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Committee Inks Constitution Draft

Members of constitution drafting committee signed the draft constitution Sunday after some amendments, Shiite committee member Khaled al-Attiyah said. Journalists were invited to a mid-afternoon ceremony marking the completion of the draft.

Two Sunni Arab negotiators said Sunday that the Sunni team rejected the final constitution draft which was approved earlier in the day by the full constitution committee.

Mohammed Abed-Rabbou, one of the four principle negotiators on the 15-member Sunni team, said the Sunni officials refused to accept the draft "because the points of disagreement were not amended" to their satisfaction.

Those included proposals to transform Iraq into a federated country and references to Saddam Hussein's Baath Party.

Another Sunni negotiator, Fakhr al-Qaisi, said "the draft was rejected" because of wording about "Iraq's unity, Iraq's Arab identity" and the desigation of Islam as "a main source" of legislation and not the main one.

The Iraqi people will now decide whether to accept the constitution in an Oct. 15 referendum. Five million copies will be circulated nationwide in food allotments each Iraqi family receives monthly from the government.

The amendments were made in hopes of appeasing the Sunni Arab minority, including removing the word "party" from the phrase about Saddam Hussein's Baath Party and allowing the parliament to be elected in December to decide the fate of a committee set up to purge for members.

Before al-Attiyah's comments, Sunni negotiator Sadoun Zubaydi said "this is the end as far as the marginalized groups are concerned" and "as far as the drafting process is concerned.

"We now have to see how to proceed from here," he said.

Zubaydi said he expected the National Assembly to rubber-stamp the proposal. "They have told us it will be rammed through whether we like it or not," he said.

Earlier, in a sign of the deepening crisis, five of the top Sunni Arabs in Iraq's coalition government, including a deputy prime minister, spoke out late Saturday against the draft. They said they objected to 13 provisions in the document.

Although Cabinet members are not directly involved in the constitutional talks, the declaration indicated that Iraq's fragile government could fall apart if the draft proposal drawn up by the Shiite and Kurdish bloc is sent to the voters without the agreement of the Sunni negotiating team.

Sunnis account for only 20 percent of Iraq's 27 million people, but they are in a strong position to derail the constitution. If two-thirds of voters in any three provinces reject the charter in the referendum scheduled for Oct. 15, the constitution will be defeated, and Sunnis have the majority in at least four provinces.

In other developments:

  • Iraq vowed Sunday to arrest the culprits in last week's rocket attack which barely missed a U.S. warship anchored in Jordan's Red Sea port of Aqaba.

    "The Iraqi government will do its best to arrest those people," government spokesman Laith Kubba said Sunday, one day after Jordan said it would ask its eastern neighbor to apprehend three suspected al Qaeda-linked militants who were said to have fled to Iraq after staging the Katyusha rocket attack in the kingdom.

  • The 36 bodies found three days ago in a dry riverbed near the Iranian border are believed to be Sunni Arabs, the government's top Sunni cleric said Sunday.

    Ahmed Abdul Ghafour al-Samarrai, head of the government's Sunni Endowments, said the bodies "are believed to be for people from (Baghdad's northern neighborhood of) Hurriyah and they belong to the Sunni sect." The cleric did not give further details.

  • Nearly a thousand people held at Iraq's Abu Ghraib prison have been released over the past few days in the largest such move to date. A separate group southeast of Baghdad was freed today by Iraqi police.
  • The U.S. Defense Department is ordering 1,500 paratroopers from the 82nd Airborne Division to Iraq to provide security for the scheduled Oct. 15 referendum on the proposed constitution and the December national elections.

    After two months of talks, negotiators for the Shiite-Kurd bloc and the Sunnis remain divided over fundamental issues that include: whether Iraq should be turned into a federal state or decentralized by granting more power to provincial authorities; how the country's oil wealth will be divided; whether members of Saddam' Hussein's banned Baath Party should be purged; and whether Iraq will be considered an Arab or Islamic nation.

    The deadlock in the talks came despite frantic efforts by the United States to secure a political consensus that would hopefully deliver a massive vote in favor of the charter, taking the steam out of the Sunni-led insurgency and enabling a drawdown of U.S. troops to start next year. U.S. Ambassador Zalmay Khalilzad met with various negotiators and parliament's speaker, Hajim al-Hassani, late Saturday trying to broker wording acceptable to the Sunnis.

    "The demands from the Sunni Arabs continued until a very late hour," Jawad al Maliki, a Shiite member of the drafting committee, told state-run Iraqiya TV on Sunday. "They demanded that we do nothing unless we accept all their demands. So we insisted on refusing that."

    CBS News Correspondent Lara Logan reports that al-Hassani denied the negotiations had divided the country but admitted it was dangerous not to have the Sunnis on board.

    "It will certainly give the insurgency more chance to do whatever they want to do and the terrorists will benefit from that," al-Hassani told Logan.

    On Saturday, after a flurry of final proposals and counterproposals for amending the document, the Shiite-Kurdish alliance said it would hand the draft on Sunday to the 275-seat National Assembly. The alliance enjoys an overwhelming majority in parliament due to the Sunni boycott of last elections last January.

    Al-Hassani said Shiites and Kurds sought to address Sunni concerns by offering Friday to put off consideration of federalism's details until after a new parliament is elected in December, when Sunnis are expected to expand on the 17 seats they currently hold. Shiites and Kurds also acknowledged that many members of Saddam's party were not criminals and wouldn't be covered by a charter provision on purging Baathists from government and public life, he said.

    Al-Hassani said he planned to convene the legislature Sunday, a workday here, but no hour was announced. It was not immediately clear whether lawmakers would vote on the alliance's proposal or simply refer it to voters for ratification in the referendum in October.

    Sunni leaders said their people should oppose the charter peacefully by voting "no" in the referendum.

    "The (Sunni) bloc should now convene a general conference to decide how to proceed," Zubaydi said. "Boycotting the referendum and parliamentary elections (in December) would be a lose-lose proposition. Our hope will be in the next parliament that will hopefully be more balanced than this one."

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