Mother of bomber arrested

Iraqi security forces have arrested a woman whose boyfriend convinced her to send her little boy on a suicide mission and then failed to stop the attack after she had a change of heart, police said.

Sunni widow Suad al-Obaidi, 47, was arrested on Friday along with her allegedly Al-Qaeda boyfriend, after attacks on anti-Qaeda Sahwa (Awakening) militia in Diyala province a day earlier, a Diyala police officer told AFP.

She was arrested in Diyala province, while the boyfriend, Hamid Alwan, 53, was detained in Baghdad.According to the officer, Alwan convinced Obaidi to send nine-year-old Murtada Latif Kadhem to bomb a Shiite mosque in Khales, north of Baghdad, several years ago.

Alwan "took her son with her ... by car to the Shiite mosque but, on the way there, she started to cry about her son," the officer said."He put her out of the car, and took the son, who was wearing an explosive belt, to the mosque," where "he blew himself up."

Security officials said the December 29, 2006 attack killed at least nine people, including the imam of the mosque, and wounded at least eight.A few months later, Alwan tried to convince Suad to send her 18-year-old son Kadhem Latif Kadhem on a suicide attack, but he fled to the home of his married sister, Hanna.

Diyala province, north of Baghdad, was the scene of bloody sectarian fighting that left thousands dead."After the attacks against the Sahwa (Awakening) last Thursday, we received information about terrorists groups and wanted people in some areas in Diyala," said the officer.

"We arrested a group of terrorists and through the investigation we reached Hamid and arrested him in Baghdad Friday."On Thursday, a suicide bomber and a car bomb targeted Sahwa militiamen near Baquba, north of Baghdad, killing five people and wounding 26, an army officer and a doctor said.

The bravest family in Britain?

It was a family trade that has gone down as one of the most extraordinary in history.The tale of three spies - two sisters and their brother - who all went undercover behind enemy lines during the Second World War to disrupt Nazis operations has been revealed in a gripping book.

It reveals the heroics of Eileen Nearne, her sister Jacqueline and older brother Francis, who all worked for Britain’s highly secretive Special Operation’s Executive (SOE).

The most famous of the trio was Eileen Nearne, who in 1944, at the age of 23, was sent to an aircraft base in France to work as a wireless operator with the cover name Mademoiselle du Tort.Miss Nearne, who spoke fluent French, was later caught using her radio set and taken into custody by the Gestapo who tortured her for information.

Despite the abuse, they were unable to break her and she convinced them she was just a ‘little shop girl’ who knew nothing of undercover war operations.She was released but captured again by the Germans, this time managing to escape from a labour camp with two fellow prisoners.

They were later arrested by the SS but were set free after Eileen again used her language skills to convince the captors they were innocent.She was awarded the MBE for her services during the war but became a recluse in later life and was found dead of natural causes at her home in Torbay on September 2 last year.

The Heroines of the SOE by Beryl Escott, also tells of the exploits of her sister Jacqueline and older brother Francis, who both began spy operations in France before her.Francis, in his late 20s, helped to marshall the French resistance from Grenoble and picked up air-dropped supplies.

Jacqueline who, like Eileen, also spoke French, was dropped into France in January 1943 with no support team to meet her.From a safe house in Clermont-Ferrand she acted as a go-between for the French resistance and British forces and even sabotaged Nazi supply factories.

Despite the huge dangers of her work – the Nazis had plenty of informers - she managed to make her way safely back to Britain with Francis at the end of the war.She died in 1982.


By TED THORNHILL, the Daily Mail

Why we need the poppy

THIS year marks the 90th anniversary of the Scottish Poppy Appeal.The men of the First World War would be surprised, if gratified, to know that all these years later communities still gather round their war memorials in November wearing the same poppy that was introduced to raise funds for them.

They would be dismayed to hear 29-year old Private Paul Lambert of 1 SCOTS, who lost his legs in an IED explosion in Afghanistan, declare: "I always wore the poppy to remember my grandfather. Now, with your help, the poppy can rebuild my life." Dismayed, but they would understand. They knew better than most that wars create casualties.

The British Armed Forces have been in action since the end of World War II and the list of victims grows with each passing year. This is why the poppy remains as relevant today as ever.

