In this edition
Job Opportunities Abound for Sons of Iraq
Iraqi Freedom Minute, Feb. 26
Umm Qasr residents get new medical facility (Basra)
Soldier in Focus – Capt. Agustin Dominguez
Job Opportunities Abound for Sons of Iraq
Thursday, 26 February 2009
Multi-National Corps – Iraq Release
BAGHDAD — The Government of Iraq (GoI) and Coalition forces will complete the transfer of the Sons of Iraq (SoI) security volunteers to Iraqi control by April, and officials say they now are focused on transitioning the men into jobs and educational programs.
“We're all working together for the same purpose: to bring these young men back to the government, back to their country, and to continue to build a stable and secure Iraq,” said Maj. Gen. Michael Ferriter, deputy commanding general for operations, Multi-National Corps – Iraq. “What you see is a result of this partnership. Things are falling into place.”
Since late 2008, responsibility for more than 70,000 SoI across six provinces has transferred from the Coalition to the Iraqi government. The transfer of the remaining members in three provinces – Ninewah, Kirkuk and Salah Ad Din – will be completed by April 1, said Lt. Cmdr. Jeffrey Butcher, C9, Multi-National Corps – Iraq. “At the same time, we are working closely with the Government of Iraq to place SoI members in meaningful jobs in the various ministries and private industry,” he said.
The hiring process has already begun in Baghdad, home to more than 47,000 of the SoI – roughly half the national total. There, the Iraqi government has collected assessment forms from the men, describing their education, employment preferences, age and work skills.
“From that data, the government is going to be able to decide where those Sons of Iraq can go,” Butcher said. “If they have prior background in the military, then they may be perfect candidates for security jobs – the Iraqi Police, as well as the Army, National Police, Border Patrol and diplomatic protection.”
“Iraq’s prime minister, Nouri al-Maliki, has made the employment process a top priority for the national government,” Butcher said. Maliki’s Executive Order 118-C mandates that 20 percent of the SoI will take jobs in the nation’s security forces.
The other 80 percent are expected to enter employment within the government’s ministries. Butcher said the ministries eventually will be able to draw their new hires from federal employment centers located throughout the country and operated by the government’s Ministry of Labor and Social Affairs.
“We’re working by, with and through the government of Iraq to get those employment centers running,” Butcher said. “We’ve equipped them with some of the necessary IT equipment, and we’re working with the government to create them as part of the Ministry of Labor’s network. The goal is to use the centers to be able to employ and work with the ministries to get the SoI in there, in accordance with their skills and inclinations.”
The Ministry of Education, in particular, has stepped up as a prospective employer for the men. The ministry expects to have approximately 10,000 positions available in Baghdad, many of them security-related, in the men’s local school districts.
For SoI interested in entrepreneurship, more diverse opportunities are available. “The main goal is to place them in the ministries, but we are also working within some Coalition programs that we have currently to assist the men,” Butcher said.
Those programs include Iraqi Business Industrial Zones, which help set up Iraqi small businesses on Coalition installations, and the Logistics Civil Augmentation Program overseen by government contractor Kellogg Brown & Root, which currently employs 60,000 Iraqis. “One of the goals is to get more Iraqis hired into that program,” Butcher said. “KBR is working through us in order to get some Sons of Iraq into these programs.”
Coalition and government authorities also are enlisting the aid of “employment assistant managers” – local, well-connected individuals that work with the shaykhs and in the local industries and can help place SoI in long-term positions.
SoI in rural areas have a variety of options available to help them build an agricultural base if they so choose, Butcher said. These programs include micro-grants to start a business and purchase work materials, like tractors and seed. A USAID economic-growth program called Tijara – Arabic for “trade” – offers small-business programs and agricultural training. “If that’s a route that the Son of Iraq wants to go, we can use that as a training solution,” Butcher said.
Because many government ministries require employees to hold a primary-school certificate, many of the SoI may need some type of literacy training or education. “We’ve helped establish a lot of vocational technical centers, and we want to work through these centers and a lot of the educational programs they have to get these guys skilled and trained in trades… like plumbing, masonry, welding, generator repair and heating, ventilation and air conditioning,” he said. “If they don’t have the necessary skill sets, then that would be the doorway into that type of ministry position.”
Literacy education is also a priority, with the SoI benefiting from a national literacy-training program recently announced by Prime Minster Maliki. Last summer, a pilot program in the Hawijah district of Kirkuk province provided 486 SoI with the equivalent of a primary-school certificate. “We learned a lot from that program, and we can use it to help set up similar programs here in Baghdad and elsewhere,” Butcher said.
