Number of Electoral Democracies reaches 122

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<font size="5"><center>Number of electoral democracies reaches 122
as freedom spreads</font size></center>



(AFP)
20 December 2005

WASHINGTON - The number of electoral democracies around the world rose from 119 to 122 this year, setting a new record as freedom made inroads in the Middle East and Africa, an independent monitoring group said on Monday.


But in its annual report rating every country in the world as ”free,” ”partly free” or “not free,” Freedom House also expressed concern about countries like the United States and France, where it saw as “looming problems” with electoral setups and immigrant integration.

“These global findings are encouraging,” said Arch Puddington, director of research at the organization.

“Among other things, the past year has been notable for terrorist violence, ethnic cleansing, civil conflict, catastrophic natural disasters, and geopolitical polarization. That freedom could thrive in this environment is impressive.”

The three additions to the list of electoral democracies were the African nations of Burundi, Liberia and the Central African Republic.

The three countries afforded considerable space for political opposition and met the minimum standard of a fair vote count, the report said.

But the most significant improvements were noted in the Middle East, where Lebanon was upgraded from “not free” to “partly free,” despite a series of political killings that shook the country.

The Lebanese witnessed major improvements in both political rights and civil liberties following the withdrawal of Syrian troops based in the country, the report said.

It also noted elections held in Iraq, Egypt, and the Palestinian territories; the introduction of women’s suffrage in Kuwait, and improvements in Saudi Arabia’s media environment among other encouraging signs in the region.

“This emerging trend reminds us that men and women in this region share the universal desire to live in free societies,” commented Thomas Melia, acting executive director of Freedom House.

In rare criticism of the United States, the survey complained about what it called “the widespread use of sophisticated forms of gerrymandering,” or redrawing of electoral districts, that the authors said has “reduced competitiveness in congressional and state legislative elections.”

Just last week, the US Supreme Court agreed to hear a case dealing with redistricting in the state of Texas engineered by former House Republican majority leader Tom DeLay that allowed Republicans to pick up six more seats in the House of Representatives in the 2004 elections.

Meanwhile, several European countries, including France, faced challenges to their democratic institutions stemming from their failure to effectively integrate non-European immigrants, the report said.

http://www.khaleejtimes.com/Display...ber/theworld_December561.xml&section=theworld
 
excellent. now if we could get the UN to prioritize democracy block voting instead of regional block voting then we could get somewhere.

and fuck them with their "looming problem" with immigrant integration. our legal immigrants have no problem integrating. its those leech ass illegals that cause problems.
 
Qatar says to elect first parliament in 2007

Qatar says to elect first parliament in 2007
Sun Apr 2, 8:27 AM ET

U.S. ally Qatar plans to hold landmark elections next year for the Gulf country's first parliament as part of democratic reforms.

Qatari Foreign Minister Sheikh Hamad bin Jassem bin Jabr al-Thani told a forum on democracy late on Saturday that elections laws would be ready by the summer.

"We expect they (elections) will take place by the beginning of next year," he said.

The election is likely to please Washington which is promoting political, economic and social reforms throughout the Arab world since invading Iraq and deposing Iraqi President Saddam Hussein. Qatar hosted a U.S. command center for the 2003 war on Iraq.

The elections are stipulated in the country's first constitution since independence from Britain in 1971 and which a majority of Qataris voted for in a 2003 referendum.

The constitution keeps power in the hands of the emir, Qatar's head of state, but allows for an elected parliament.

A law has yet to be drafted specifying what powers will be delegated to the parliament.

Voters, including women, will be able to choose 30 of the 45 members of parliament while the emir, Sheikh Hamad bin Khalifa al-Thani, will appoint the rest.

The Gulf Arab state is home to some 850,000 people, about 150,000 of them Qatari nationals.

Qatar currently has an advisory Shura council whose members are all appointed by the emir.

