May 28, 2004

ITS FIFTEEN MINUTES ARE NEARLY OVER:

e Builders of Iraq (Charles Rousseaux, 05/28/2004, Tech Central Station)

Several structures of self-government have been established. Control of thirteen separate government ministries has been transferred to Iraqis, the most recent of which was the Ministry of Transportation. Other ministries under direct Iraqi control include the Ministry of Science and Technology, the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and the Ministry of Education.
 
Notwithstanding an awful start last year, when Coalition commanders cancelled elections shortly after announcing them, Iraqis have gained experience in self-government. President Bush noted that, "many of Iraq's cities and towns have elected town councils or city governments." Under the oversight of Paul Bremer, a group of local government representatives, including members of the Baghdad City Council, elected engineer Mahmood al Tamimi as city mayor last month.
 
The Baghdad City Council, largely a mix of previously apolitical technocrats, ranging from sheiks to secularists and from lawyers to engineers, has become a power in its own right. Council members were selected by their neighbors almost a year ago, and after first focusing on their neighborhoods, have since started to speak out on national issues. A February Washington Post profile of the group said, "They are the closest thing Iraq has to a democratically elected representative body with real clout." For instance, council member Ali Hadary pushed hard for the reassembly of classrooms, and received almost $500,000 to repair 20 schools in his area.
 
The entire Iraqi educational establishment is being rebuilt. Mr. Bush said, "Under the direction of Dr. Ala'din al-Alwan, the Ministry [of Education] has trained more than 30,000 teachers and supervisors for the schools of a new Iraq." According to the White House, over a third of the 15,000 teachers fired by Saddam have been rehired and more than 5.5 million Iraqi students are back at school. Earlier this month, the World Bank issued a $40 million grant to the Ministry of Education.
 
Schools aren't the only things going up. Spending on reconstruction is finally surging, according to retired admiral David Nash, who is overseeing construction. Earlier this week he said at a briefing, "Things are going very well." $75 million in new construction being set up each week. Over the last two months, $4 billion has been put towards specific projects. That is twice the amount two months ago, and the pace is still increasing.

Hard to accept it now, but Iraq is two months away from being a non-story.

Posted by Orrin Judd at May 28, 2004 2:56 PM
Comments

What's Iraq?

Posted by: andy at May 28, 2004 4:36 PM

Andy,

Why it's Southwest Asia's newest democracy silly.

Posted by: Bartman at May 28, 2004 6:14 PM

Thanks Bartman. And what's the name of that country sometimes referred to as the "graveyard of empires"?

Posted by: andy at May 28, 2004 8:36 PM

Gee, Andy, the name escapes me at the moment (possibly due to the "modicum of ethyl alcohol" I just mentioned to Orrin). Does it perhaps start with an "A"?

Posted by: Joe at May 28, 2004 9:33 PM

Abu Ghraib? It just abu has to be abu ghraib, doesn't it? I mean, it abu just has to be abu freaking ghraib. Because if it isn't, then the media doesn't know anything about it. Abu Ghraib. Kind of like gollum, isn't it? "Gollum, gollum".

Posted by: jim hamlen at May 28, 2004 11:11 PM
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