Re: Failure to meet constitution date worries Iraqis
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ANOTHER REALITY CHECK!!!,
from all the "Iraq is a success"
"We Have A Constitution"....PROPAGANDA!</font>
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So the bush junta now has "A Constitution"? - that's all it is, a piece of paper with the word constitution in the Arabic language printed on it. Does it have any credibility at all with the 99.999 % of the 25 million plus Iraqis that live outside the "green zone" and don't get phone calls from Condi Rice & baby bush??.
NO!!, For them it is a meaningless occurrence.
Even for the elite Iraqis inside the "green zone" seated in Saddam's air conditioned palaces, being aggressively prodded by the American invaders to come up with "A Constitution"?, it is a meaningless occurrence.
The real battle for Iraq will occur in the streets outside the "green zone".
For you peeps who are relying on the "Media Of Mass Distraction" to tell you what's really going on here. FORGET-ABOUT-IT!!
The - "A Constitution"- is a sham because whatever it says it is SUPERSEDED by the "Bremmer Orders" .
You don't know what the "Bremmer Orders" are???
Of course you don't know!!!
The news story about the Iraqi Orders has been virtually ignored by the U.S. press. The bush junta, via Paul Bremmer who was the head of the the Coalition Provisional Authority (CPA), the body that ran Iraq before the first puppet prime minister Ayad Alawi was installed issued 100 Orders that have been imposed on the people of Iraq by the U.S. government.
<font face="arial" size="2" color="#0000FF"><b>Click Orders below if you want to read all 100 Orders</b></font>
<b><h2><a target="_blank" href="http://www.iraqcoalition.org/regulations/#Orders"><u>Orders</u></a></h2> </b>- are Binding Instructions or directives to the Iraqi people that create penal consequences or have a direct bearing on the way Iraqis are regulated, including changes to Iraqi law.
These orders are sometimes referred to as the Bremmer Orders. No one in the U.S. or Iraq was ever allowed to cast a vote in the ballot box for any of these Orders. These Orders SUPERSED any Iraq Constitution.
In plain language what this means is that - ALL FINAL DECISIONS REGARDING IRAQ POLITICS WILL BE MADE IN THE OVAL OFFICE IN THE WHITE HOUSE IN WASHINGTON DC. It dosen't matter who is occupying the Oval Office. Bush, Clinton, whoever!
For you peeps who are asleep ,This reality tells you what an Invasion & Occupation of a country is all about. It has nothing to do with democracy and freedom.
Also the sham- "A Constitution"- provides NO significant oil revenue to the Sunnis.
Would you live in a country where virtually none of the export product ,OIL, which earns 98% of the country's $$$$ is coming to your section of the country???
This sham- "A Constitution"- , superseded by "Bremmer Orders" is a prelude to an Iraqi civil war.
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Constitution born by Caesarian Section</font>
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Monday, August 29, 2005
By Juan Cole
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http://juancole.com
So they had the ceremony, and the drafting committee (minus Sunni Arab members) presented the final draft of the permanent Iraqi constitution to parliament on Sunday. But parliament did not vote on it. The Sunni Arabs did not attend. Parliament has abdicated its responsibilities toward the constitution and put it in the lap of the October 15 national referendum. Al-Hayat aptly said that the Iraqi constitution has been delivered by caesarian section. It was plucked from the womb of the drafting committee before the latter could give birth to it naturally. Sunni negotiator Salih Mutlak called it "a minefield."
Al-Hayat: Another member of the drafting committee, Sunni politician Abd al-Nasir al-Janabi, called for international intervention to prevent its being passed into law. He particularly asked for the Arab League and the United Nations to intervene. The Sunni Arab delegates noted that they were promised that the constitution drafting process would be based on consensus, and that this pledge had been the precondition for their involvement in it last June. On Sunday the Shiites and the Kurds reneged dramatically on that promise. Husain al-Falluji said that this constitution contains the seeds of Iraq's bloody partition, something, he said, that would "serve American interests."
US Ambassador in Baghdad Zalmay Khalilzad got carried away and called the Iraqi constitution the best in the Muslim world. Well, we could exclude Turkey's constitution because it is just a slightly reworked version of the Swiss, and so not very indigenous to the Muslim world. But what about, say, Indonesia?
<font color="#0000FF"><u>He should look at these powerpoint slides on the Indonesian constitution.</u></font> The latter also guarantees civil liberties and equality before the law, but the Indonesian government, unlike Khalilzad, resisted demands by adherents of political Islam that Islamic law be recognized in it. The new Iraqi constitution contains a provision that no legislation may be passed that contradicts Islamic law. That provision makes the Iraqi constitution read as self-contradictory (since it also celebrates human rights and democracy), and puts it in contrast with that of Indonesia, which contains no such provision. Since 1998 democracy has flourished in Indonesia.
