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http://snipurl.com/cfxp

Voting in Baghdad was linked with receipt of food rations, several voters
said after the Sunday poll.

"Two of the food dealers I know told me personally that our food rations
would be withheld if we did not vote," said Saeed Jodhet, a 21-year-old
engineering student who voted in the Hay al-Jihad district of Baghdad...


http://snipurl.com/cfxo
The Iraqi Ballot, Translated

-----------

http://snipurl.com/cfxk

Fig-leaf freedom
One election does not a democracy make, writes Brian Whitaker

Monday January 31, 2005
The Guardian [UK]

President George Bush has pronounced the election in Iraq a success. "The
world is hearing the voice of freedom from the centre of the Middle East,"
he said yesterday.

Since this is more or less what he was bound to say anyway, the only
surprise is that he waited until four hours after the polls had closed
before saying it.

It's a curious sort of freedom where candidates cannot campaign openly for
fear of their lives and where, despite the tightest security that the
occupation armies and the Iraqi forces can provide - curfews, banning cars
from the streets, intensive searches at polling stations, etc - more than
40 people still die.

Violence on that scale is by no means unusual at election time in other
parts of the world. Four years ago, for instance, municipal elections in
Yemen, where there was no insurgency, left 29 people dead.

The problem in Iraq, though, is that such violence is not a one-off. It is
a regular, almost daily, occurrence and nobody realistically expects it to
subside any time soon.

It's almost two years since Donald Rumsfeld, the US defence secretary,
shrugged off the looting during the first few days after the fall of
Saddam Hussein by accusing the media of exaggerating.

"Freedom's untidy," he said. "Free people are free to make mistakes and
commit crimes and do bad things. They're also free to live their lives and
do wonderful things.

"I picked up a newspaper today and I couldn't believe it," he continued.
"I read eight headlines that talked about chaos, violence, unrest ... I've
never seen anything like it! And here is a country that's being liberated,
here are people who are going from being repressed and held under the
thumb of a vicious dictator, and they're free. And all this newspaper
could do, with eight or 10 headlines, they showed a man bleeding, a
civilian, who they claimed we had shot - one thing after another. It's
just unbelievable..."

In those days, bringing stability to Iraq was just a matter of rounding up
the Ba'athist "remnants" and catching the man who was orchestrating the
trouble from his hole in the ground.

Eventually they caught Saddam, but it got worse.

Continuing violence was then attributed to the "run-up" to the handover of
sovereignty to an interim Iraqi government.

Sovereignty was duly handed over, George Bush famously scribbled "Let
freedom reign" on his notepad, and again it got worse.

Since then, we have had violence in the "run-up" to the election. This
time, American officials have been less optimistic. Applying a sort of
inverse magic - the way actors superstitiously wish each other good luck
before a performance by saying "break a leg" - they have been predicting
that things may get worse still after the election. And this time their
predictions are likely to be right.

None of this is to disparage the efforts of millions of Iraqis who turned
out to vote yesterday in defiance of threats from the insurgents, but
portrayals of the election as "historic" are way off mark: all the old
problems remain.

The election has done nothing to help resolve the question of Iraq's
ethnic and religious divisions - particularly that of the disaffected
Sunni Arab minority. If anything, it has further institutionalised these
divisions.

Whatever the results when the votes are finally counted, it is already
clear that the emerging system of political parties is based around
interest groups and men of influence rather than debates about policy - a
system that may look vaguely democratic on the outside but is actually a
barrier to genuine democracy.

Much of this is the fault of the Bush administration which, for its own
reasons, has turned the ballot box into a symbol of freedom around the
world without paying much attention to the slow and laborious business of
creating the civil institutions that make elections meaningful.

Over the next few months, the new Iraqi parliament is supposed to draft a
permanent constitution which, among other things, will have to grapple
with the thorny issues of federalism and the role of Islam in the state -
issues that the Americans ducked before handing over sovereignty.

Arguments about the constitution could bring Iraq to the crunch point -
possibly with fatal consequences - or, more likely, the parliament will
come up with another fudge, putting off the crunch (as the Americans did)
for another day.

If the Iraqis are lucky, they may eventually arrive at the corrupt
fig-leaf sort of democracy that flourishes in other Arab states such as
Egypt. The sort of democracy where elections change nothing and their
results are always a foregone conclusion. On the other hand, they may not
be so fortunate.

The liberation of Iraq is still a long way off.


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