Coalition authorities attribute the momentum on these programs to the enthusiasm of the Iraqi government. “They understand the significance of what the SoI have done for the country, and what they’ve done to create a peaceful security environment,” Butcher said.
“We are very impressed with the Iraqi government’s attention to the Sons of Iraq,” he said. “They have the ball and they’re running with it.”
•This edition features stories on a new medical clinic in Umm Qasr, and Army medical personnel training Iraqi doctors. |
Umm Qasr residents get new medical facility (Basra)
By A. Al Bahrani
Gulf Region Division South district
BASRA, Iraq— Basra officials opened a newly completed primary healthcare clinic Feb. 19, the first of its kind in Umm Qasr, located on the southern edge of Iraq.
The new clinic is providing medical care to about 250 patients daily, compared to the old two-room facility that had less than half that volume, said Dr. Abdullah, the clinic administrator. “What we had was very small and we simply didn’t have room for all our staff and patients,” Dr. Abdullah continued. “But here, everything is great. We have separate rooms for vaccinations, a pharmacy, medical and dental care, a testing laboratory, X- rays and public education.” The new clinic is staffed by 20 medical personnel and is open six hours daily Sunday through Thursday for residents of all ages.
Salih Abdulmahdi, Head of Umm Qasr’s Council, said, “We are very happy to participate in this ribbon cutting today. People here will no longer have to drive 60 kilometers to get quality medical care for their families. This is a great improvement for our entire community.” Pharmacist Lila agreed. She worked at the old facility and is very pleased with the new one. “It’s awesome – all state-of-the-art equipment and design. All who have stopped by are impressed with what they see.”
James Mills with the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers Gulf Region Division said he was very proud to oversee the construction, which was done by local Iraqis whose families will directly benefit for years to come. “It’s something I can tell my grandchildren about,” he noted. “It provides services which were simply not available in this community before.”
Throughout Iraq, USACE has completed and turned over 132 Primary Healthcare Centers to the Iraqi Ministry of Health. The PHCs have the capacity to treat 4.6 million outpatients annually.
Soldier in Focus – Capt. Agustin Dominguez
Capt. Agustin Dominguez, a native of Miami, Fla., fires support officer assigned to Headquarters and Headquarters Company, 2nd Battalion, 505th Parachute Infantry Regiment, 3rd Brigade Combat Team, 82nd Airborne Division, Multi-National Division-Baghdad shows some Iraqi children his camera screen after taking a picture of them during a humanitarian drive Feb. 4 at a school in the New Baghdad district of eastern Baghdad. Paratroopers assigned to 2nd Battalion, 505th Parachute Infantry Regiment, 3rd Brigade Combat Team, 82nd Airborne Division, Multi-National Division-Baghdad partnered with National Police officers assigned to the 8th NP Brigade to distribute more than 800 wool blankets to the citizens of New Baghdad. Photo by Spc. Josh Lowery
Story by Staff Sgt. Alex Licea
Date: 02.24.2009
FORWARD OPERATING BASE LOYALTY, Iraq — Today's Soldier in Focus is Capt. Agustin Dominguez, a fire support officer assigned to the 2nd Battalion, 505th Parachute Infantry Regiment, 3rd Brigade Combat Team, 82nd Airborne Division, Multi-National Division – Baghdad.
Dominguez, of Miami, is a first-generation Cuban-American. He entered the U.S. Army in 2003 after receiving his commission from the United States Military Academy at West Point, N.Y., and is serving his second deployment to Iraq. No stranger to the Middle East, the 29 year-old has also deployed to Afghanistan.
Dominguez and his Soldiers have partnered with the 8th National Police Brigade, 2nd NP Div., since arriving in Iraq in January. Since his last deployment to Iraq, the improvements are what stand out.
“Now with our Iraqi partners you can see that they got it, they are very good, they are disciplined, they are always uniformed and they always do the right thing,” he said.
Throughout this deployment, Dominguez has been involved in several humanitarian projects to provide much needed goods to the citizens of Iraq. He and his Soldiers teamed with his Iraqi counterparts to distribute thousands of blankets and children’s toys to residents in the New Baghdad district in the eastern section of the capital.
Dominguez also assisted Iraqi security forces on several renovation projects to revive the New Baghdad economy and create jobs for its residents.
“We are focused on the renovation and improvement of several markets and roads, especially the roads that have access to the shops,” said Dominguez. “All these projects will create jobs because we will hire residents in the respective area.”
Dominguez is hopeful that these renovations projects will serve as a model of partnership and cooperation between the government of Iraq, ISF and coalition forces.
Dominguez is scheduled to command an airborne field artillery battery this summer.
When he is back home in the U.S., Dominguez is an avid athlete and loves to play rugby.