ARAB WORLD NEWS
Last minute efforts to win Sunni
support of constitution face deep divisions
Photo:
An Iraqi food distribution agent counts copies of the new constitution
in Baghdad, Iraq, Sunday.
BAGHDAD, Iraq- With U.S. mediation,
Shiite and Kurdish officials negotiated Sunday with Sunni Arab leaders
over last minute additions to the constitution, trying to win Sunni
support ahead of next weekend's crucial referendum. But the sides
remained far apart over basic issues - including the federalism that
Shiites and Kurds insist on - and copies of the constitution are
already being passed out to the public. Though major attacks have
waned in recent days, violence continued with insurgent violence
killing 13 Iraqis. In one attack, masked gunmen in police commando
uniforms burst into a school in the town of Samarra, north of Baghdad,
pulled a Shiite teacher out of his classroom and shot him to death in
the hallway in front of his students, still sitting behind their
desks, police said. A suicide car bomb killed a woman and a child in
the southern city of Basra. A U.S. marine was killed by a roadside
bomb in the town of Ramadi, west of Baghdad, on Saturday, the military
announced. It was the ninth American to be killed in a series of
offensives the military has been waging the past week in western Iraq
in an attempt to knock al-Qaida militants and other insurgents off
balance and prevent attacks during Saturday's national vote on the
constitution. The death brought to 1,953 the number of U.S. service
members who have died since the beginning of the Iraq war in March
2003, according to an Associated Press count. Sunni-led insurgents are
trying to prevent Iraqis from voting with a wave of attacks over the
past two weeks. The government has launched campaign to convince
Iraqis to go to the polls despite the threats - and despite calls by
some Sunni Arabs for a boycott. "We think (a boycott) would weaken
Iraq because the only way that Iraq can recover is done by
concentrating on the political process, writing the constitution and
participating in it," government spokesman Laith Kubba said. "Any act
that calls for violence or boycotting would deviate the country from
its course." Kubba fiercely denounced the insurgents, calling them
"rats spreading plague among the people." Iraqi Interior Minister
Bayan Jabr said the number of foreign militants involved in Iraq's
insurgency has fallen to around 900, from up to 3,000 three months
ago. Their ranks have fallen because of deaths in U.S. and Iraqi
military offensives - but also because al-Qaida in Iraq leader Abu
Musab al-Zarqawi has started sending fighters to other Arab countries
to build terror networks there, Jabr said in an interview with the
Arab daily Sharq al-Awsat. Iraq's Sunni Arab leaders are calling on
their followers to turn out in force to vote in the referendum - but
to vote "no" to defeat a draft constitution they say will break Iraqi
into pieces, with Shiite and Kurdish mini-states in the north and
south, with the Sunni minority left poor and weak in a central zone.
Though a minority, Sunnis can defeat
the charter if they garner a two-thirds "no" vote in any three of
Iraq's 18 provinces - and they have the potential to make that
threshold in four provinces. But turnout is key, since they must
outweigh Shiite and Kurdish populations in some of those areas. Even
with copies of the official text of the constitution being distributed
to voters to consider before the polls, all sides were debating
last-minute changes in a bid to swing some Sunnis to a "yes" vote.
Kurdish leader Massoud Barzani met with Sunni Arab leaders Saturday
and Sunday trying to convince them on the changes, officials from all
sides said. The United States is eager to see the passage of the
constitution, since its rejection would prolong Iraq's political
instability for months - and could hamper the U.S. military's plans to
start pulling out some troops next year. But there appeared to be too
wide a gulf to convince Sunni leaders to drop their opposition. While
Shiite and Kurdish parties were willing to make some cosmetic
additions to the draft, they rejected what they called central changes
sought by Sunnis, particularly ones aimed at reducing the strong
powers the charter gives to regional administrations over the central
government. The Sunnis seek in particular changes to the
constitution's articles outlining the purging of members of Saddam
Hussein's former Baath party - most of whose major figures were Sunnis
- and others allowing provinces to join together into "regions" under
a single administration that would have considerable powers. "We don't
want a federal system. It shouldn't be a system of regions, it's a
system of provinces," Saleh al-Mutlaq, a prominent Sunni politician,
said. He said the Sunnis want the articles on de-Baathification
rewritten to "not single out the Baath party." The federalism terms
are central to the constitution as it stands and the Shiite and
Kurdish parties staunchly oppose them. Many of the same issues Sunnis
are trying to change in the last minute talks were the subject of
rancorous debate during the drafting of the constitution, which ended
with the Shiites and Kurds approving the draft to be put to a
referendum over Sunni opposition. In other violence Sunday, gunmen
killed the bodyguard of a legislator in the northern city of Mosul and
shot to death three Iraqi contractors in two attacks, in Baghdad and
the town of Beiji to the north. Four policemen were slain in two
separate Baghdad shootings, and an Iraqi was killed by gunmen in front
of his shop selling construction materials in the capital. In Samarra,
insurgents also killed the owner of a refrigerator repair shop. The
bullet-riddled body of a woman in her 20s was found by the side of the
road in the southern Baghdad suburb of Dora, an area of frequent
insurgent slayings. By Kasem Zahra
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