Iraq panel reinstates election ban amid Shi'ite ire
BAGHDAD (Reuters) - An Iraqi appeals panel that angered Shi'ite leaders by suspending a ban on candidates accused of links to Saddam Hussein's Baath party until after an election reversed its decision on Sunday, politicians said.
The change came as Shi'ite parties held protests and vowed to purge Baath loyalists. It took some wind out of a furor that has stoked tensions before the March 7 vote, and parliament delayed a planned debate on the issue as a result.
The panel decided it had made a mistake thinking it needed to consider the entire list of nearly 500 candidates instead of just 177 politicians who appealed, said Falah Shanshal, a senior lawmaker. It will examine the appeals before the vote, he said.
The Shi'ite-led government's ire and calls for a campaign against Baathists could lead to a dangerous witchhunt that might reopen sectarian wounds between Sunnis who dominated Iraq under Saddam and the Shi'ite majority just as overall violence fades.
Fanning fears of a Baathist revival might benefit Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki and other Shi'ite Islamist leaders, as it could win back voters who might be leaning toward secular, cross-confessional groups, like ex-prime minister Ayad Allawi's.
"We should not stand here with our hands tied during this sensitive period. We should take revenge for our martyrs, prisoners, the displaced and the homeless left by the former regime," Baghdad provincial governor Salah Abdul-Razzaq, a senior member of Maliki's Dawa party, told protesters.
"We will de-Baathify the Baghdad administration," he said, adding that the Baath party "and its instruments al Qaeda" were behind recent bomb attacks that have killed dozens of Iraqis in Baghdad and in the Shi'ite holy city of Kerbala.
Local government leaders in Basra affiliated with Dawa and the other main Shi'ite blocs, the Supreme Islamic Iraqi Council (ISCI) and anti-American cleric Moqtada al-Sadr's movement, made similar vows at a rally to purge the city of Baath sympathizers.
DOMINATING THE BALLOT
The ban on the candidates imposed by a body controlled by Shi'ite politicians with ties to Iran is dominating the ballot, viewed as a critical juncture as U.S. troops prepare to withdraw and Iraq signs multibillion-dollar deals with oil firms.
The vote could lead to a more stable, if still fragile, democracy or possibly lurch Iraq back into sectarian conflict. The furor has already led to a delay in the start of election campaigning to February 12 from February 7, although that did not stop Sunday's rallies from looking like campaign events.
Shi'ites along with Iraq's minority Kurds were brutally suppressed and often slaughtered by Sunni dictator Saddam.
Sunnis largely boycotted the last national election in 2005 and resentment at their loss of power helped fuel a ferocious insurgency. U.S. officials fear that Sunnis may take up arms again if they feel they are being disenfranchised this time.
The focus on Baathists benefits the ruling Shi'ite parties as it distracts attention from corruption, still creaky public services like power and security breaches that have allowed several major suicide bomb attacks in recent months.
Maliki has staked much of his re-election hopes on being credited for a sharp fall in violence over the past two years.
The Baath spotlight also unites Iraq's Shi'ite factions. That suits Iran, which wants fellow Shi'ites to remain in charge of a neighbor with which it fought an 8-year war.
WaPo
The change came as Shi'ite parties held protests and vowed to purge Baath loyalists. It took some wind out of a furor that has stoked tensions before the March 7 vote, and parliament delayed a planned debate on the issue as a result.
The panel decided it had made a mistake thinking it needed to consider the entire list of nearly 500 candidates instead of just 177 politicians who appealed, said Falah Shanshal, a senior lawmaker. It will examine the appeals before the vote, he said.
The Shi'ite-led government's ire and calls for a campaign against Baathists could lead to a dangerous witchhunt that might reopen sectarian wounds between Sunnis who dominated Iraq under Saddam and the Shi'ite majority just as overall violence fades.
Fanning fears of a Baathist revival might benefit Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki and other Shi'ite Islamist leaders, as it could win back voters who might be leaning toward secular, cross-confessional groups, like ex-prime minister Ayad Allawi's.
"We should not stand here with our hands tied during this sensitive period. We should take revenge for our martyrs, prisoners, the displaced and the homeless left by the former regime," Baghdad provincial governor Salah Abdul-Razzaq, a senior member of Maliki's Dawa party, told protesters.
"We will de-Baathify the Baghdad administration," he said, adding that the Baath party "and its instruments al Qaeda" were behind recent bomb attacks that have killed dozens of Iraqis in Baghdad and in the Shi'ite holy city of Kerbala.
Local government leaders in Basra affiliated with Dawa and the other main Shi'ite blocs, the Supreme Islamic Iraqi Council (ISCI) and anti-American cleric Moqtada al-Sadr's movement, made similar vows at a rally to purge the city of Baath sympathizers.
DOMINATING THE BALLOT
The ban on the candidates imposed by a body controlled by Shi'ite politicians with ties to Iran is dominating the ballot, viewed as a critical juncture as U.S. troops prepare to withdraw and Iraq signs multibillion-dollar deals with oil firms.
The vote could lead to a more stable, if still fragile, democracy or possibly lurch Iraq back into sectarian conflict. The furor has already led to a delay in the start of election campaigning to February 12 from February 7, although that did not stop Sunday's rallies from looking like campaign events.
Shi'ites along with Iraq's minority Kurds were brutally suppressed and often slaughtered by Sunni dictator Saddam.
Sunnis largely boycotted the last national election in 2005 and resentment at their loss of power helped fuel a ferocious insurgency. U.S. officials fear that Sunnis may take up arms again if they feel they are being disenfranchised this time.
The focus on Baathists benefits the ruling Shi'ite parties as it distracts attention from corruption, still creaky public services like power and security breaches that have allowed several major suicide bomb attacks in recent months.
Maliki has staked much of his re-election hopes on being credited for a sharp fall in violence over the past two years.
The Baath spotlight also unites Iraq's Shi'ite factions. That suits Iran, which wants fellow Shi'ites to remain in charge of a neighbor with which it fought an 8-year war.
WaPo
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