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Iraqi election dispute may be
easing
Baghdad -
Iraq's top Shiite Muslim cleric and coalition officials signaled
flexibility on holding early elections, with both sides suggesting
they'll follow any U.N. recommendation on whether a direct vote is
feasible, Iraqi and Western officials said Wednesday.
Grand Ayatollah Ali al-Husseini al-Sistani's
insistence that Iraqi voters choose a transitional legislature has
jeopardized a U.S. plan to transfer power to Iraqis and end the U.S.
occupation of Iraq by July 1.
A Shiite official who spoke to al-Sistani
said Wednesday that if a proposed team of U.N. experts tells the
cleric it isn't possible to organize direct elections by July 1, he
would accept the verdict.
The British government, the strongest
U.S. coalition partner, meanwhile will consider al-Sistani's call for
direct elections if a U.N. team determines they're practical,
officials told The Associated Press.
British Foreign Secretary Jack Straw,
attending an international forum in Davos, Switzerland, defended the
coalition process, but expressed hope that Annan will send a team to
assess election prospects.
"A large part of this comes down to
... technical issues," Straw said, noting security problems in parts
of Iraq and the lack of voter registration. "This needs to be
discussed through."
The comments put more pressure on
U.N. Secretary-General Kofi Annan to sign off on a request by the Bush
administration and the U.S.-appointed Iraqi Governing Council to send
a U.N. election assessment team to Iraq.
U.N. officials were in contact with
coalition and Iraqi leaders over the possibility of sending the
election team, but no decision had been made, U.N. spokesman Stephane
Dujarric said Wednesday.
Annan
is primarily concerned with the safety of any U.N. staff who would
head to Iraq. The secretary-general ordered all international staff to
leave Iraq in October following two bombings at U.N. headquarters —
including one on Aug. 19 that killed 22 people.
It's possible he won't decide on
sending any election team until a separate U.N. mission of security
experts — heading to Iraq in the coming days — returns and gives its
assessment about whether it's safe to return U.N. staff to the
country.
The current American plan, set out in
November, involves choosing lawmakers in 18 regional caucuses to be
held across Iraq in May. The assembly would then appoint a provisional
government that would govern until elections in 2005.
Coalition officials maintain there is
not enough time to hold legislative elections before the power
transfer because of the unstable security situation and the absence of
voter rolls and an election law.
U.S. administrator L. Paul Bremer has
offered to broaden participation in the caucus system to accommodate
al-Sistani's demands but insists that the July 1 deadline for
transferring sovereignty is final.
During a press conference in Baghdad,
Ibrahim al-Jaafari, a Shiite member of the Iraqi Governing Council,
said he believed al-Sistani would accept any U.N. verdict even it an
election team sides with the coalition.
"Based on my conversation with him,
if the U.N. team comes and holds a dialogue with the Iraqi side (on)
census and electoral matters ... one of the parties may be convinced
of what the other party says," al-Jaafari told reporters. "Whatever
the outcome, if they reach an agreement, I think al-Sistani will
accept it."
Officials traveling with Straw denied
a report in the Guardian that the British government has been swayed
by arguments from al-Sistani, and that the U.S. government also is
shifting ground. But they said the British government is open to ideas
as long as they are practical.
"We think the views of Ayatollah
Sistani are an important factor," one official told AP, speaking on
condition of anonymity. "We are obviously committed to a democratic
Iraq, but whatever method is chosen must work in practice."
Tens of thousands of Shiites have
marched in Baghdad and other cities this week in support of al-Sistani's
demand.
If al-Sistani sticks by his election
call, coalition officials, speaking on condition of anonymity, told AP
that several options were under consideration, including transferring
sovereignty to the U.S.-appointed Iraqi Governing Council.
However, coalition spokesman Charles
Heatly on Wednesday denied that "other options such as handing over
authority to the Governing Council on the first of July are under
serious consideration."
"We're looking forward to the
possible deployment of a U.N. technical team and to hearing its
assessment," Heatly told the AP. "Meanwhile, we're moving ahead with
implementing the Nov. 15 agreement."
Iraqi Shiites, who form an estimated
60 percent of Iraq's 25 million people, have generally refrained from
attacks on coalition forces. Most of the insurgents are believed to be
Arab Sunnis, including members of Saddam Hussein's Baath party.
In his State of the Union address
Tuesday, President Bush said U.S. forces here "are dealing with these
thugs in Iraq, just as surely as we dealt with Saddam Hussein's evil
regime."
"As democracy takes hold in Iraq, the
enemies of freedom will do all in their power to spread violence and
fear ... but the United States of America will never be intimidated by
thugs and assassins. The killers will fail, and the Iraqi people will
live in freedom."
In another Iraq development, 10
people, including three American soldiers, were injured when a
roadside bomb exploded near a U.S. convoy west of Mosul, officials and
witnesses said. None of the injuries were believed serious. --
Associated Press
Brudirect.com
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