Iraqis Defy Attackers in Historic Election
NewsMax.com Wires
Monday, Jan. 31, 2005
BAGHDAD, Iraq - Iraqis embraced democracy in large numbers
Sunday, standing in long lines to vote in defiance of mortar
attacks, suicide bombers and boycott calls. Pushed in wheelchairs
or carts if they couldn't walk, the elderly, the young and women in
veils cast ballots in Iraq's first free election in a half-century.
Iraqi election officials said it might take 10 days to determine
the vote's winner and said they had no firm estimate of turnout
among the 14 million eligible voters. The ticket endorsed by the
Shiite Grand Ayatollah Ali al-Sistani was the pre-voting favorite.
Interim Prime Minister Ayad Allawi's slate was also considered
strong.
"We broke a barrier of fear," said Mijm Towirish, an election
official.
Uncertain Sunni turnout, a string of insurgent attacks that
killed 44 and the crash of a British military plane drove home that
chaos in Iraq isn't over yet.
Yet the mere fact the vote went off seemed to ricochet instantly
around a world hoping for Arab democracy and fearing Islamic
extremism.
"I am doing this because I love my country, and I love the sons
of my nation," said Shamal Hekeib, 53, who walked with his wife 20
minutes to a polling station near his Baghdad home.
"We are Arabs, we are not scared and we are not cowards,"
Hekeib said.
With helicopters flying low and gunfire close by, at least 200
voters stood calmly in line at midday outside one polling station
in the heart of Baghdad. Inside, the tight security included at
least four body searches, and a ban on lighters, cell phone
batteries, cigarette packs and even pens.
The feeling was sometimes festive. One election volunteer
escorted a blind man back to his home after he cast his vote. A
woman too frail to walk by herself arrived on a cart pushed by a
young relative. Entire families showed up in their finest clothes.
But for the country's minority Sunni Arabs, who held a
privileged position under Saddam Hussein, the day was not as
welcome.
No more than 400 people voted in Saddam's hometown of Tikrit,
and in the heavily Sunni northern Baghdad neighborhood of Azamiyah,
where Saddam made his last known public appearance in early April
2003, the four polling places never even opened.
"The world is hearing the voice of freedom from the center of
the Middle East," said President Bush, who called the election a
success. He promised the United States would continue training
Iraqi soldiers, hoping they can soon secure a country America
invaded nearly two years ago to topple Saddam.
Iraqis, the U.S. president said, had "firmly rejected the
anti-democratic ideology" of terrorists.
The vote to elect a 275-National Assembly and 18 provincial
legislatures was only the first step on Iraq's road to self-rule
and stability. Once results are in, it could take weeks of backroom
deals before a prime minister and government are picked by the new
assembly.
If that government proves successful by drawing in the minority
Sunni Arabs who partly shunned the election, the country could
stabilize, hastening the day when 150,000 U.S. troops can go home.
Iraqi interior minister, Falah al-Naqib, told Britain's Channel
4 News he expected there would be no need for U.S. troops any
longer than 18 months because that's when he anticipates Iraq's
security forces will be trained well enough to handle the job
themselves.
When Will U.S. Pull-out Begin?
But in comments to CBS' "Face The Nation," Secretary of State
Condoleezza Rice would not say whether U.S. forces would leave the
country in great numbers now that the vote is complete, and Bush
did not mention any U.S. military withdrawals in his statement.
On Sunday, coalition soldiers raced through Baghdad's streets in
Humvees and tried to coax people to vote with loudspeakers in
Ramadi, a Sunni city where anti-U.S. attacks are frequent. Iraqi
police served as guards at most polling stations and U.S. troops
had strict orders to stay away unless Iraqi security forces called
for help.
At the Louisiana National Guard headquarters near Baghdad,
nervous U.S. officers paced the halls, muttering, "So far, so
good," after the first 30 minutes of polling passed without
attacks.
But the violence soon broke out.
While a driving ban seemed to discourage car bombs, the
insurgents improvised, strapping on belts of explosives to launch
their suicide missions.
At least 44 died in the suicide and mortar attacks on polling
stations, including nine suicide bombers. The al-Qaida affiliate
led by Jordanian terror mastermind Abu Musab al-Zarqawi claimed
responsibility for at least four attacks.
Most attacks were in Baghdad, but one of the deadliest came in
Hillah to the south, when a bomber got onto a minibus carrying
voters and detonated his explosives, killing himself and at least
four others.
In another reminder of the dangers that persist in Iraq, a
British C-130 Hercules transport plane crashed north of Baghdad.
The wreckage was strewn over a large area. No cause was given, but
Britain's Press Association, quoting military sources, said about
10 British troops were believed to have died. Elsewhere, one U.S.
serviceman died in fighting in the Sunni stronghold of Anbar
province west of Baghdad.
Despite the string of attacks and mortars that boomed first in
the morning and then after dark, a people steeled to violence by
years of war, sanctions, the brutality of Saddam's regime and U.S.
military occupation were not deterred from the polls.
In the so-called "triangle of death" south of Baghdad, a
whiskery, stooped Abed Hunni walked an hour with his wife to reach
a polling site in Musayyib. "God is generous to give us this
day," he said.
And in heavily Shiite areas in the far south and mostly Kurdish
regions in the north, some saw the vote as settling a score with
the former dictator, Saddam.
"Now I feel that Saddam is really gone," said Fatima Ibrahim,
smiling as she headed home after voting in Irbil. She was 14 and a
bride of just three months when her husband, father and brother
were rounded up in a campaign of ethnic cleansing under Saddam.
None have ever been found.
Many cities in the Sunni triangle north and west of the capital,
particularly Fallujah, Ramadi and Beiji, were virtually empty of
voters also.
A low Sunni turnout, if that turns out to be the case, could
undermine the new government that will emerge from the vote and
worsen tensions among the country's ethnic, religious and cultural
groups.
Adnan Pachachi, a Sunni elder statesman and candidate for the
National Assembly, said he believes the best hope for harmony lies
in giving Sunnis a significant role in drafting the country's new
constitution.
"The main thing, I think, is we should really have a
constitution written by representatives of all segments of Iraq's
population," Pachachi said. "I think it would improve the
security situation."
Across the largely authoritarian-ruled Arab world, where dislike
and distrust of U.S. power and American intentions dominates the
public debate, some dismissed the poll as a U.S.-orchestrated sham.
Others hoped it might prove a catalyst for a region-wide democratic
push.
Iraq's elections are a "good omen for getting rid of
dictatorship," said Yemeni political science student Fathi
al-Uraiqi.
Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak _ sure to win his own country's
much-less-democratic vote later this year _ telephoned Allawi to
congratulate him on the smooth election, saying he hoped it would
"open the way for the restoration of calm and stability" in Iraq.
© 2005 Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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