for girls to realise their rights and fulfil their full potential.

--

UNICEF Representative to Iraq, Ms Hamida R. Lasseko

UNFPA Representative to Iraq, Dr Rita Columbia

OHCHR Representative to Iraq, Ms Danielle Bell

For media queries:

UNICEF Chief of Communications, Zeina Awad, zawad@unicef.org

UNICEF Digital Communication Specialist, Innocent Kafembe,ikafembe@unicef.org

UNFPA Communications Specialist, Salwa Moussa, smoussa@unfpa.org

UNAMI Human Rights Office, Monica Michelle Kemanzi Women and Minority Rights Team Leader, kemanzi@un.org


Media queries?  Don't make me laugh.  Find the English language outlet that even bothered to note the day.  They can't even be bothered to Tweet about it.  Take the idiot Peter Baker who we called out last night.  Along with his stupid Tweet comparing the death tolls of pandemic to the death tolls of US troops in conflicts (and only US troops -- no foreigners were included, no US citizens were included), Petey managed to wag his limp noodle enough to do five Tweets about his new bad book co-written with his wife (about the equally hideous James Baker).  But people who weren't worth millions?  People like Iraqi girls?  Peter has no time or interest in them.


He couldn't even be bothered to reTweet The World Food Program:

The lives of girls are disproportionately changing in the face of conflict and hunger. On the #DayOfTheGirl
, we remind the world that peace is our only path to a better future for all.
🕊
Photo: Emilienne Malfatto
UN


The ICRC Tweeted:

“I drew our house and this is my missing brother inside.” These are the heart-breaking words of Layla, a nine-year-old #girl in #Iraq showing strength, resilience and hope for a better future. On the #DayOfTheGirl
, we salute Layla, girls in #Iraq and across
Earth globe americas
Image


UNHCR Tweeted:


On #DayOfTheGirl
let us not forget girls like 2-year-old Bedoor, who was displaced by war in Iraq
Image


Mosul Schoolgirls Tweeted:

Amena, 10, wants to help build a better future for Iraq as an engineer. #DayOfTheGirl
Image


And they Tweeted:


Zainab, 12, sees brighter days ahead. #DayOfTheGirl
Image


And they noted:

Fatima, 14, "wants to see permanent peace in Iraq." #DayOfTheGirl
Image


One more:


Hajer, 11, "wants war to end" so that she can fulfill her dream of becoming a doctor. #DayOfTheGirl
Image


Check out Mosul Schoolgirls Twitter feed for many more drawings and photos.  So many brave girls, living in war, raised in war and the country that started it -- that would be us in the US -- can't even take a moment to acknowledge them.





Bless the girls of Iraq.  The reporters at US outlets?  Not so much.

Alex Burns, another piece of garbage working for NYT, found time to try to rehab War Criminal Bully Boy Bush's image yesterday but not to cover the girls of Iraq.


You know what?  No news outlet has more Iraqi blood on its hands than NYT.  They sold the illegal war, they lied to sell the war, they lied to keep it going.  And yet, all these years later, still having taken no accountability, they ignore the children of Iraq.  For someone that constantly tells you how awful Donald Trump is, they themselves are pretty damn awful as well.  Not to be outdone, Arwa Damon and CNN used this Day of the Girl to report on . . . an Iraqi boy.  That's pretty embarrassing and who would have thought the reporter who already had her own TMZ headline ("CNN Sued Over Correspondent Who Bit EMTS in Drunken Rage") could get more embarrassing?


The press loves to lie -- lives to lie?  They're juking all over themselves about a 'cease fire' that really isn't.  The militias in Iraq have not agreed to stop attacking US targets.  ALJAZEERA explains:


An array of Iran-backed Iraqi armed groups have agreed to suspend attacks on United States forces on condition Iraq’s government presents a timetable for a withdrawal of US troops, according to one of the groups.

“The factions have presented a conditional ceasefire,” Mohammed Mohi, spokesman for the Iran-backed Kataib Hezbollah group, said on Sunday.

“It includes all factions of the [anti-US] resistance, including those who have been targeting US forces,” he told the Reuters news agency.

Mohi said the Iraqi government must implement a parliamentary resolution in January that called for the withdrawal from Iraq of foreign troops.


If Iraq expels US forces, then the militia would stop attacking.  Of course, if all US forces left Iraq, the militias would have to stop attacking them because they wouldn't be there.  But never count on US media to have reasoning skills.  Remember, they're glorified general studies majors with no real training in anything at all.  And it shows -- it really, really shows.  

On the topic of the militias, Hussain Abdul-Hussain (Kuwait's AL-RAI) writes:


Iraq’s top Shia cleric, Ayatollah Ali Sistani, last month called for the disbanding of all militias. This would involve the state disarming the pro-Iran Popular Mobilization Units (PMU). In turn, this would neuter Tehran’s most reliable partner in Iraq, Kataeb Hezbollah, the most dangerous alternative to state power in the country. Such then is the importance to the integrity of the Iraqi state of Sistani’s call. Indeed, the prime minister, now provided cover by the religious leadership in the Shia centre of Najaf, should act with haste. Yet, all we have witnessed thus far is an exhibition of inertia.

Kataeb Hezbollah – the Brigades of the Party of God, if you will – has been busy building a “statelet” within Iraq. If the government does not act quickly, Kataeb Hezbollah soon will become stronger than the Iraqi state itself; it will dominate Iraq in the manner in which its namesake, Hezbollah, does in Lebanon and seal Iraq’s slide into failure as a client state of Iran.


Yesterday, Isaiah posted four new THE WORLD TODAY JUST NUTS comics: "Outreach," "Howie speaks," "A Couple Of Paramedics Just Standing Around Talking." and "Does anyone really listen?"




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