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US hopes Iraq will ask troops to stay: Gates

'Growing assault' on Iraqi Kurd media freedom: HRW
Baghdad (AFP) May 24, 2011 - Human Rights Watch called on Tuesday for Iraqi Kurdish authorities to cease their intimidation of journalists, citing increased attacks on freedom of the press in the wake of recent protests.

Their criticism follows similar remarks from Paris-based media watchdog Reporters Without Borders last week against the government of the autonomous region in Iraq's north.

"Kurdistan regional government officials and security forces are carrying out a growing assault on the freedom of journalists to work in Iraqi Kurdistan," HRW said in a statement.

"Regional officials should stop repressing journalists through libel suits, beatings, detentions, and death threats," the New York-based group added.

A spokesman for the Kurdistan region presidency was not immediately available for comment when contacted by AFP.

HRW noted in particular the case of Lvin magazine, which was sued for libel last week by the ruling Kurdistan Democratic Party (KDP) of regional president Massud Barzani. The KDP has demanded that Lvin be shut.

The rights group also claimed that on May 11, Kurdish authorities in the region's second biggest city of Sulaimaniyah detained Bryar Namiq, a journalist with the Kurdistan News Network television station, before insulting and physically assaulting him.

The Kurdistan region has since the beginning of the year been the site of regular protests against corruption and nepotism within the government, dominated by the KDP and Patriotic Union of Kurdistan of Iraqi President Jalal Talabani.

According to HRW, several journalists who covered or participated in the protests are now living in fear of reprisal.

"In a time when the Middle East is erupting in demands to end repression, the Kurdish authorities are trying to stifle and intimidate critical journalism," said Sarah Leah Whitson, the rights group's Middle East director.

by Staff Writers
Washington (AFP) May 24, 2011
Defense Secretary Robert Gates said Tuesday he hopes Iraqi leaders will ask US troops to stay in their country beyond a year-end deadline but acknowledged the United States was unpopular there.

While extending the US military presence beyond this year would send an important message to Arab allies and to Washington's archfoe Iran, Iraqi politicians faced a "challenge" in weighing such a move, Gates said.

"We have to realize that it is a political challenge for the Iraqis, because whether we like it or not, we're not very popular there," Gates said at a conference at the American Enterprise Institute, a Washington think tank.

Supporters of radical Shiite leader Moqtada al-Sadr "clearly want us out," Gates said, adding that it was unclear "how much of that is the Sadrists and how much of that is the Iranians behind the Sadrists."

He expected that "it will take some time for the political leaders to figure out a way to move forward on this.

"And all I can say is that from the standpoint of Iraq's future but also our role in the region, I hope they figure out a way to ask. And I think the United States will be willing to say yes when that time comes," he said.

Sadr warned last month that his supporters will resume armed opposition if US forces stay in Iraq beyond their scheduled departure at the end of the year.

Iraqi Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki said earlier this month he would meet with rival political blocs to gauge support for keeping American forces in the country, after top US officials visited Baghdad in recent weeks to press Iraq to decide quickly.

Gates said keeping a modest US military presence in Iraq would represent a "worthy" investment in a country that could serve as a model for democracy for other Arab states.

"Something we could not have predicted five months ago is that Iraq would emerge as the most advanced Arab democracy in the entire region," he said.

"I think sustaining that is worthy of an investment" that could in some ways provide "a model, for a multi-sectarian, multi-ethnic society in the Arab world, that shows democracy can work."

Keeping a US force in Iraq would send "a powerful signal to the region that we're not leaving," he said.

"I think it would be reassuring to the Gulf states, I think it would not be reassuring to Iran, and that's a good thing," Gates added.

US forces are largely engaged in "advise and assist" roles with Iraqi security forces since formally ending combat operations last August, when most troops left the country.

There are still about 45,000 US soldiers stationed in Iraq, with all American forces due to pull out by the end of 2011 under a security agreement with Baghdad.



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