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Robert Fisk on Iraq Elections: Iraqis Voting for "Freedom From Foreign
Occupation"

(excerpted from Democracy Now! 1/31/05)

I have to say, as a person who is regularly cynical about the Middle East,
and I think with good reason, it was a very moving experience to see so
many hundreds and thousands of Shia Muslims in Baghdad walking against the
sound of bombs and mortar fire. I counted 30 incoming mortar rounds quite
close to us as I walked to one polling station within two minutes. All
these families sometimes are bringing along their children, carrying their
babies in their arms going to vote. The Shiites decided to vote. They
abided by the instructions of the supreme Shiite leader, the marja, Ali
al-Sistani who said it was more important to vote than fasting at Ramadan
or prayer. And when you went into the polling stations, you could talk to
them and the American appointed administration insisted that television
cameras could only film in five polling stations. Four of them naturally
were Shiite, which were nearly crowded with voters, one for upper-class
Sunni which would have some voters and none for lower class Sunni areas
where, of course, there wouldn't be any. But we could move around as
newspaper journalists quite freely from polling station to polling station
and we had to walk because the roads were closed with no traffic except
for American military patrols and Iraqi police.

And, you know, to see these people coming as one, as families with all
their identification papers and dutifully having the ink put on their
fingers to prevent fraud at the polls and then going to vote almost all of
them in my area here for the Iraqi alliance, the Shiite Iraqi alliance, it
showed that, you know, here we were, you could feel the air pressure
changing with explosion of mortars and the first two suicide bombers blew
themselves up not far from us, killing at least nine of the almost 60
people who were to be killed in the past 24 hours and there they were,
they went through security checks and voted. And that, I suppose, is what
we want people to do. The catch, of course, is that the Shiites were not
voting for democracy, although they'd very much like to have it and
believe in it. Many of them expressed their views forthrightly inside the
polling station. They were coming to vote because al-Sistani told them to.
“We're coming to vote because we weren't allowed to do so before. We're
coming to vote because we want the Americans to leave.”

Now it is all very well for the American media that they came to vote for
democracy. They probably did. But they also came because they think and
believe and are convinced of the fact that by voting that they'll have a
free country without an occupation force. If they are denied this, if they
feel they are betrayed that their vote is worth nothing, of course a
different question arises. What will they think of democracy and will they
join the insurgency?

[...]

What this election has done is not actually a demonstration of people who
demand democracy, but they want freedom of a different kind, freedom to
vote, but also freedom from foreign occupation. And if they are betrayed
in this, then we are going to look back and regret the broken promises.

[snip]

------------

http://www.thestar.co.za/index.php?fArticleId=2392099

Triumph and tragedy for Iraq

Low level of Sunni participation tarnishes success of large poll turnout
January 31, 2005

By Robert Fisk

Baghdad - Even as the explosions thundered over Baghdad, they came in
their hundreds, and then in their thousands. Entire families, crippled old
men supported by their sons, children beside them, babies in the arms of
their mothers.

The Shi'ite Muslims of Baghdad yesterday walked quietly to polling
stations, to the Martyr Mohamed Bakr Hakim School in Jadriya, without
talking, through the car-less streets, the air pressure changing around
them as mortars rained down on the US and British embassy compounds and
the first of the day's suicide bombers immolated himself and his victims,
most of them Shi'ites, 3km away.

The Kurds voted, in their tens of thousands, but the Sunnis - 20% of
Iraq's population, whose insurgency was the principal reason for this
election - boycotted or were intimidated from the polling stations.

The turnout figure, estimated at perhaps 72% of Iraq's 15-million
registered voters, represented both victory and tragedy. For while the
Shi'ites voted in their millions with immense courage, the Sunni voice
remained silent, casting into semi-illegitimacy the National Assembly
whose existence is supposed to provide the US with a political excuse to
extricate itself from its little Vietnam in the Middle East.

And yes, there was the violence we all expected. There were nine suicide
bombers in Baghdad - the largest number ever to have killed themselves on
a single day anywhere in the Middle East.

