Sunnis, Shiites threaten to boycott Iraq's new legislature
http://www.theglobeandmail.com/servlet/story/RTGAM.20051222.wiraq22/BNStory/International/
Thursday, December 22, 2005 Posted at 10:47
AM ESTAssociated
PressBaghdad — Dozens of Sunni
Arab and secular Shiite groups threatened to boycott Iraq's new legislature
Thursday if complaints about tainted voting are not reviewed by an international
body.A representative for former Prime
Minister Ayad Allawi described the Dec. 15 vote as "fraudulent" and the elected
lawmakers "illegitimate."A joint
statement issued by 35 political groups that competed in last week's elections
said the Independent Electoral Commission of Iraq, which oversaw the ballot,
should be disbanded.It also said the
more than 1,250 complaints about fraud, ballot box stuffing and intimidation
should be reviewed by international organizations such as the United Nations,
the European Union, the Organization of the Islamic Conference or the Arab
League.
There was no one available for comment at the
U.N. office in Baghdad.
The electoral
commission, or IECI, that monitored the elections reported receiving more than
1,500 complaints of violations — of which 25 were described as serious.
However, it does not expect the complaints to change the overall result, to be
announced in January.
The groups
signing the joint statement included the main Sunni Arab coalition — Adnan
al-Dulaimi's Iraqi Accordance Front — and a secular Shiite bloc headed by
Mr. Allawi.
A senior member of the
Shiite religious United Iraqi Alliance, the group that preliminary results show
leading in the polls, said the protesters should accept the
results.
"These statements will lead
the country to new chaos," Ali al-Adib said. "Who can guarantee that when the
elections are rerun they will not reject them
again?"
Mr. Al-Adib, also a member of
the Supreme Council of the Islamic Revolution in Iraq, said the alliance now
helping govern Iraq also had
complaints.
"We also have complaints
and we also have evidence, and we are waiting for the decision of the electoral
commission," he said. "They have to accept the will of the Iraqi people, the
will of the majority. The political process will continue even if they boycott
it."
He said those groups rejecting the
election results "are the same who called for the boycotting of the last
elections and said 'no' to the
constitution."
Sunni Arab groups had
called on the minority to boycott the Jan. 30 elections and to reject the
constitution approved in an Oct. 15 referendum. The Sunni-dominated insurgency
had threatened to kill anyone participating in the Jan. 30 elections but pledged
not to carry out any attacks last
week.
Sunni Arabs fear being
marginalized. Most estimates say they make up about 20 per cent of the
population, although many in the minority claim they comprise 40 per cent of
Iraq's estimated 27 million people. Shiites make up an estimated 60 per cent of
the population and Kurds 20 per
cent.
Mr. Allawi did not attend
Thursday's meeting, held in his political headquarters in the heavily fortified
Green Zone.
"We hold the IECI
responsible for all the violations which took place during the elections and
demand that it be dissolved and a suitable alternative to be found," said the
statement read by Ali al-Timimi, the head of the Hilla al-Fayha List, a secular
Shiite ticket Babil province south of the
capital.
"If this is not achieved, then
we will have no choice but to refuse the results and boycott the new
parliament."
More than 100 politicians
and representative of various groups participated in the meeting, held in a
smoke-filled room.
Mr. Allawi
representative Ibrahim al-Janabi took the accusations one step further and
described last week's elections in all 18 provinces as
"fraudulent."
"These elections are
fraudulent, they are fraudulent, and the next parliament is illegitimate. We
reject all this process," Mr. al-Janabi told a news
conference.
Results released Tuesday
showed the governing Shiite grouping, the United Iraqi Alliance, winning strong
majorities not only in Baghdad but in the largely Shiite southern provinces.
Sunni Arabs turned out in large numbers, unlike January's
election.
The electoral commission put
total turnout at nearly 70 percent of the country's 15.5 million voters. The
Jan. 30 elections saw a turnout of 58 per cent, while 63 per cent participated
in the October referendum.
Politicians
say that based on preliminary results, the alliance seems on course to win
between 120 and 130 seats — compared with 140
now.
Sunni Arabs may increase their
seats from 17 to more than 40, while the Kurds are expected to hold between 40
and 50. Allawi, who controls 40 seats, is expected to drop to 20 seats or
fewer.
Despite the lead, the Shiite
religious bloc likely will fall short of the 184 seats necessary to choose a new
president, the first step needed to form a government, and will have to find a
coalition partner in the 275-member parliament.
Posted: Fri - December
23, 2005 at 02:43 PM