Iraq’s Parliament quells ethnic dispute, sets elections for Jan. 23
By WARREN P. STROBEL and SAHAR ISSA
McClatchy Newspapers
ESSAM AL-SUDANI
While lawmakers on Sunday were approving new elections, Iraqi soldiers patrolled outside a Shiite Muslim mosque in Abu al-Khasib near Iraq’s border with Iran. The army was looking for weapons and other contraband such as drugs.
BAGHDAD | After nearly a dozen delays, Iraq’s Parliament on Sunday passed a law setting national elections for January, averting a political crisis that threatened the country’s progress toward stability.
Approval of the law after a final rowdy session eases a growing source of concern for the Obama administration. President Barack Obama is considering sending 34,000 more U.S. troops to Afghanistan, and successful elections in Iraq are key to a major reduction in U.S. combat forces in the country by next summer.
The elections, now scheduled for Jan. 23, had been held up by a volatile dispute over the Kirkuk region, where both Arabs and Kurds claim a majority.
Lawmakers resolved the disagreement, for now, by agreeing to use voter rolls from 2009 rather than a list that was compiled in 2004, before many Kurds had moved into the region.
The lawmakers also resolved another key issue: how to list candidates on the ballot. Under the new law, candidates will be listed by name — a so-called open list — and not by party affiliation, a “closed list” in which voters do not know who the individual candidates are. The decision to use an open list will make it more difficult for religious-based parties to win support.
“Today we have been able to achieve one of the most sought-after points regarding the elections, and that is the open list. And it is a grand day for Kirkuk. It will not be deprived of its right in national elections,” said Khalid Shwani, a Kurdish lawmaker and a prominent figure in negotiations over the law.
“Of course there were many compromises. No one can reach an accord without making some concessions,” said Fawzi Akram, a member of Parliament from Iraq’s Turkomen minority.
Iraqi and U.S. officials expressed relief Sunday.
“This is good news. This is an achievement for all Iraqis, and for the political process,” said Sadiq al-Rikabi, an adviser to Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki.
U.S. ambassador Chris Hill and Army Gen. Raymond Odierno, the commander of American forces in Iraq, issued a statement congratulating the Iraqis.
Hill, in a conference call with reporters, said that for now the withdrawal of U.S. combat forces from Iraq could proceed as planned next year.
“Had these deliberations gone on, some new decisions would have had to be made” about U.S. troop withdrawals, he said. “We knew that a crucial element of the schedule was that we were able to be here in strength through the election.”
In a statement Sunday in the White House Rose Garden, Obama acknowledged the continuing sectarian and insurgent violence in Iraq and said approval of the law was more evidence that Iraqis had chosen democracy over the chaos that threatened the country with civil war in 2006 and 2007.
“Iraq has known many challenges, and in the past several weeks we’ve seen that there are still those who would kill innocent men, women and children to deny the Iraqi people the future they deserve,” Obama said. “Today’s step forward is another reminder that these enemies of the Iraqi people will fail.”
Under Obama’s plan, all U.S. combat troops would be out of the country by the end of August, leaving about 50,000 trainers and support troops, who in turn would leave by the end of 2011.
The Kirkuk issue, which generates deep emotions among Iraq’s Arabs, Kurds and Turkomen, had repeatedly stymied efforts to pass the law.
Many Kurds were expelled from the area under Saddam Hussein but have returned since the March 2003 U.S. invasion — in numbers other Iraqis say exceed their previous population. The decision to use voter registration lists from 2009 was a victory for the Kurds.
The dispute, however, was only postponed, not resolved.
The law set up a fact-finding committee to examine voter lists in Kirkuk and other disputed areas and compare them with 2004 versions. The panel is to complete its work in a year, long after the national elections, potentially setting up another standoff.
The days leading up to the final legislative vote showed how Iraqi officials, after years of sectarian violence, still struggle between defending their ethnic or religious group and representing the interests of the country as a whole.
Sunday’s final session was raucous, with lawmakers shouting and a few storming out of the session. One of the most contentious issues was whether internally displaced Iraqis, who number as many as 2.5 million, could cast votes in their former home regions. In the end, it was decided they could not.
The Associated Press contributed to this report.
@Nyx.CommentBody@