An American mercenary and a US soldier were among the first to die when
mortars exploded across the American-appointed administration buildings in
central Baghdad. Then more than 20 voters were cut down. Before dusk came
news that a Royal Air Force C-130 Hercules transport aircraft had crashed
en route to the largely insurgent-held city of Balad. In all, almost 50
people were killed across Iraq.

But it was the sight of those thousands of Shi'ites, the women mostly in
black hejab covering, the men in leather jackets or long robes, the
children toddling beside them, that took the breath away. If Osama bin
Laden had called these elections an apostasy, these people, who represent
60% of Iraq, did not heed his threats.

They came to claim their rightful power in the land - that is why
Ayatollah Ali al-Sistani, the grand marja of the Shi'ites of Iraq, told
them to vote - and woe betide the Americans and British if they do not get
it. For if this election produces a parliamentary coalition which splits
the Shi'ites and turns their largest party into the opposition, then the
Sunni insurgency will become a national uprising.

"I came here," said a young man in the Jadriya polling station, "because
our grand marja told us that voting today was more important than prayer
and fasting."

An older man beamed with delight. "My name is Abdul-Rudha Abu Mohamed and
I am so happy today," he said. "They must elect a president from us and we
must be one with all Iraqis - and we must have justice."

Even the local election agent was close to tears. Taleb Ibrahim admitted
that he had participated in Saddam Hussein's one-man elections but that
this day marked the moment when the Shi'ites of Iraq, after refusing to
take revenge on their Ba'athist oppressors, would show their magnanimity.

Even if the Sunnis were boycotting the poll, he said, "there is an old
saying that if the father becomes angry, we will have no problems with his
sons. We will make sure that these sons - the Sunnis - have equal rights
with us."

Across Baghdad, it was the same story; entire families moved as one
towards the polling stations while the air rang with explosions. Just
after voting started, there were 30 detonations in the city in less than
two minutes - but still they came as if on a family day out.

Bombs are now heartbeats in Iraq, and we could hear the thump of
explosions even above the low-flying American Apache choppers. Yet along
the empty roads, neighbours stopped to talk and show each other the
indelible ink on their index fingers that officials used to ensure there
were no double votes.

It was both the safest and the most dangerous of days.

At one polling station, I asked the first of the young Iraqi soldiers who
were to check us - all wore black woollen face masks so that they could
not be identified - if he was frightened.

"It doesn't matter," he said.

"I am ready to die for this day. We have got to vote."

Seven hours later I talked to him again and he, too, had the indelible ink
on his finger. "It's like you can change your future or your faith," he
said.

"We only had military coups and revolutions before. We voted 'yes' or
'yes'. Now we vote for ourselves."

It was easy to imbibe the false optimism of the Western television
networks and the nonsense about Iraq's "historic" day - for it will only
have been historic if it changes this country, and many fear that it will
not.

No one I met yesterday believes the insurgency will end - many thought it
would grow more ferocious - and the Shi'ites in the polling stations said
with one voice that they were also voting to rid Iraq of the Americans,
not to legitimise their presence.

This is a message that the Americans and British will ignore at their peril.

On Baghdad's streets yesterday, the Americans deployed thousands of
troops, most of them trying to show some respect for the people, watching
them rather than threatening them with their rifles, which is how they
usually behave in the dangerous capital.

A certain Captain Buchanan from Arkansas even ventured a political
thought. "It's a pity the Sunnis aren't voting - it's their loss."

But of course it is also Iraq's loss and the Shi'ites' loss too - and
possibly America's loss. For without that vital minority component, who
will believe in the new parliament or the constitution it is supposed to
produce or the next government it is supposed to create?

I asked a Sunni Muslim security guard what he thought would be the future
of his country.

He had not voted - in many Sunni cities only a third of the polling
stations opened - but he had thought a lot about this question.

"You cannot give us 'democracy' just like this. This is one of your
Western, foreign dreams," he said. "Before, we had Saddam and he was a
cruel man and he treated us cruelly. But what will happen after this
election is that you will give us lots of little Saddams."

_____________________________

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