[Excerpt: These threats are serious: On Dec. 19, insurgents dragged 
three elections workers out of the their car on a busy Baghdad 
thoroughfare and shot them execution-style in the street.....The danger 
to election workers has made it difficult to find enough people to work 
the polls. According to the memo, the election commission is planning to 
ask Iraq's Ministry of Education for permission to use schools as 
polling centers, and teachers and administrators to staff them.....While 
that may solve the immediate staffing problem, it could make schools 
vulnerable to attack in a country where many parents are already afraid 
to send their children to school.]

http://209.64.62.42/2004/1228/p01s02-woiq.html

A UN memo details added concerns about registration and security before 
election Jan. 30.

12/28/2004
By Annia Ciezadlo | Correspondent of The Christian Science Monitor
ARBIL, IRAQ – Planning an election is difficult even under the best of 
circumstances. As one United Nations consultant remarked, it's "the 
largest logistical operation that a country undertakes outside warfare." 
To pull it off, many postconflict nations need at least a year.

Iraq is aiming for eight months.
        
But with election day less than five weeks away, the Iraqi effort to 
choose 18 provincial councils and a 275-member National Assembly that 
will appoint a central government and draft Iraq's constitution is 
facing serious logistical problems. The short time frame, coupled with 
the insurgency, is forcing Iraq's election commission to sacrifice both 
voter education and the safeguards necessary for a fair election. The 
logistical hurdles also raise questions about the legitimacy of the Jan. 
30 vote.

A new memo from the chief UN election official in Iraq, obtained by the 
Monitor, spells out an array of serious challenges:

• The number of new voter registrations is below expectations.

• Even though polling centers are likely to be attacked, Iraq's election 
commission is asking to use schools as voting sites, and trying to draft 
teachers and school administrators to work the polls on election day.

• A security assessment found that the warehouses for storing ballots in 
some provinces are not "fully defendable" in case of attack.

• The $55 million program for out-of-country voting by Iraqi expatriates 
has faced "significant delays." Fourteen countries are scrambling to 
allow eligible Iraqi exiles to vote in the Jan. 30 election.

One of the few bright spots is the number of people who are running for 
office. Preliminary figures showed close to 19,000 candidates, 6,239 of 
whom were competing for National Assembly seats.

But in Anbar province, where the violence-torn cities of Fallujah and 
Ramadi are located, there are only 43 candidates competing for a 41-seat 
provincial council.

"While there is no technical reason ... to cancel the election (as there 
are more candidates than seats)," said the memo, "the board is carefully 
studying the situation to determine whether that election should go 
ahead as planned."

On Monday, the Iraqi Islamic Party, the country's largest Sunni Muslim 
political group, announced it was pulling out of the election, citing 
the same types of concerns outlined in the memo: difficult security and 
lack of public education about the vote.

Iraq's election commission has been hampered from the beginning by a 
violent insurgency. In July, one of the seven commission members 
resigned due to safety concerns. (The commission has seven Iraqi members 
and two nonvoting UN advisers.)

By September, the commissioners were still "begging" international 
agencies for funds to protect themselves and their families, according 
to an international consultant who asked not to be named.

"When the election commissioners are asking the UN to find a donor for 
your election commission's security, that's a big problem," said the 
consultant. "How does that allow you to focus on your work, if you have 
to worry about your family members being threatened?"

Poll workers targeted

Insurgents are targeting poll workers, too. Sundus al-Shemmeri, a young 
Iraqi journalist who quit her job to help prepare for the elections, was 
approached by an acquaintance with ties to the insurgency. "He said, 'Be 
warned: If you work with this organization, they will do to you what 
they did to Margaret Hassan [a charity worker who was killed by 
insurgents],'" said Ms. Shemmeri, laughing nervously.

These threats are serious: On Dec. 19, insurgents dragged three 
elections workers out of the their car on a busy Baghdad thoroughfare 
and shot them execution-style in the street.

The danger to election workers has made it difficult to find enough 
people to work the polls. According to the memo, the election commission 
is planning to ask Iraq's Ministry of Education for permission to use 
schools as polling centers, and teachers and administrators to staff them.

While that may solve the immediate staffing problem, it could make 
schools vulnerable to attack in a country where many parents are already 
afraid to send their children to school.

The number of polling centers will be lower than expected. The memo puts 
the number of polling centers at "no more than 6,000, with no more than 
29,000 polling stations" - a significant reduction from earlier 
estimates of 9,000 polling centers and 40,000 or so polling stations.

Voter registration problems

That's partly because voter registration is below expectations. 
According to the memo, about 200,000 people made corrections and about 
650,000 made new registrations. Divided into the total number of 
eligible voters - about 15 million - they come out to about 5.6 percent.

The numbers are approximate, and data from Anbar province is still 
missing. But the low numbers may mean that some people won't be able to 
vote if their food ration cards are inaccurate or outdated.

Because Iraq has no official census, voters were registered through 
ration cards from the UN oil-for-food program, which began in 1996. If 
the existing ration card information was correct, they didn't have to 
register or make a correction.

The low number could mean that ration cards were mostly correct. But it 
could also mean that Iraqis are counting on being able to use invalid 
ration cards.

"A big fear is that people in the Sunni triangle just won't register, 
and will count on current registration because they weren't able to 
confirm their registration during the confirmation period," said the 
consultant.

The electoral commission is debating whether to extend voter 
registration in Kirkuk, where leading Kurdish political parties have 
called for a boycott of the provincial election.

Despite the low numbers, the election commission decided not to extend 
registration countrywide, mainly for logistical reasons, noting that an 
extension would create a "tremendous new operational burden on the 
election administration - and just as the administration is attempting 
to prepare for polling day."

But the biggest problem for the elections, consultants say, is still the 
truncated time for voter and candidate education.

"All of them need education - civic education," said another 
international consultant working to prepare Iraqis for the poll. "They 
still don't know the rules."




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