Posted by
whoyg10395 on Wednesday, November 11, 2009 1:32:43 AM
Baghdad - In an unexpected twist for Iraq's nascent democracy, an
anti-American party is speeding ahead with electoral reform while the
freshwater pearl Iraqi parliament is gridlocked over how to run national elections slated for January.
On
Friday, supporters of radical Shiite cleric Muqtada al-Sadr voted
directly for candidates in a primary poll ahead of national elections,
calling it a milestone in the democratic process. The vote is believed
by Iraqi officials to be the first time that choosing candidates for
any party outside Iraqi Kurdistan has been placed in the
akoya pearl earrings hands of ordinary Iraqis.
"I
can say that the Sadr movement achieved the highest level of
democracy," says Sheikh Salman al-Furaiji, in charge of the Sadr
offices on the Rusafah side of Baghdad, where 53 polling sites were
open on Friday. Some 300,000 registered voters were to vote for almost
700 candidates in south and central Iraq.
But in the national
elections slated for January, it's not certain that citizens across
Iraq will be able to follow suit. The Iraqi parliament is still
wrangling over an election law that would determine whether voters will
be able to vote for individual candidates on an "open list" or retain
the closed-list system of 2005 elections, in which voters are told only
the parties' names and not the candidates.
A closed list would
likely favor incumbent politicians expected to lose support at the
polls for failing to deliver essential services and cut down on
corruption. Iraq's most influential Shiite cleric, Grand Ayatollah Ali
al-Sistani, recently issued a rare public pronouncement urging an open
list for the next elections. And Sadr, who
freshwater pearl ring
has been pursuing his religious education in Iran, has issued a decree
directing followers not to participate in a closed list, some of his
supporters said.
"If parliament does not pass an open list, we
will not vote," says retired government worker Ali al-Lami, one of
hundreds of men who had rolled out prayer rugs for Friday prayers on
closed streets and sidewalks in Sadr City, Baghdad's biggest and
poorest neighborhood. Some of the men brought umbrellas to shield them
from the sun. Others wandered through the crowd spraying the
worshippers with a cooling mist of rose-scented water.
Iron
fences surrounding newly planted grass gleamed with fresh purple paint,
but piles of garbage choked the streets. Electricity here is cut off
for hours each day, and almost half the population has no jobs ¨C a
concern voters wanted candidates to address.
"The most important
thing is for them to provide jobs," says Atheer Mohammad Hashim, a
laborer who dropped out of school in the second grade when his cousin
was executed, his father imprisoned, and their food ration card revoked
under Saddam Hussein. He voted for an official in his neighborhood.