It was in 1921 that collars and lapels in Britain first bore the bright red paper bloom which instantly gained a special place in our culture. Although the poppies were initially imported from devastated areas of France, it took only until 1926 for the Scottish Appeal to have its own factory.

Arthur Dyke, ex-Scots Guards, who works at today's Lady Haig Poppy Factory in Edinburgh, explains: "The poppy is an icon of remembrance but it also provides support to ex-Service people today and I am proud to be part of that helping process."

Arthur and 40 colleagues produce all Scotland's five million poppies, 8,000 wreaths and 60,000 collecting tins.

The appeal, organised by Poppy Scotland, is enjoying a run of ever bigger totals. Last year's record of £2.35 million was a five per cent increase on 2009, showing us that the public continues to acknowledge the debt of honour we owe our Service people.

The charity gave £800,000 to 1,360 individuals and £959,000 to 15 organisations. Veterans received assistance towards emergency home repairs, temporary accommodation and home adaptations, re-training grants and small business loans, while organisations such as mental health charity Combat Stress and housing charity Scottish Veterans' Garden City Association benefited too.

One of the most unusual awards was made to purchase six American quarter horses for a new charity, HorseBack UK, which uses horse riding in Aboyne as therapy for injured veterans.

It can be moving to read how small sums, carefully spent, can transform lives. A typical letter is from RAF veteran Charles Milne, 88, who wrote: "Thank you for funding my new stairlift. I was struggling with the stairs and would have been sad to move from my home. Your generosity has reassured me that I can continue to live here for the foreseeable days ahead."

But it's not all small scale. Last year Poppy Scotland launched the Armed Forces Advice Project to offer free confidential advice to serving personnel, veterans and their families in Scotland, where Citizens Advice Scotland staff assist with a wide-range of issues, including finances, benefits, housing and employment.

This is just one of several innovations introduced by Poppy Scotland in recent years and accurately reflects the vital necessity of moving with the times.The Poppy Appeal is not associated with just the World Wars but the many bloody conflicts that our Servicemen have fought since 1945.

These include Palestine, Korea, Malaya, Cyprus, Falklands, Northern Ireland, Bosnia and Sierra Leone, to mention just a few while recent conflicts such as Iraq or Afghanistan have emphasised the poppy's role in the modern world.

A world which has, in the past four years, seen Poppy Scotland increase average expenditure per beneficiary by 84 per cent.While this reflects the rising cost of care in today's climate, the link between modern conflicts and those of the World War I trenches will always be the poppy.

It has endured as a symbol of blood, fragility, death, rebirth and remembrance. The paper flower remains today as a vital tool for reconstructing shattered lives too. We still need the humble poppy.Those who died serving their country, or who suffer still, must not be forgotten.

This is where the poppy's role as a symbol of remembrance and heroic fundraiser continues to play a vital role.It has also come to represent war, peace, hope and sacrifice but with a stubborn sense of regeneration too. The poppy remains a compelling symbol and is needed now much as it ever was.

By Neil Griffiths of the Royal British Legion Scotland

Jobless young veterans

The job market is not getting better for Iraq and Afghanistan veterans.

The Bureau of Labor Statistics reported Friday the national unemployment rate remains mostly unchanged at 9 percent, while the jobless rate for veterans of all generations dropped to 7.7 percent in October, down from 8.1 percent in September. But for Iraq- and Afghanistan-era veterans who left active duty since 2001, the unemployment rate for October was 12.1 percent, up from 11.7 percent in September and from an average of 10.5 percent in 2010.

The economy created just 80,000 jobs in October, resulting in only a 0.1 percentage point drop in the national unemployment rate, according to the Labor Department report.

Friday’s release of the monthly employment report from the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics comes as Congress continues to try to pass a bill to help jobless veterans find work. The veterans’ affairs committees in the House and Senate have their own ideas, and the Obama administration has made its own proposals, including a tax credit for businesses hiring veterans. An agreement, though, has proven elusive.

