Iraqis reach breakthrough deal on charter (AP) Updated: 2005-10-12 08:27 But the announcement was the first break in the ranks of Sunni Arab leaders
and will likely deeply undermine the campaign to defeat the constitution at the
polls. Sunni-led insurgents have demanded a boycott of the election and
threatened those who would vote.
The agreement outlines four additions to the document considered Saturday
that outline how future amendments will be made.
The draft constitution has already been printed by the United Nations and
millions of copies are being distributed to the public for Saturday's vote, so
the new additions cannot be included.
Instead they will be announced in the media, particularly on television,
since many Iraqis watch popular holiday programming during the current Islamic
holy month of Ramadan, said Ali al-Dabagh, a Shiite negotiator.
The central addition allows the next parliament, which will be formed in Dec.
15 elections, to form the commission, which will have four months to consider
changes to the constitution. The changes would be approved by the entire
parliament, then a referendum would be held two months later.
That is no guarantee that Sunnis will be able to make the changes they seek.
They are likely to have a stronger representation in the next parliament, but
would still face a strong Shiite and Kurdish majority that would likely oppose
major changes.
And the deal does not necessarily make it any easier for Sunnis to push
through amendments, only guarantees them the opportunity to try.
Al-Dabagh said any changes would have to be approved by a two-thirds majority
in the parliament — just as is outlined in the constitution — before they can go
to a referendum. Other negotiators, however, said the required proportion was
not decided.
Sunnis fear that the draft constitution as it stands will fragment Iraq,
because it allows Shiites and Kurds to create mini-states in the oil-rich north
and south, leaving Sunnis in a poor central zone.
The other additions agreed on Tuesday include a statement stressing Iraqi
unity and another states that the Arabic language should be used in the
Kurdistan region, along with Kurdish — issues important to the Sunni Arabs. The
fourth underlines that former members of Saddam Hussein's ousted, Sunni-led
Baath Party will only be prosecuted if they committed crimes.
Some moderate Sunni leaders once had positions in the Baath Party and fear
being barred from politics by the De-Baathification process outlined in the
constitution.
"The leaders of the political blocs have approved these additions and
amendments and tomorrow they will be announced (read) to the national assembly,"
al-Dabagh said.
Insurgent attacks Tuesday killed at least 54 people, the highest death toll
since Sept. 29, when three car bombs exploded simultaneously in the mainly
Shiite town of Balad, north of Baghdad, killing at least 102 people.
President Bush said more attacks would likely follow in the three days
remaining before the balloting.
"I expect violence because there's a group of terrorists and killers who want
to stop the advance of democracy in Iraq," Bush said in an interview with
NBC-TV's "Today" show. "I also expect people to vote, which is a remarkable
achievement."
Tuesday's deadliest attack came when a suicide bomber plowed his
explosives-packed vehicle into a crowded outdoor market in the northwestern town
of Tal Afar, killing 30 Iraqi civilians and wounding 45, said Brig. Najim
Abdullah, Tal Afar's police chief.
It was the second suicide bombing in the town, about 90 miles east of the
Syrian border, since U.S. and Iraqi forces waged a major offensive there in
August, claiming to have killed some 200 insurgents and driving many others out.
In Baghdad, a suicide car bomber hit an Iraqi army checkpoint in a western
district, killing eight soldiers and a civilian, police said.
A woman exploded a car bomb near a U.S. military patrol in the northern city
of Mosul, police and hospital officials said. U.S. troops immediately closed off
the scene, so it was not known if there were any casualties. The U.S military in
Baghdad had no information on the attack.
It was the first known instance of a female suicide car bomber, though a
woman carried out a suicide attack on foot in Tal Afar in
September.
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