IRAQ WAR - LOOKING GLASS NEWS | |
Still in the dark over where to vote - or for whom |
|
by Cory McCarthy The Guardian Entered into the database on Wednesday, January 26th, 2005 @ 16:44:01 MST |
|
With four days to go before the election in Iraq, the vote looks unlike most
other exercises in democracy. In an unusually secret ballot, Iraqis are going
to the polls unaware of the identities of many of the people they will be voting
for. Last week UN officials promised the names would be published in Iraqi newspapers
before the vote, but that has yet to happen. Some of the parties are using photographs on their posters of people who are
not running. One poster shows the face of Abdul Karim Qasim, who became prime
minister after a revolt against the monarchy in 1958 and was executed five years
later. Another shows the face of Shaba'ad, one of the Sumerian queens of the
ancient city of Ur. Many others show the face of Grand Ayatollah Ali al-Sistani,
Iraq's leading Shia cleric, who is not only not standing for election but who
also supposedly advocates the separation of religion and politics. Politicians are not alone in distributing propaganda leaflets. Yesterday insurgents
walked though a district of eastern Baghdad handing out their own election leaflets.
They carried a warning: "Those who dare to stand in the lines of death
to participate in the elections will be responsible for the consequences that
will be heavy." With mounting security concerns, the locations of many of the 5,000 polling
centres across Iraq have not been announced. When the buildings have been identified
- usually schools which are now empty for the holidays - they have promptly
been shelled or mortared by insurgents. Three schools in the otherwise quiet
city of Basra in the south were destroyed last week in a mortar attack. It is
still unclear how and when voters will be told where to vote. On election day motorists will be banned from the roads and a nationwide curfew
will be imposed between 8pm and 6am. Voters must walk to polling centres, where
they will find several security cordons ringing each station. They must then
pass through the many security checks before they can finally enter the booth,
unfold the vast ballot paper in front of them, choose one of the 111 parties
contesting the election and tick the correct box. Each party has been given a number and some have chosen their own symbols,
ranging from date palms, to a lion's head, to a winged horse, to a military
medal. But voters will still have to choose between parties with confusingly
similar names such as the Iraqi Democratic Gathering, the Democratic Iraq Gathering,
the Iraqi Gathering for Democracy, the Democratic Iraqi Current, and the Democratic
Party of the Iraqi Nation. A few have opted for simplicity, such as the prime minister Ayad Allawi's coalition,
which is called the Iraqi list, or President Ghazi al-Yawar's alliance, named
"Iraqis". Violence means there are few election rallies and hardly any parties have announced
their manifestos. The United Iraqi Alliance, the influential Shia coalition
that is likely to come out best in the vote, is one of the few to have put forward
its policies, which include insisting on a timetable for a US military withdrawal.
Mr Allawi announced his policy agenda on Monday, just six days before the vote,
and promised to create thousands of new jobs. Many other groups bear little resemblance to Western parties and simply propose
to work for a united, independent and democratic Iraq. "Nobody ever said it was going to be easy. That's been our mantra here,"
said Carlos Valenzuela, the Colombian diplomat heading the UN election team
and an election expert who has helped run polls in 14 other countries facing
severe security challenges, including East Timor, Cambodia and South Africa.
"Security in transitional elections is never good, never ideal." |