Rep. Jeff Miller, R-Fla., the House Veterans Affairs Committee chairman, set a personal goal of passing a compromise veterans’ jobs bill in time for it to become law by Veterans’ Day on Nov. 11. It remains unclear if that goal can be met. While veterans’ issues are mostly nonpartisan, the possibility of adding the employer tax credits from President Obama’s American Jobs Act to a compromise measure has become a last-minute hurdle because of reluctance by some Republicans to passing any Obama-proposed jobs legislation.

While Congress dithers, the Obama administration has launched a pre-Veterans’ Day public relations offensive to list myriad programs aimed at helping veterans find jobs.

This includes loans and counseling from the Small Business Administration for veterans and Guard and reserve members who want to start their own business — an option that’s getting more attention since high-paying jobs are scare. William Elmore, SBA’s associate administration for veterans’ business development, said there are 15 veterans outreach centers scattered throughout the U.S. Veterans can also get help at any of the 950 small-business development centers, he said. Additionally, there are small-business mentors to help guide veterans, special veterans-only loans of up to $500,000 to start or expand a business, and micro-loans of up to $50,000 to help when a business is in trouble.

Improvements also are being made in the transition classes provided to service members, in hopes of better tailoring them to individual needs. The stalled veterans’ employment legislation would make attendance at the transition classes mandatory for most separating and retiring service members — a requirement aimed more at getting military commanders to free people to attend the classes than to convince people of the importance of getting help.

By Rick Maze - Staff writer

Burn pit register

Legislation introduced in the House would require the Veterans Affairs Department to create a register for veterans who have health problems they believe are related to exposure to open-air burn pits in Iraq and Afghanistan.

The bill, the Open Burn Pit Registry Act, HR 3337, is sponsored by Rep. Todd Akin, R-Mo. It aims to widen the understanding of exposure, the possible health consequences and extent of symptoms service members report as a result of the Defense Department’s extensive use of burn pits in the war zones.

Among the waste burned in the pits were plastic bottles, paper trash, human offal and medical waste that included needles and syringes, soiled bandages and even amputated limbs, according to anecdotal reports provided by those who served near the largest pit at Joint Base Balad, Iraq.

“I have worked with a number of my constituents who were exposed to burn pits while serving in the military and have been suffering from very severe health problems since,” Akin said. “We want to create a repository for information so as these different situations occur, we have a record of them and we can track them, because different ailments take place over an extended period of time, like cancer.”

Sen. Tom Udall, D-N.M., plans to offer a companion bill in the Senate, Akin said.

“With this registry, we can ensure that those who have been exposed to toxic chemicals and fumes while serving overseas are better informed about the effects so they can properly treated,” Udall said in a prepared statement.

Veterans and support groups lobbied for the legislation. For Aubrey Tapley, a former Army sergeant with the advocacy group Burn Pits 360, the register is personal.

Tapley was stationed at Balad in 2004 and began experiencing symptoms that included severe headaches, abdominal pain and fatigue. After being medically evacuated and discharged, she endured several operations for uterine growths and has been treated for rheumatoid arthritis and severe migraines.

“I’m now 100 percent disabled. I used to be in the Army. I used to be able to run two miles in less than 19 minutes,” she said.Other veterans groups that rallied behind the legislation include Veterans of Foreign Wars, Disabled American Veterans, the American Legion and the National Military Family Association.

“There are a lot of veterans out there who look healthy but they can’t breathe. They can’t walk up stairs. The science will eventually back all this up, but in the meantime, how do we properly identify the people who, through their exposures, their service, deserve benefits? This legislation is a great first step in this direction,” said Shane Barker, VFW’s senior legislative associate.

Akin estimates the registry would cost VA $2 million over five years to establish and maintain. If approved, it would require VA to establish the database within six months of passage and publicize it.

The Defense Department closed its last burn pit in Iraq in December 2010. It still operates about 100 small pits in Afghanistan and is working to replace them with cleaner-burning incinerators, said Pentagon spokeswoman Cynthia Smith.

DAV maintains a database of 594 veterans who say they have ailments related to their proximity to burn pits. But the organization believes many more have been affected by environmental hazards they encountered when deployed.

“It’s imperative we take steps now so we are prepared for when service members exposed to burn pits have problems later … this will help to ensure that we do better in the future than we did in the past, when Vietnam veterans suffered from their own exposure with Agent Orange,” DAV associate national legislative director John Wilson said.

