Showing posts with label Iraqi Journalist Throwing Shoes at Bush. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Iraqi Journalist Throwing Shoes at Bush. Show all posts

Thursday, December 25, 2008

Cash registers ring at company selling 'Bush Shoes': The News

ISTANBUL: The Turkish company which made the shoes an Iraqi journalist hurled at President George W. Bush last week is reporting a massive increase in sales in the wake of the now infamous incident.Muntadhar al-Zeidi became a hero throughout the Arab world when he threw his shoes at the US president during a press conference last week.


Istanbul-based shoemaker Ramazan Baydan says his company, Baydan Shoes, has been inundated with requests for pairs of the shoes and he has had to employ 100 extra staff to meet the demand.

The 'Bush Shoes' as they have come to be known, are the company's Model 271 - black, polyurethane-soled brogues which sell for around 40 New Turkish Lira (NZ$47).Serkan Turk, the head of sales at Baydan Shoes told media the firm normally sold 15,000 pairs a year of the Model 271 shoes.Since the shoe-throwing incident on December 14 however, the company has received orders totaling 370,000 pairs.

For more on this article, please click on the following link: Cash registers ring at company selling 'Bush Shoes': The News

Tuesday, December 16, 2008

Patrick Cockburn: Keep out... a message for foreign leaders: The Independent

I used to think that all these official visits did little harm, even if they did no good

Tuesday, 16 December 2008

The sight of the Iraqi reporter Muntazer al-Zaidi hurling his shoes at President Bush at a press conference in Baghdad will gladden the heart of any journalist forced to attend these tedious, useless, and almost invariably obsequious, events. "This is a farewell kiss," shouted Mr Zaidi. "This is from the widows, the orphans and those who were killed in Iraq."

Official press conferences of any kind seldom produce real news, but the worst are usually those given by foreign leaders on trips abroad in which they and their local ally suggest that they are in control of events and all is going according to plan.

One of the many infuriating, though also ludicrous, events in Iraq since the invasion of 2003 has been American and British leaders, arriving in secret at the enormous US base at Baghdad airport and travelling, accompanied by numerous armed guards, by helicopter to the heavily-fortified Green Zone. After a few hours there they would give upbeat press conferences, sitting alongside the Iraqi leader of the day, claiming significant improvements in security and chiding the assembled journalists for ignoring such clear signs of success.

Periodically reality would break in, such as the time a mortar bomb exploded nearby the press conference hall at the very moment when UN Secretary General Ban ki-Moon was lauding security improvements, compelling him to cower down behind a display of artificial flowers.
Visiting US politicians during the presidential election sought determinedly to manicure what American television viewers would see. Diplomats at the US embassy complained that staffers of Republican candidate Senator John McCain had asked them not to wear helmets and body armour when standing next to him in case these protective measures might appear to contradict his claim that the US military was close to military victory. For similar reasons staffers of the Vice President Dick Cheney demanded that the siren giving a seven or eight second warning of incoming rockets or mortar rounds to people in the Green Zone be turned off during his visits.

For more on this article, please click on the following link: Patrick Cockburn: Keep out... a message for foreign leaders: The Independent