[LINK] Iraqi sovereignty won't extend online

Tony Barry me at tony-barry.emu.id.au
Sat Jun 26 14:21:15 EST 2004


From: http://www.siliconvalley.com/mld/siliconvalley/news/9003645.htm
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Posted on Thu, Jun. 24, 2004

Iraqi sovereignty won't extend online
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By Brian Bergstein
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AP Technology Writer
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When an interim government takes over from the U.S.-led occupation next 
week, Iraq will regain its place among the world's sovereign nations -- 
except on the Internet.

More than 240 places have their own two-letter Internet country codes, 
from ``.ac'' for Ascension Island to ``.zw'' for Zimbabwe. There's even 
``.ps'' for the Palestinian territories.

But the domain assigned to Iraq, ``.iq,'' is stuck in a strange 
bureaucratic limbo -- the company that had administered it is under 
U.S. criminal indictment -- and could remain there for months.

As a result, if Iraq's government, national institutions or regular 
Iraqis want a Web site, they need to use international domains, such as 
``.com,'' ``.org'' or ``.net'', which are maintained in the United 
States.

``To me, having `iq' is probably one of the most important steps toward 
giving Iraq its identity and independence,'' said Hisham Ashkouri, an 
Iraqi-born architect who has lived in the United States since 1972 and 
is designing several projects for Baghdad. ``The information technology 
part today is extremely important.''

Ashkouri said people in Iraq he works with use Web-based services like 
Yahoo! or America Online or domains with other countries' codes, 
including Bahrain or the United Arab Emirates.

The Baghdad Museum, which is still trying to recover from its April 
2003 looting, could use an ``.iq'' address to identify itself as Iraqi, 
just as the Louvre proclaims its Frenchness with www.louvre.fr. 
Instead, it has registered http://the.iraq.museum.

There's also a practical downside to using other countries' slices of 
the Internet. With many common site names already registered, ``major 
brand names or organizational names in Iraq cannot even use their own 
name in their Internet address unless and until the .iq domain is 
reactivated,'' said John Simmons, an American who co-founded the 
Dialogue Channel, which promotes communication between Iraqis and 
international organizations.

Simmons says he's gotten more than 130 people to sign a petition 
imploring the Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers to 
free up ``.iq.''

Part of ICANN's job is to select responsible parties to operate such 
``top-level domains,'' which includes registering Web addresses and 
ensuring that traffic is properly routed within them.

In 1997, when Saddam Hussein's dictatorship was blocking the Internet, 
an ICANN body granted responsibility for the ``.iq'' domain to InfoCom 
Corp., a Texas-based company that sold computers and Web services in 
the Middle East. The domain's ``technical contact'' was listed as Bayan 
Elashi, InfoCom's chief executive.

In 2002, a grand jury indicted InfoCom, Elashi and four of his brothers 
on charges that they exported computer equipment to Libya and Syria and 
funneled money to a member of the Islamic extremist group Hamas. Trial 
for the Elashi brothers began this month in Dallas.

The case put the ``.iq'' domain on ice.

A Google search for sites in the domain yields only 20 links, all 
unavailable. In comparison, there are at least 290,000 in Iran's 
domain, ``.ir,'' and more than 34 million in Britain's ``.uk.''

The U.S. administrator in Iraq, L. Paul Bremer, and the head of Iraq's 
new National Communications and Media Commission, Siyamend Ziad Othman, 
have both urged ICANN to free up ``.iq'' as soon as possible, partly so 
government ministries can standardize their Web addresses.

More than one group has applied to take over as ``.iq'' registry 
operator, said ICANN's general counsel, John Jeffrey, refusing to 
specify the number.

For a while after the war ended, ICANN told applicants there were too 
many uncertainties about the stability of Iraq to assign the domain to 
someone else.

Recently, however, ICANN began evaluating the technical qualifications 
of applicants and whether they truly have the support of the Iraqi 
``Internet community.'' Jeffrey wouldn't say how long the process might 
take.

One hopeful applicant is Asaad Alnajjar, a technology businessman in 
Los Angeles who left Iraq in 1982. Alnajjar said he would run ``.iq'' 
on a nonprofit basis, subsidizing Web hosting for Iraqis and helping 
them with Web site design.

He said he could have the domain up and running in three days if ICANN 
would only give the nod. Alnajjar said he understands the demands on 
ICANN but wishes it could move faster to free the sidelined domain.

``We need it like yesterday,'' he said.

Alnajjar said that at an ICANN meeting in Tunisia last year, he was 
turned down when he asked that at the very least, www.iraq.iq be 
opened, just one page, to show the country's flag and the words 
``Republic of Iraq.''

His goal, he said with a slight laugh, was ``to show that there is a 
country.''
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