By Patricia Kime - Staff writer

War zone crime rise

A Marine in Iraq sent home $43,000 in stolen cash by hiding it in a footlocker among American flags. A soldier shipped thousands more concealed in a toy stuffed animal. An embassy employee tricked the State Department into wiring $240,000 into his foreign bank account.

As the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan wind down, the number of people indicted and convicted by the U.S. for bribery, theft and other reconstruction-related crimes in both countries is rapidly rising, according to two government reports released Sunday.

"This is a boom industry for us," Stuart Bowen, the special inspector general for Iraq reconstruction, said in an interview.

"Investigators and auditors had a productive quarter," said a report on the theft of Afghanistan aid by Steven Trent, who holds the same job for Afghanistan. His report covered August through October.

In the past 13 months U.S. investigators in Iraq secured the indictments of 22 people for alleged aid-related offenses, bringing to 69 the total since the SIGIR office was created in 2004. Convictions stand at 57. Several hundred more suspects are under scrutiny in 102 open investigations and those numbers are expected to climb.

The rise in caseloads derives partly from spinoff investigations, where suspects facing prosecution lead investigators to other suspects, said Jon Novak, SIGIR's assistant inspector general for investigations.

"More and more people are ratting out their associates," he said, turning in conspirators who helped launder money after it was stolen, others who were aware of it and others implicated in the crimes.

As investigators gain experience, they're received better information from a growing network of sources in Iraq, said Dan Willkens, Novak's deputy. Development of an automated data-mining system for investigations has helped, he said, as did a decision two years ago to speed prosecutions by hiring three former assistant U.S. attorneys and detailing them to the Justice Department.

At the inspector general's office for Afghan reconstruction, created in 2008, officials report only nine indictments and seven convictions so far. They say they're trying to ramp up after years of upheaval and charges the office was mismanaged. Trent was named acting inspector general after his predecessor left in August and is the third person to hold the job.

Still, Trent reported that during the last quarter, an investigation initiated by his office netted the largest bribery case in Afghanistan's 10-year war. A former Army Reserve captain, Sidharth "Tony" Handa of Charlotte, N.C., was convicted, sentenced to prison and fined for soliciting $1.3 million in bribes from contractors working on reconstruction projects.

Most crimes uncovered by U.S. investigators in the two war zones include bribery, kickbacks and theft, inspired in part by the deep and pervasive cultures of corruption indigenous to the countries themselves.

Among some of the cases listed in the reports were those of:

• Gunnery Sgt. Eric Hamilton, who pleaded guilty to conspiracy in what prosecutors say was a scheme to help Iraqi contractors steal 70 generators that were meant to supply electricity for fellow Marines. He sent some of their payments home in a footlocker and had other money wired, the report said.

• Several U.S. government employees, who received kickbacks for steering contracts to local conspirators and providing inside information to people competing for contracts. A former army sergeant, who was not identified, is charged with pocketing more than $12,000 in cash that a contractor never picked up after the money was allegedly stolen by another army sergeant and mailed to California inside a stuffed animal.

• Jordanian national and U.S. Embassy employee Osama Esam Saleem Ayesh, who was convicted in April for stealing nearly $240,000 intended to cover shipping and customs charges the State Department incurs when it moves household goods of its employees. The money wound up in Ayesh's bank in Jordan.

Money stolen from reconstruction projects also has been shipped off of U.S. battlefields tucked into letters home and stuffed in a military vest. Tens of thousands of dollars were once sewn into a Santa Claus suit.

Prosecutors have retrieved some of the money. More than $83 million will be returned to the U.S. from Iraq cases completed in the budget year that ended Sept. 30, bringing the total recovered over the last seven years to nearly $155 million, Bowen's office said.

As well as stolen cash, the total includes court-ordered restitution, fines and proceeds from the sale of merchandise seized from those convicted, including Rolex watches, luxury cars, plasma TVs and houses.

‘EGREGIOUS’ FRAUD

Prosecutions by Trent's office recovered $51 million over the past year, his report said.

But the amount recovered is believed to be a tiny fraction of what's been stolen in the two war zones, a figure that will probably never be known for certain. Far more money is believed to have been lost through waste and abuse that resulted from poor management and the often-questioned U.S. strategy of trying to rebuild nations that are still at war.

