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International Team To Review Iraq
Results
Baghdad -
An international team agreed Thursday to review Iraq's
parliamentary elections, a decision lauded by Sunni Arab and secular
Shiite groups who have staged repeated protests around Iraq
complaining of widespread fraud and intimidation.
Meanwhile, The New York Times
reported Friday that American commanders are planning to boost the
number of soldiers advising Iraqi police commando units. The report,
which cited an unidentified senior commander in Iraq, said the aim was
to curtail abuse that Iraqi units are suspected of inflicting on Sunni
Arabs.
Under the plan the number of advisers
working with the Iraqi units would be greatly expanded. The advisers
themselves would be under the command of American officers.
Gunmen killed 12 members of an
extended Shiite family near Latifiyah, a Sunni Arab-dominated town
about 20 miles south of Baghdad. Police said the men were taken from
their homes, packed into a minivan and shot.
The decision by the International
Mission for Iraqi Elections to send a team of assessors should help
placate opposition complaints of ballot box rigging and mollify those
groups who felt their views were not being heard, especially among
hardline Sunni Arab parties.
"It is important that the Iraqi
people have confidence in the election results and that the voting
process, including the process for vote counting, is free and fair,'
U.S. Ambassador Zalmay Khalilzad said.
He added that "these experts will be
arriving immediately and we are ready to assist them, if needed."
The team was coming despite a U.N.
observer's endorsement of the Dec. 15 vote, which gave the Shiite
religious bloc a big lead in preliminary returns. The observer, Craig
Jenness, said Wednesday that his team — which helped the Iraqi
election commission organize and oversee the poll — found the
elections to be credible and transparent.
Sunni Arabs and secular Shiites
rejected Jenness' findings, saying their concerns — which included
political assassinations before the elections — were not addressed.
There have been about 1,500
complaints lodged against the elections, including about 50 serious
enough to alter the results in some districts. The overall result,
however, was not expected to change.
On Thursday, the United Nations said
it had encouraged Iraq's electoral commission to get more outside
observers involved in the process, and Secretary-General Kofi Annan
welcomed the participation of the International Mission for Iraqi
Elections, his spokesman Stephane Dujarric said.
"It is critical that those Iraqi
groups who have complained about the conduct of the election are given
a hearing," Dujarric said in a statement. "This team of assessors,
which was not involved in the conduct of the elections, offers an
independent evaluation of these complaints."
The Iraqi Accordance Front, which is
the country's leading Sunni Arab group, applauded the decision, as did
the secular Iraqi National List headed by former Shiite Prime Minister
Ayad Allawi.
"We are optimistic with this
international response and hope that it will find a solution for this
crisis," Accordance spokesman Thafir al-Ani told The Associated Press.
It was unclear if the review would
further delay final results, now expected in early January.
A serious crisis involving the
elections could set back hopes for a broad-based government that would
include minority Sunni Arabs as well as secular Shiites. Such a
government could have the legitimacy necessary to diminish the
insurgency — a key part of any U.S. military exit strategy from Iraq.
The presence of two Arab experts on
the International Mission for Iraqi Elections team could go far in
helping to convince Iraqis that the review of the vote will be fair.
The team will also consist of a Canadian and a European.
The independent group said it helped
monitor the elections in Baghdad and was "assisted by monitors from
countries of the European Union working under IMIE's umbrella."
The team will travel to Iraq at the
invitation of the Iraqi election commission — a pointed noted by
Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice.
"The Electoral Commission has once
again demonstrated its commitment to fair and credible elections that
meet international standards," Rice said in a statement welcoming the
invitation to the independent team.
An official for the commission,
Safwat Rashid, said a review could "evaluate what happened during the
elections and what's going on now. We are highly confident that we did
our job properly and we have nothing to hide."
Preliminary results from the vote
have given the governing Shiite religious bloc, the United Iraqi
Alliance, a big lead — but one which still would require forming a
coalition with other groups.
In northern Iraq, President Jalal
Talabani, a Kurd, was holding talks with Abdul Aziz al-Hakim, the
cleric who heads the United Iraqi Alliance, and other members of that
religious group about forming a coalition government.
There were no Sunni Arabs or secular
Shiites at the meeting. They said they were waiting for the results of
the investigation into their complaints.
"Whenever the results of the
investigation come to the surface, then the time will be suitable to
talk about forming the new government," Allawi told Al-Arabiya
television.
In other developments:
• In Baghdad, a suicide bomber killed
a police officer, gunmen assassinated an Iraqi driver working with a
French company, and a drive-by shooting killed a university student.
• Al-Qaida in Iraq threatened to kill
five kidnapped employees of the Sudanese Embassy in Baghdad in two
days unless Sudan removes its diplomatic mission from Iraq. The claim
could not be immediately confirmed.
• Gunmen kidnapped a Lebanese
engineer in Iraq, the Lebanese Foreign Ministry said. The ministry's
statement gave no other details on the disappearance of Camile Nassif
Tannous, who works for the Schneider engineering firm.
• Iraq's largest oil refinery has
suspended operations since Dec. 24 after insurgents threatened to kill
drivers and blow up trucks that distribute its oil products across
Iraq, said Assem Jihad, a spokesman for the oil ministry. --
Associated Press
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