Final Offer For Iraqi Minorities
Shiite negotiators have proposed a compromise to the Sunnis and Kurds to break the impasse over the new constitution and called it a final offer, a member of the Shiite committee said Friday.
"We have given the latest draft and we hope they respond today," Abbas al-Bayati told The Associated Press. "We cannot offer more than that" concerning federalism and efforts to remove top members of Saddam Hussein's Baath Party from government and political posts.
He said the Shiites had proposed that the parliament that will be elected in December should be given the right to issue a law on the mechanism of implementing federalism. He gave no further details.
On the issue of purging members of Saddam Hussein's Sunni-dominated Baath Party from government jobs and political life, he said it will be up to the next parliament to set a timetable for the work of the Supreme National Commission for de-Baathification. That would presumably involve how long the commission would operate.
But constitution talks have been snagged repeatedly in the past two weeks, and, considering
, the rest of the constitution ratification process promises to be a long and tumultuous, CBS News correspondent Lara Logan reports.President Bush telephoned Shiite leader Abdul-Aziz al-Hakim on Wednesday and urged "consensus" on the draft constitution, the White House confirmed to reporters.
In other developments:
President Bush's urging Shiites to make concessions to Sunni Arabs focused on two key points — federalism and Saddam Hussein's Baath Party. He said it would be necessary to win their support for Iraq's constitution, a Shiite official said Friday following a third extension of the deadline to approve the charter.
U.S. officials have also appealed to the country's powerful Shiite clergy, including Grand Ayatollah Ali al-Sistani, to help resolve the standoff, said Ali al-Adeeb, a Shiite member of the committee drafting the charter.
A Sunni negotiator, meanwhile, pointed the finger at the Kurds, citing their "intransigence" over the issue of federalism, which the Sunnis oppose.
Several Shiite negotiators, expressing frustration with the continued delays, said Thursday there was no need for unanimity or a parliament vote and that the draft approved Monday by them and the Kurds should go to voters in an Oct. 15 referendum without further changes.
The United States, hoping to lure Sunni Arabs away from the insurgency, had pressed the Shiites and Kurds to accept unelected 15 Sunni negotiators on the drafting committee last spring to ensure that the pivotal community was represented. Sunni Arabs form the core of the insurgency.
Parliament speaker Hajim al-Hassani, a Sunni who was elected on the mostly Sunni ticket headed by former President Ghazi al-Yawer, agreed that the law does not require a parliament vote.
Sunni Arabs said federalism, including al-Hakim's demand for a Shiite mini-state in the south, remained the major obstacle. But they said the Kurds were unwilling to budge on that issue in order to protect their own self-ruled region in three northern provinces.
"Federalism is now the core issue. In light of Kurdish intransigence it makes it difficult to hope for a compromise," said Sadoun Zubaydi, a Sunni member of the drafting committee.
Sunni Arabs fear that federalism will lead to the breakup of the country and deprive them of oil wealth, concentrated in the Shiite south and the north, much of it in areas the Kurds rule or want to incorporate.
But Kurds and the majority Shiites bitterly recall decades of oppression at the hands of Saddam's Sunni-dominated dictatorship. They believe federalism is the best way to prevent a new dictator.
Zubaydi said the Sunni delegation had proposed granting the Kurdish north — consisting of three provinces — full federal status, with decentralized local government for the remaining 15 provinces.
The Sunnis want federalism limited to three provinces, while the current draft sets no limit on the number of provinces which could join a federal region. The Kurds oppose measures which would limit the size of self-ruled area because they want to incorporate oil-rich Kirkuk — which contains substantial non-Kurdish populations.
The bitter negotiations, rather than serving to bring the country's disparate ethnic, cultural and religious groups closer together appear instead to be pushing them further apart.
The Shiite alliance and the Kurds together control 221 of the 275 parliament seats and could win easily in a parliamentary vote on the charter, which requires only a majority. And with 60 percent of the population, the Shiites and their Kurdish allies are gambling that the draft would win approval in the referendum.
However, the perception that the Shiites and Kurds pushed through a document unacceptable to the Sunnis could sharpen religious and ethnic tensions.
The Bush administration expressed optimism an agreement would be reached.
"I think if Iraqi leaders say that they need a few days more to complete a historic document that will lay a foundation for a new and free Iraq, I think that that is certainly understandable," State Department spokesman Sean McCormack said after the delay was announced.
Although the constitution requires only a simple majority in the referendum, if two-thirds of the voters in any three of Iraq's 18 provinces vote against it, the charter will be defeated.
Sunni Arabs make up about 20 percent of the national population but form the majority in at least four provinces. Sunni clerics have begun urging their followers to vote down the charter in the referendum if Sunni interests are not served.
If voters reject the constitution, parliament will be dissolved and elections held by Dec. 15 to form a new one. The new parliament would then start drafting a new constitution.