The U.S. has committed $62 billion to rebuilding Iraq and $72 billion for the reconstruction of Afghanistan.

The independent Commission on Wartime Contracting estimated in August that at least $31 billion has been lost to waste and fraud in Iraq and Afghanistan, adding that the total could be as high as $60 billion. It studied not just reconstruction spending, but $206 billion for the logistical support of coalition forces and the performance of security functions.

The commission found that from 10 to 20 percent of the $206 billion in spending was wasted, while fraud accounted for the loss of another 5 percent to 9 percent.

Bowen called the cost of fraud "egregious."

"This is open crime occurring in a war zone," he said. "And the purpose of a lot of these expenditures is to win hearts and minds. Obviously we lose hearts and minds" when local populations see foreigners steal money meant to help rebuild their country.

The inspectors general are only two of the U.S. government offices looking into fraud, waste and abuse. Others include State Department inspectors and Army criminal investigators.

By Pauline Jelinek - The Associated Press

second Iraq war veteran injured

A second Iraq war veteran has suffered serious injuries after clashes between police and Occupy movement protesters in Oakland.

Kayvan Sabehgi, who served in Iraq and Afghanistan, is in intensive care with a lacerated spleen. He says he was beaten by police close to the Occupy Oakland camp, but despite suffering agonising pain, did not reach hospital until 18 hours later.

Sabehgi, 32, is the second Iraq war veteran to be hospitalised following involvement in Oakland protests. Another protester, Scott Olsen, suffered a fractured skull on 25 October.

On Wednesday night, police used teargas and non-lethal projectiles to drive back protesters following an attempt by the Occupy supporters to shut down the city of Oakland.Sabehgi told the Guardian from hospital he was walking alone along 14th Street in central Oakland – away from the main area of clashes – when he was injured.

"There was a group of police in front of me," he told the Guardian from his hospital bed. "They told me to move, but I was like: 'Move to where?' There was nowhere to move.

"Then they lined up in front of me. I was talking to one of them, saying 'Why are you doing this?' when one moved forward and hit me in my arm and legs and back with his baton. Then three or four cops tackled me and arrested me."

Sabeghi, who left the army in 2007 and now part-owns a small bar-restaurant in El Cerrito, about 10 miles north of Oakland, said he was handcuffed and placed in a police van for three hours before being taken to jail. By the time he got there he was in "unbelievable pain".

He said: "My stomach was really hurting, and it got worse to the point where I couldn't stand up."I was on my hands and knees and crawled over the cell door to call for help."

A nurse was called and recommended Sabehgi take a suppository, but he said he "didn't want to take it".He was allowed to "crawl" to another cell to use the toilet, but said it was clogged."I was vomiting and had diarrhoea," Sabehgi said. "I just lay there in pain for hours."

Sabehgi's bail was posted in the mid-afternoon, but he said he was unable to leave his cell because of the pain. The cell door was closed, and he remained on the floor until 6pm, when an ambulance was called.

He was taken to Highland hospital – the same hospital where Olsen was originally taken after being hit in the head by a projectile apparently fired by police.

Sabehgi was due to undergo surgery on Friday afternoon to repair his spleen, which would involve using a clot or patch to prevent internal bleeding.Thousands of protesters had attended the action in Oakland on Wednesday, taking over the downtown area of the city and blockading Oakland's port.

As demonstrations continued near the camp base at Frank H Ogawa plaza during the evening, a group of protesters occupied a disused building on 16th Street at around 10.30pm, with some climbing up onto the roof.

There had been little police presence during the day, but more than 200 officers arrived after 11pm. Some protesters had set fire to a hastily assembled barrier at the corner of 16th Street and Telegraph, in a bid to prevent access to the occupied building, but police drove demonstrators away from 16th Street using tear gas, flashbang grenades, and non-lethal rounds.

Sabehgi said he had not been in the occupied building, and was walking away from the main area of trouble when he was injured.

He said he had his arms folded and was "totally peaceful" before being arrested.A spokeswoman for Highland hospital confirmed Sabehgi had been admitted. Oakland police were not immediately available for comment.

Adam Gabbatt, guardian.co.uk