Mortar lands near Baghdad Green Zone As polls open (AP) Updated: 2005-12-15 15:10
Iraqis lined up amid tight security Thursday to vote in a historic
parliamentary election the U.S. hopes will lay the groundwork for American
troops to withdraw, with a mortar landing near the heavily fortified Green Zone
just minutes after polls opened.
No injuries were reported in that blast, but a bomb killed a hospital guard
and wounded two other people near a polling station in the northern city of
Mosul. The violence underscored security concerns despite a promise by Sunni
insurgent groups not to attack the polls.
A coalition of Shiite religious parties, which dominate the current
government, was expected to win the largest number of seats �� but not enough to
form a new administration without alliances with rival groups.
Dozens of Iraqis waiting to cast ballots at Baghdad's city hall went through
three separate checkpoints as police searched each person entering the downtown
site.
Abbasiya Ahmad, 80, said she had voted for the governing Shiite United Iraqi
Alliance.
"We hope that they will bring us security and safety. Also they are clerics,
and clerics do not steal our money. We want people who protect our money," she
said.
Senior election official Abdul-Husein Hendawi said some polling stations in
Ramadi, an insurgent stronghold 70 miles west of Baghdad, had not yet opened for
security reasons.
But, he said, voting was largely under way without problems elsewhere in the
restive Anbar province, including nearby Fallujah, where the U.S. military said
a bomb had been found and defused at a polling station.
A large explosion hit downtown Baghdad within minutes of the polls opening.
Police said it apparently was caused by a mortar landing near the Green Zone
that houses the Iraqi government and the U.S. and British embassies, but no
injuries were reported.
In Mosul, a bomb killed a hospital guard and wounded two other people when it
went off between a polling station and a hospital, Dr. Bahaaldin al-Bakri said.
A mortar also landed near a polling station without causing any injuries,
according to the U.S. military.
The Bush administration hopes the new parliament will include more Sunni
Arabs to help establish a government that can lure other Sunnis away from the
insurgency. Such a development would make it possible for the United States and
its partners to start to draw down their troops next year.
In Baghdad's predominantly Sunni Arab Azamiyah district and at the al-Nu'aman
school, security was tight and the street on either side of the building was
blocked with cement blocks and razor wire.
People were arriving in small numbers. Women were not allowed to take their
bags inside the center and cell phones were banned.
Voters at the station had little enthusiasm for the Shiite coalition that has
governed the country since April 28. In January, few people in Azamiyah voted
and some polling stations didn't even open.
"We want to choose Sunni candidates. We want them to be in power because they
are capable of providing security and they do not kill or beat us," said Khali
Ibrahim, 70, as he hobbled up the stairs leaning on his cane.
His comments reflected the sectarian tensions that threaten the nation's
future and the Bush administration strategy amid Sunni complaints of abuse at
the hands of Shiite-dominated security forces.
Up to 15 million Iraqis were to choose 275 members of the new parliament from
among 7,655 candidates running on 996 tickets, representing Shiite, Sunni,
Kurdish, Turkomen and sectarian interests across a wide political spectrum.
Iraqis do not vote for individual candidates, but instead for lists �� or tickets
�� that compete for the seats in each of the 18 provinces.
Some preliminary returns were expected late Thursday, but final returns could
take days if not weeks.
President Jalal Talabani, a Kurd, cast his ballot in the northern city of
Sulaimaniyah.
"This is a good day and the Iraqi people bear the responsibility to vote for
a better future. I hope that the Iraqi people will stay united. We hope that the
people will vote to keep the constitution that was approved by the Iraqi
people," he said.
Election of the new parliament, which will serve a four-year term, marks the
final step in the U.S. blueprint for democracy. The vote will cap a process that
included the transfer of sovereignty last year, selection of an interim
parliament Jan. 30 and ratification of the constitution in October. The new
parliament will name a government, including a new prime minister.
"In spite of the violence, Iraqis have met every milestone," President Bush
said in Washington.
For the Bush administration, the stakes are nearly as high as for the Iraqis.
A successful election would represent a much-needed political victory at a time
of growing doubts about the war among the American public.
"We are in Iraq today because our goal has always been more than the removal
of a brutal dictator," Bush said. "It is to leave a free and democratic Iraq in
its place."
U.N. Secretary-General Kofi Annan also urged the Iraqi people to vote, saying
they have another "historic opportunity" to shape the country's political
future.
Insurgent threats and boycott calls kept many Sunnis at home in the January
election despite a national turnout of nearly 60 percent. That enabled Shiites
and Kurds to dominate the current legislature, sharpening communal tensions and
fueling the insurgency.
This time, more Sunnis Arabs were in the race and changes in the election law
to allocate the majority of seats by district all but guaranteed strong Sunni
representation.
More than 1,000 Sunni clerics called on their followers to vote, and
insurgent groups, including al-Qaida in Iraq and the Islamic Army in Iraq,
pledged not to attack polling stations even though they oppose the political
process.
Nevertheless, tens of thousands of Iraqi soldiers and police were guarding
polling stations, with U.S. and other coalition forces standing ready in case of
trouble. U.S. troops and bomb-detecting dogs checked thousands of polling
stations before handing over control to Iraqi police.
U.S. officials warned that a successful election alone will not end the
insurgency. Also needed is a government capable of reconciling Iraq's disparate
groups.
The Americans also were eager to avoid protracted negotiations to choose a
new prime minister and Cabinet �� a process that dragged on for three months
after the last vote.
"I think the elections are a positive step, but it will not be enough to
ensure stability," U.S. Ambassador Zalmay Khalilzad told Al-Jazeera television.
"There should be a good government that represents all Iraqis, and the security
forces also should be formed by all Iraqi sects."
His comments about the security forces referred to Sunni Arab complaints that
the Shiite-dominated army and police have abused Sunnis. On Tuesday, Khalilzad
said at least 120 abused prisoners had been found in two detention centers run
by the Interior Ministry since November.
On the eve of the election, sectarian tensions swelled over what Shiite
political parties considered an offensive remark made by an Iraqi Shiite
panelist on Al-Jazeera. Fadel al-Rubaei said Shiite clerics should not
participate in politics, and he accused them of conspiring with the Americans
against the mostly Sunni insurgents.
The statements angered many Shiites, including many who did not see the
Al-Jazeera broadcast but saw reports about it on an Iraqi station, Al-Furat,
owned by the biggest Iraqi Shiite party, which used the report to fire up its
supporters.
Hours later, thousands of people chanted anti-Al-Jazeera slogans in the
streets of the Baghdad neighborhoods of Sadr City and Karradah, and in major
cities throughout the Shiite south.
In Nasiriyah, Shiite protesters set fire to a building housing the offices of
former interim Prime Minister Ayad Allawi, a secular Shiite, and the Iraqi
Communist Party.
Officials at the Qatar-based Al-Jazeera were not available for comment. But
Baghdad correspondent Atwar Bahjat told The Associated Press she resigned from
her job "in protest of what the guest of the station said."
Rumors swept Baghdad that a tanker truck filled with thousands of blank
ballots had been smuggled into the country from Shiite-dominated Iran. Many
Sunnis consider Shiite political parties as agents of Iran.
The Interior Ministry denied any attempt to smuggle ballots, and the election
commission said the only trucks in the area were its own delivering election
materials to polling stations.
Rumors also swept the Iraqi capital early Thursday that the water supply had
been poisoned after warnings against drinking tap water were broadcast through
mosque loudspeakers, but they were quickly denied by the Health
Ministry.
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