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LONDON- U.S. influence in the process of drafting a constitution for
Iraq is excessive and "highly inappropriate", a United Nations official
says.
"It is a matter of public record that in the final weeks of the
process the newly arrived U.S. ambassador (Zalmay Khalizad) took an extremely
hands-on role," Justin Alexander, legal affairs officer for the office
of constitutional support with the United Nations Assistance Mission to Iraq
(UNAMI) told IPS. "Even going so far as to circulate at least one U.S ...
draft."
Alexander, who oversaw the recent proceedings in Baghdad added: "This
involvement was highly inappropriate for a country with 140,000 soldiers in
country."
Zaid al-Ali, a legal expert who also oversaw the drafting process in Baghdad,
made a similar case at a meeting at the International Association of Contemporary
Iraqi Studies in London.
"There are three ways in which the occupation intervened in the context
of Iraq's constitution-writing process," he said. "Firstly, the occupation
authorities selected and affected the makeup of the commission that was charged
with drafting Iraq's transitional law, and its permanent constitution. Second,
the occupation determined the limits and parameters within which the constitution
was to be drafted. Third, the occupation authorities intervened directly in
order to safeguard its interests in the context of the constitutional negotiations."
Al-Ali said it was significant that one article in the draft constitution on
foreign military bases was dropped from the final version. "One article
contained in a previous draft provided that setting up foreign military bases
in Iraq was to be forbidden, and that the only way in which this could be deviated
from would have been by a two-thirds majority vote in Parliament."
Al-Ali said "this article was dropped from the final draft of the constitution."
An alliance including the Sunni Association of Muslim Scholars and the large
movement of Shia cleric Muqtada al-Sadr said it rejected the draft and a "political
process which had been led by occupiers and their collaborators."
The group said in a media statement: "We consider this draft as a next
step of this process which does not represent the peoples' will." The alliance
also expressed "major suspicions about the honesty of the next referendum,
which will take place under occupation and with neither international nor Arabic
and Islamic supervision."
Dr. Marinos Diamantides, senior lecturer in law at the University of London,
said the entire drafting process could be illegal under international law.
"One could argue the entire process is against the law," Diamantides
told IPS. "According to the 1907 Convention (the convention for the pacific
settlement of disputes), the occupying power has a duty to maintain the legal
system of the country it occupies. This is the first time ever that an occupying
power has dismantled the internal law system of the country it occupies."
He also pointed out that ironically the Sunnis now have power to derail the
upcoming referendum vote by a two-thirds vote in three provinces. That power
was originally intended to give Kurds power to veto the constitution.
When Iraq's Kurdish and Shia dominated parliament recently approved the draft,
Sunnis immediately began campaigning for a 'no' vote in the upcoming October
referendum. If the draft were to pass the referendum, it would be followed two
months later by election for a government.
At least four provinces are predominantly Sunni, and Sunni clerics have urged
their followers to reject the draft if it does not meet Sunni demands.
Adding further complexity to the already muddled situation, former UN humanitarian
coordinator in Iraq during the sanctions Denis Halliday believes that even the
United Nations has no place in occupied Iraq..
"The UN doesn't have a position in Iraq today," Halliday told IPS.
"Once the invasion took place, the UN became collaborators with the enemy
(the United States)."
Halliday, who had resigned from his UN post in protest against "genocidal
sanctions" added: "This lesson should have been learned in August,
2003 when our office in Baghdad was blown up, as we were collaborators. The
UN has simply become a tool of the U.S., and Iraqis can no longer distinguish
between the U.S. And the UN."
Justin Alexander said Iraq might need a new constitution. "If Iraq creates
a progressive and effective constitution and laws to implement the constitution,
then this could benefit Iraqis." But "in the absence of mutual reconciliation
and an end to the occupation this is all futile.