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IRAQ WARS
US insists Iraq police training not being scrapped
by Staff Writers
Baghdad (AFP) May 13, 2012


Philippine workers free to go to Iraqi Kurdistan
Manila (AFP) May 13, 2012 - The Philippines has lifted an eight-year ban on its nationals working in Iraq, but only for the Middle Eastern country's autonomous Kurdistan region, the foreign ministry said Sunday.

In 2004 then-president Gloria Arroyo withdrew a contingent of Filipino police and soldiers assigned to the US-led coalition in Iraq after a Filipino truck driver was kidnapped and threatened with beheading.

The driver was released unharmed and Arroyo banned all Filipinos from working in the country.

Now Filipino overseas workers, a major engine of the economy, will be allowed to return to Kurdistan but not the rest of Iraq, Department of Foreign Affairs spokesman Raul Hernandez said in a statement.

"POEA (the official Philippine Overseas Employment Administration) has already lifted the deployment ban for the Kurdistan region in Iraq," he said. "Only the Kurdistan region for now."

Despite the ban, officials estimated that as many as 10,000 Filipinos continued to work in Iraq.

Nine million Filipinos, 10 percent of the population, work overseas largely in low-skilled jobs such as maids and sailors, but also as nurses, engineers and IT specialists.

They sent $18.17 billion back to the Philippines last year, equivalent to 10 percent of the country's GDP, and are hailed as modern-day heroes by many of their countrymen for helping keep the economy afloat.

The US embassy in Baghdad insisted on Sunday it had no plans to shut down a multi-billion-dollar police training programme that it said was a "vital part" of its enormous civilian mission here.

Responding to a New York Times report that the US may phase the programme out entirely, the embassy did not comment on the newspaper's claims it would reduce the number of police advisers to just 50 or directly address charges it spent more than $100 million on a facility that it will no longer use.

"Despite a New York Times report to the contrary, the US Embassy in Baghdad and the Department of State have no plans to shut down the Police Development Programme in Iraq that began in October 2011," an embassy statement said.

It said it would return a Baghdad Police College annex to Iraqi authorities, thereby relocating US police advisers to the heavily-fortified embassy and generating "considerable cost savings".

"The Police Development Programme is a vital part of the US-Iraqi relationship and an effective means of standing by our Iraqi friends as they protect their sovereignty and democratic institutions from internal and external threats," embassy spokesman Michael McClellan said in the statement.

Citing unnamed State Department officials, the New York Times reported on Sunday that new restructuring plans called for the number of police advisers to be reduced to just 50, from what was originally envisioned as a cadre of 350.

It also said that the embassy spent more than $100 million on upgrades to the Baghdad Police College, but that the building was "recently abandoned, unfinished".

The embassy did not immediately confirm the amount of money spent on the police college, and a spokesman said that "all staffing levels are evaluated periodically in coordination with the" Iraqi government.

The US military completed its withdrawal from Iraq at the end of last year, leaving around 150 troops under the authority of the embassy, charged with training Iraq's security forces in addition to the police training programme.

Now, the embassy is the biggest in the world, with 12,755 personnel as of April -- 1,369 government officials and the remainder contractors.

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