So why must an indigenous achievement such as the 1998-2002 amendments to the Indonesian Constitution be devalued in favor of a deeply flawed and fatally self-contradictory constitution produced in Iraq under twin Iranian and American auspices? Does everything have to be about George Bush?
Why isn't the Indonesian constitution the most progressive in the Muslim world?
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Factions join hands against constitution</font>
<font face="arial" size="3" color="#0000FF"><b>Iraq's Sunni Leadership and the firebrand Shiite cleric Sadr both oppose federalism</b></font>
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August 29, 2005
By Jill Carroll | Correspondent of The Christian Science Monitor
BAGHDAD - Several Sunni leaders drafting Iraq's constitution staunchly object to provisions included in the document and have found common cause with an unlikely ally: radical Shiites.
Sunnis and supporters of firebrand Shiite cleric Moqtada al-Sadr have said they will rally supporters to reject the constitution in October's national referendum.
Together the groups might convince two-thirds of voters in three provinces to vote down the document, prompting new elections for a national assembly that will draft another charter. A new vote would give both parties a chance to regain influence they lost when they boycotted last January's elections, leaving former exiled Shiite political parties and Kurds with a stronger hand.
While both groups have widely different visions for Iraq, both oppose federalism, which allows semiautonomous regions to spring up across the country.
"It's not the time for federalism under occupation. It will draw a lot of troubles," says Abbas Rubaie, the political director of the Sadr movement. This stance puts them at odds with the ruling Islamist Shiite parties like the Dawa Party and the Supreme Council of the Islamic Revolution in Iraq.
Sunni leaders who oppose the constitution say they will start a drive to inform Sunnis about what the document contains.
"We will explain everything in detail to them and we will leave it to their decision. We'll accept the result as long as we feel that no one has tampered with the vote," says Hussein Shukur al-Falluji, a Sunni member of the constitutional committee.
He says that in addition to federalism, Sunnis object to provisions regarding the dispersal of oil revenues, power sharing between the president and prime minister, and the description of the ethnic and religious identity of the country.
Efforts to include Sunnis during the drafting phase in order to quell the Sunni-led insurgency never really got off the ground. That galvanized Sunnis to call for a vote against the document even before the final draft was completed.
Adding to the strange bedfellows is the Association of Muslim Scholars, a group of extremist Sunni clerics with close ties to the insurgency who have been meeting with Sadr. Sunni clerics often dismiss Shiites as not true Muslims, while some Sadr leaders have preached against Sunni Wahhabis.
"When we have things in common with other people it's not necessarily an alliance," Mr. Rubaie says, noting that Sadr's followers support a provision keeping former members of the Baath Party out of government, the opposite stance of Sunnis. "Sayyid Moqtada has been visited by many groups and people, and that does not mean there is an agreement."</font>
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Under US noses, brutal insurgents rule Sunni citadel</font>
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Guardian gains rare access to Iraqi town and finds it fully in control of 'mujahideen'</b></font>
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Omer Mahdi in Haditha and Rory Carroll in Baghdad
Monday August 22, 2005
http://www.guardian.co.uk/print/0,3858,5267756-103550,00.html
Guardian
The executions are carried out at dawn on Haqlania bridge, the entrance to Haditha. A small crowd usually turns up to watch even though the killings are filmed and made available on DVD in the market the same afternoon.
One of last week's victims was a young man in a black tracksuit. Like the others he was left on his belly by the blue iron railings at the bridge's southern end. His severed head rested on his back, facing Baghdad. Children cheered when they heard that the next day's spectacle would be a double bill: two decapitations. A man named Watban and his brother had been found guilty of spying.
With so many alleged American agents dying here Haqlania bridge was renamed Agents' bridge. Then a local wag dubbed it Agents' fridge, evoking a mortuary, and that name has stuck.
A three-day visit by a reporter working for the Guardian last week established what neither the Iraqi government nor the US military has admitted: Haditha, a farming town of 90,000 people by the Euphrates river, is an insurgent citadel.
That Islamist guerrillas were active in the area was no secret but only now has the extent of their control been revealed. They are the sole authority, running the town's security, administration and communications.
A three-hour drive north from Baghdad, under the nose of an American base, it is a miniature Taliban-like state. Insurgents decide who lives and dies, which salaries get paid, what people wear, what they watch and listen to.