The OPEC-member has the world's third largest gas reserves after Russia and Iran and has a booming economy fueled by high energy prices.

http://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20060402...6hZ.3QA;_ylu=X3oDMTA5aHJvMDdwBHNlYwN5bmNhdA--
 
Historic first: Kuwaiti women vote, run

Historic first: Kuwaiti women vote, run
By Jamie Etheridge, Contributor to The Christian Science Monitor
Wed Apr 5, 4:00 AM ET

A sea of black flooded a local polling station in Kuwait Tuesday when hundreds of women clad in the head-to-toe abaya cast their vote for the first time.

One of the two female candidates contesting a vacant seat on the powerful Municipal Council, Khaledah Al-Khader, said she faced some criticism from Islamic groups.

"Some individuals believe that simply because I am of the female gender, I am incapable of having a seat in the council - because I would not be strong enough to deal with the pressure," says Ms. Khader, a medical doctor educated at Tulane University in New Orleans.

Considered a test case for 2007 parliamentary polls, the by-election is the first in which women have been able to vote since the National Assembly approved universal suffrage last year.

The May 2005 decision sparked widespread debate about women's roles in politics, with some conservative Islamist members of Parliament arguing that women should not be allowed in Parliament without wearing the Islamic hijab, or head covering.

The landmark political participation of women in Kuwait's election Tuesday is part of a regional trend in the Arab Gulf states, where women are growing more publicly vocal about political matters.

Qatar recently announced that it would hold first ever parliamentary elections in 2007, in which women will be allowed to vote. These modest political gains mark a dramatic shift for a region where many women still cannot even leave their homes, take a job, or go to school without the permission of their father or husband.

But though Kuwait's new law was a victory for women activists who had fought for suffrage for decades, female candidates and voters still face obstacles.

Khader's fellow female candidate, 32-year-old chemical engineer Jenan Al-Bousheri, has taken a modest approach to her campaign, refusing to visit the all-male diwaniyas, or gathering places. Another female politician, Ayesha Al-Reshaid, who already announced plans to run for parliament in 2007 and has visited male diwaniyas, recently received a death threat warning her to stop campaigning.

Ms. Bousheri, who wears the Islamic hijab and has worked for the municipality for 10 years, says she doesn't feel threatened but instead is simply being respectful of the country's conservative nature. In addition to not visiting the diwaniyas, she refused to include her photo on campaign billboards, which could be considered indecent.

"It's a new situation in Kuwait. I don't want to put [up] my pictures. Maybe in the next two years or three years, the situation will be different ... I can put it [photos] but it's my decision," she says.

Early morning turnout at the polling stations was modest. Each station included an entrance for men and for women. Female monitors had been appointed by the electoral authorities to check the identity of female voters wearing abaya and niqab (face covering).

Kuwait TV said the polls marked an "historic day" for the country. Kuwait's Prime Minister Sheikh Nasser Al-Sabah praised the elections, visiting polling stations in the predominately Shia area of Rumaythia just south of downtown Kuwait City.

The Municipal Council has 16 members, 10 elected and six appointed by the government. The local government body wields considerable power across the nation, approving building, construction, and road projects.

The seat became vacant following the death of the late Amir Sheikh Jaber Al-Sabah and the appointment of a new government by the new Amir Sheikh Sabah Al-Ahmed Al-Sabah. Abdullah Al-Muhailbi, the Municipal Council member representing the fifth district of Rumathiya, Salmiya, was appointed Minister of Municipality in the new government.

In addition to the two female candidates, six male candidates competed for the seat. Women made up 57 percent of the 28,000 eligible voters for the fifth constituency.

Speaking at the polls, Khader told reporters that the elections showed the country and the world the capabilities of local women.

"This is the first time Kuwaiti women can show the men that we are capable. It is important that we do our best and leave the outcome of the polls to God," she said.

• Material from the wires was used in this report.

http://news.yahoo.com/s/csm/ofirst
 
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