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Headlines for Tuesday, July 27, 2010
Tue, 07/27/2010 - 13:17
Study says BPA coats cash register receipts Department of Defense has no paper trail for $9 billion of Iraq’s money The Defense Department took control of some 9 billion dollars of Iraqi money from 2004 to 2007. It was to be used for reconstruction projects, but according to the audit released by a special investigator, most of the money - 8 point 7 billion - was not properly accounted for. Of that, there are no records at all of what happened to 2.6 billion. Ronald Neumann is President of the American Academy of Diplomacy - a Washington think-tank. He says in the early years of the Iraq war, often, the military was just handing out money to get things done. “People would say, you know if you don’t put people to work, we’re gonna have more fighting. So they would rush around and do things to put people to work. They didn’t always keep careful account of the money.” Neumann says civilians at the State Department and U-S-A-I-D need more staff to keep track of reconstruction money. “So if you’re gonna have billions of dollars in contracts as we had in Iraq, and you deploy tiny numbers of people to manage those contracts, you will not manage them properly, and you will have these problems again.” The report also found the US military still controls some 35 million dollars of Iraqi funds, despite being required to return that money to Iraq’s government. Jacob Fenston, FSRN, Washington. International donors earmark $1.1 billion in aid for Kyrgyzstan Indigenous Brazilians still occupying power plant Protesters representing eight native Brazilian tribes say an Amazon hydroelectric plant is being built on an ancient burial ground. The protest, which did not turn violent, began on Sunday when about 300 Indians armed with bows and arrows occupied the construction site, blocking transit and taking about 100 workers hostage. After negotiating with the plant’s management, the protestors exchanged the workers for five engineers who were later released. But they did not leave the site or allow construction to restart. Instead, they presented a list of demands to the company building the plant including more than 5 million dollars in compensation. The construction site, located in the state of Matto Grosso, is about 20 miles outside the Indians’ reserve. They claim the hydroelectric plant will diminish their ability to fish and access clean water once it begins to operate. The plant is schedule to be completed by the end of the year. Bryan Gibel, FSRN, Sao Paulo. Israel razes entire Bedouin village – 200 homeless ACLU: FBI data collection on ethnic communities constitutes racial profiling ACLU affiliates across the country are asking for FBI records on ethnic communities. According to the ACLU, this information is gathered to document and map racial and ethnic behaviors and constitutes racial profiling. Further, the group says the data collection is therefore unconstitutional. This mapping is sanctioned in the FBI operations guide. Ii specifically allows "the FBI to “identify locations of concentrated ethnic communities in the Field Office's domain.” Virginia ACLU Director Kent Willis said the FBI profiling program is similar to one created by former Virginia Governor Tim Kaine, where in Kaine told law enforcement officials that areas with high concentration of minorities were a threat to national security. Brad Kutner, FSRN, Richmond. Share this page! »
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