Haditha exposes the limitations of the Iraqi state and US power on the day when the political process is supposed to make a great leap - a draft constitution finalised and approved by midnight tonight.
For politicians and diplomats in Baghdad's fortified green zone the constitution is a means to stabilise Iraq and woo Sunni Arabs away from the rebellion. For Haditha, 140 miles north-west of the capital, whether a draft is agreed is irrelevant. Residents already have a set of laws and rules promulgated by insurgents.
Within minutes of driving into town the Guardian was stopped by a group of men and informed about rule number one: announce yourself. The mujahideen, as they are known locally, must know who comes and goes.
The Guardian reporter did not say he worked for a British newspaper. For their own protection interviewees cannot be named.
There is no fighting here because there is no one to challenge the Islamists. The police station and municipal offices were destroyed last year and US marines make only fleeting visits every few months.
Two groups share power. Ansar al-Sunna is a largely homegrown organisation, though its leader in Haditha is said to be foreign. Al-Qaida in Iraq, known locally by its old name Tawhid al-Jihad, is led by the Jordanian-born Abu Musab al-Zarqawi. There was a rumour that Zarqawi, Washington's most wanted militant after Osama bin Laden, visited early last week. True or not, residents wanted to believe they had hosted such a celebrity.
A year ago Haditha was just another sleepy town in western Anbar province, deep in the Sunni triangle and suspicious of the Shia-led government in Baghdad but no insurgent hotbed.
Then, say residents, arrived mostly Shia police with heavyhanded behaviour. "That's how it began," said one man. Attacks against the police escalated until they fled, creating a vacuum filled by insurgents.
Alcohol and music deemed unIslamic were banned, women were told to wear headscarves and relations between the sexes were closely monitored. The mobile phone network was shut down but insurgents retained their walkie-talkies and satellite phones. Right-hand lanes are reserved for their vehicles.
From attacks on US and Iraqi forces it is clear that other Anbar towns, such as Qaim, Rawa, Anna and Ramadi, are to varying degrees under the sway of rebels.
In Haditha hospital staff and teachers are allowed to collect government salaries in Ramadi, the capital of Anbar, but other civil servants have had to quit.
Last year the US trumpeted its rehabilitation of a nearby power plant: "The incredible progress at Haditha is just one example of the huge strides made by the US army corps of engineers."
Now insurgents earn praise from residents for allegedly pressuring managers to supply electricity almost 24 hours a day, a luxury denied the rest of Iraq.
The court caters solely for divorces and marriages. Alleged criminals are punished in the market. The Guardian witnessed a headmaster accused of adultery whipped 190 times with cables. Children laughed as he sobbed and his robe turned crimson.
Two men who robbed a foreign exchange shop were splayed on the ground. Masked men stood on their hands while others broke their arms with rocks. The shopkeeper offered the insurgents a reward but they declined.
DVDs of beheadings on the bridge are distributed free in the souk. Children prefer them to cartoons. "They should not watch such things," said one grandfather, but parents appeared not to object.
One DVD features a young, blond muscular man who had been disembowelled. He was said to have been a member of a six-strong US sniper team ambushed and killed on August 1. Residents said he had been paraded in town before being executed.
The US military denied that, saying six bodies were recovered and that all appeared to have died in combat. Shortly after the ambush three landmines killed 14 marines in a convoy which ventured from their base outside the town.
Twice in recent months marines backed by aircraft and armour swept into Haditha to flush out the rebels. In a pattern repeated across Anbar there were skirmishes, a few suspects killed or detained, and success was declared.
In reality, said residents, the insurgents withdrew for a few days and returned when the Americans left. They have learned from last November's battle in Falluja, when hundreds died fighting the marines and still lost the city.
Now their strategy appears to be to wait out the Americans, calculating they will leave within a few years, and then escalate what some consider the real war against a government led by Shias, a rival sect which Sunni extremists consider apostasy.
The US military declined to respond to questions detailing the extent of insurgent control in the town.
There was evidence of growing cooperation between rebels. A group in Falluja, where the resistance is said to be regrouping, wrote to Haditha requesting background checks on two volunteers from the town.
One local man in his 40s told the Guardian he wanted to be a suicide bomber to atone for sins and secure a place in heaven. "But the mujahideen will not let me. They said I had eight children and it was my duty to look after them."
Tribal elders said they feared but respected insurgents for keeping order and not turning the town into a battleground.
They appear to have been radicalised, and condemned Sunni groups, such as the Iraqi Islamic party and the Muslim Scholars' Association, for engaging in the political process.
The constitution talks, the referendum due in October
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