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Iraqi council pushes for elections in 2005
 Updated: 2003-11-26 08:15

UNITED NATIONS: Iraq's interim authority on Monday submitted a timetable for self-rule and asked the United Nations (UN) Security Council for a new resolution that would end the US-led occupation in June.

The timetable, worked out with US and British officials, was due on December 15 and arrived three weeks earlier. It was requested in an October 16 Security Council resolution, which created a multinational force in Iraq.

Jalal Talabani, the current president of the Iraqi Governing Council, in a letter pledged respect for human rights and promised to establish the "principle of civilian control over the Iraqi armed and security forces."

The 24-member US-appointed council said it would select a "provisional legislative body" no later than May 31, 2004.

This assembly would elect a provisional government by the end of June 2004 at which time "the Coalition Provisional Authority will be dissolved and the occupation ... will end," the letter said.

A new constitution would be drafted by March 15, 2005, and then presented to Iraqis in a referendum. After the referendum, a general election for a new government is to take place before December 31, 2005, according to Talabani's letter to the Security Council.

"In light of what had transpired, it has become appropriate for the Security Council to adopt a new resolution taking into consideration the new circumstances," Talabani wrote.

The United States and Britain are considering a new resolution that would welcome or endorse the accelerated timetable, which Washington had opposed in October.

But faced with a mounting death toll, the Bush administration switched positions this month and decided to speed up a transfer of power.

Talabani's letter did not mention continued deployment of US and other foreign troops. But it is assumed that a new provisional government in June will request that they stay.

France, Russia and Germany, who opposed the war, told the council last Friday they would like to see any new resolution give the United Nations a major role in the political transition. They also urged a broader participation of Iraqi political groups, an apparent reference to nationalists and members of Saddam Hussein's Baathist party.

And they proposed a conference to bring Iraq's neighbours into the political process.

But diplomats said the United States and Britain are not eager to engage in a new debate over the resolution and would drop the idea if bargaining proved too tough.

UN Secretary-General Kofi Annan told council members last week that Baghdad still remained too dangerous for UN staff to be based there. An August 19 bombing of the organization's headquarters in the Iraqi capital killed 22 people.

But he told reporters he would soon appoint a new official to supervise UN operations from outside the country, either in Jordan or Cyprus. And early next year at the latest, he said he would name a new special representative to replace Brazilian Sergio Vieira de Mello, killed in the August 19 blast.

Annan also said last week he would establish a new group to discuss the political future of Iraq. It would include six neighbouring nations and Egypt as well as the five permanent Security Council members - the United States, Russia, China, Britain and France.

Annan on Monday released a November 11 letter from Talabani that said the "active participation of the United Nations" in the political process was essential. It said that "time is due" for Annan to appoint a new chief envoy for Iraq who need not live in the country but could come periodically for consultations.

Agencies via Xinhua


 
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