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UN considers elections in Irak
- Subject: UN considers elections in Irak
- From: Other News - Roberto Savio / IPS <soros at topica.email-publisher.com>
- Date: Fri, 13 Feb 2004 17:55:46 +0100
U.N. Aide Backs Cleric on Elections; Offers No Timetable By Edward Wong The New York Times BAGHDAD, Iraq, Feb — An envoy for the United Nations said he supported a powerful Shiite cleric's call for elections to install a new sovereign government after having met with the cleric this morning. But the envoy, Lakhdar Brahimi, did not say whether he thought direct elections could be held by June 30, when the Bush administration wants to put a transitional national assembly in place to appoint the new government. Later, at the United Nations, Secretary General Kofi Annan said there was "wide agreement" that elections must be carefully prepared and organized, seeming to dispel the notion that any direct elections would be rushed. Mr. Annan's statement was issued in an effort to clear up any earlier confusion about Mr. Brahimi's statements. Mr. Brahimi is leading a team from the United Nations that arrived this week to assess the possibility of holding quick direct elections. The cleric, Grand Ayatollah Ali al-Sistani, insists on holding elections to appoint members of the national assembly and opposes the Bush administration's plan to have a caucus-style selection process. Frustrated by the cleric's demands, the White House asked Mr. Brahimi and the United Nations last month to intervene, since Ayatollah Sistani said he would seriously weigh the opinion of the United Nations. After meeting with the cleric in the holy Shiite city of Najaf, 90 miles south of Baghdad, Mr. Brahimi told a group of reporters that Ayatollah Sistani "insists on holding the elections and we are with him on this 100 percent because elections are the best means to enable any people to set up a state that serves their interest." Mr. Brahimi added that "we also agree with his excellency that the elections must be well-prepared and well-arranged and must be done under the best possible circumstances to get the results that Ayatollah Sistani wants and the people of Iraq and the U.N. want." Mr. Brahimi's statements make it increasingly apparent that the White House will have great difficulty carrying out its original caucus-style plan and persuading the Iraqi people of the plan's legitimacy. American officials have indicated they are willing to make adjustments to the plan, but want to stick to a deadline of June 30 to hand over sovereignty of the country. Direct elections are not possible before then because proper voter rolls and electoral laws cannot be set up in time, they say. Ayatollah Sistani has said he is willing to postpone direct elections if the United Nations team tells him the process is impossible right now. It is unclear what mechanism the United Nations might suggest for appointing the national assembly. When asked by a reporter whether the United Nations was being pressured by the White House to reach certain conclusions, Mr. Brahimi said, "Our organization is a neutral organization and has no specific agenda but to help the Iraqi people." Mr. Brahimi made his remarks after meeting with Ayatollah Sistani for two hours in the cleric's austere home. The ayatollah lives in a narrow alleyway a few blocks from the Shrine of Ali, one of the holiest pilgrimage sites for Shiites. Witnesses said they saw Mr. Brahimi entering the alleyway around 10 a.m. Various politicians have met with the United Nations team in recent days to lobby for their points of view. Shiite Arab leaders generally support quick direct elections out of respect for Ayatollah Sistani's opinion, and because they understand that such elections will help put Shiite Arabs in power because that group makes up at least 60 percent of the population. Kurds and Sunni Arabs are generally opposed to direct elections for fear that a national assembly and a new government heavily dominated by Shiite Arabs will not honor minority rights. Sunnis ruled the country for centuries under the Ottoman and British empires and the dictatorship of Saddam Hussein. One of the most vocal champions of elections has been the Supreme Council for the Islamic Revolution in Iraq, a powerful Shiite party whose officials often visit Ayatollah Sistani. "It was a very successful meeting," Haitham al-Husseini, an aide to Abdul Aziz al-Hakim, head of the party and an Iraqi Governing Council member, said of the meeting between Mr. Brahimi and Ayatollah Sistani. He said he had no further details of what took place. Dan Senor, a spokesman for the Coalition Provisional Authority, said American administrators were still awaiting a report from the United Nations. He added that administrators have begun replacing some members of local councils in order to make the councils "more representative." The councils would be involved in choosing delegates during the caucus-style process. Though the Bush administration has yet to acknowledge that security also poses a problem for elections, many experts — including American generals here — say the country is too unstable to stage a fully democratic process. This afternoon, in the volatile town of Falluja, insurgents fired rocket-propelled grenades at a convoy carrying Gen. John Abizaid, commander of American forces in the Middle East, and Maj. Gen. Charles Swannack, commander of the 82nd Airborne Division. No one was hurt. The American military said two soldiers from the First Armored Division were killed in a roadside bomb attack in Baghdad during a patrol on Wednesday night. A mortar round exploded this morning near a Japanese base in the southern town of Samawa, but no one was hurt. Japanese troops arrived in Iraq on Sunday in the first deployment of such a force in a combat zone since World War II. Those attacks come after two suicide car bombs exploded in Baghdad and the nearby town of Iskandariya on Wednesday and Tuesday mornings, killing a total of at least 102 Iraqis. Most of the victims were men applying for jobs with the new Iraqi Army and police forces. Earlier this week, occupation officials issued details of an intercepted letter supposedly written by a suspected Jordanian terrorist, Abu Musab al-Zarqawi. In the letter, Mr. Zarqawi claimed to have directed about 25 suicide bombings in Iraq and asked for the help of Al Qaeda in igniting a sectarian war here. The American military said today that it was offering a reward of $10 million for information leading to the arrest of Mr. Zarqawi. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- "Other News" is a personal initiative seeking to provide information that should be in the media but is not, because of commercial criteria. It welcomes contributions from everybody. Work areas include information on global issues, north-sutrh relations, gobernability of globalization. The "Other News" motto is a phrase which appeared on the wall of Barcelona’s old Customs Office, at the beginning of 2003:”What walls utter, media keeps silent”. Roberto Savio ==================================================================== Update your profile here: http://soros.u.tep1.com/survey/?b1dnYs.b7sSRx.bXJ0YUBi Unsubscribe here: http://soros.u.tep1.com/survey/?b1dnYs.b7sSRx.bXJ0YUBi.u Delivered by Topica Email Publisher, http://www.email-publisher.com/
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