Polls Open In Iraq Amid Violence
Insurgents attacked three polling stations in Baghdad during Iraq's constitutional referendum on Saturday, wounding two policemen and a civilian, police said.
Violence also occurred in Ramadi, a city west of Baghdad, and near the southern city of Basra, but no injuries were reported.
In the first attack in Iraq's capital, a roadside bomb exploded near a polling station in the western area of Amiriyah as it opened at 7 a.m., wounding two policemen, said police Lt. Mohammed Kheyon. No voters were there yet, he said.
At 8:30 a.m., a small rocket exploded near a polling station in Azamiyah, northern Baghdad, slightly wounding one civilian, said police Lt. Thaer Mahmoud.
Elsewhere, in the nearby area of Kazemiyah, a mortar round fell near a polling station at 9 a.m., but it did not explode, said police Maj. Falah al-Mhamadawi.
In Ramadi, 70 miles west of Baghdad, fighting erupted at about 7 a.m. between a small group of insurgents and U.S. troops patrolling the mostly empty streets of the city, said police 1st. Lt. Mohammed Al-Obaidi. No injuries were immediately reported.
South of Basra, three armed men attacked an empty polling station at 3 a.m. and were caught and arrested, said police Capt. Mushtaq Kadim.
Sunni-led insurgents had vowed to wreck Saturday's referendum at about 6,000 polling stations across Iraq. In the 19 days before the voting, nearly 450 people were killed by insurgents using suicide car bombs, roadside bombs and drive-by shootings.
As the polls opened, a few people were seen walking down empty streets of Baghdad heavily guarded by Iraqi soldiers and police to schools where polling stations were fortified with concrete barriers against attacks by Sunni-led insurgents determined to wreck the vote.
President Jalal Talabani and Prime Minister Ibrahim al-Jafaari cast ballots in Baghdad's heavily fortified Green Zone, where Iraq's parliament and the U.S. Embassy are based.
"With the polls open and insurgent attacks in parts of Baghdad, the measure of success of the referendum will depend in part on Sunni participation in the vote," reports CBS News Foreign Affairs Analyst Pamela Falk.
"With confidence in a unified Iraqi state at a low ebb," Falk adds, "there is a lot resting on the referendum to replace insurgency with political participation."
In related developments:
On Friday, the lights went out just after Iraqis finished their sunset meal ending the day's Ramadan fast. Huge swaths of Baghdad went black. Surrounding towns were covered in darkness. As the hours without power dragged on, water began to run out in some homes.
Sunni-led insurgents found a way to strike Friday on the eve of at Iraq's landmark vote on a new constitution despite the heavy clampdown imposed in towns and cities around the country by Iraqi and U.S. forces to assure Iraqis that it is safe to go to the polls.
Still, it was not a suicide bombing or a car bomb ripping through a market, as has happened in days leading up to the vote — suggesting security measures may have hampered militants from operating in the cities.
Instead, they hit 180 miles north of Baghdad, knocking out electricity towers that carry the lines through the unprotected countryside. Electricity Ministry workers were rushing to repair the damage and restore power, and by midnight — six hours after the lights went out — electricity was returning to parts of Baghdad.
The ministry could not guarantee all would be back to normal by the time polls open Saturday. That will not affect the actual casting of votes — which is done by paper ballots, not machines — but the strike could intimidate some Iraqis from going to the polls.
For most of the day, Iraqis remained home, with the streets of the Iraqi capital almost empty hours before a 10 p.m. curfew and the country sealed off from the outside world as borders and airports were closed ahead of the vote.
In recent weeks, Sunni-led insurgents have waged a campaign of violence that killed hundreds, hoping to scare Iraqis from voting on the constitution.
The approximately 140-article charter — hammered out after months of bitter negotiations — is supported by a Shiite-Kurdish majority but has split Sunni Arab ranks after last-minute amendments designed to win support among the disaffected minority.
In Friday sermons across the nation, the message from Shiite pulpits was an unequivocal "yes," but it was not so clear-cut in Sunni Arab mosques — varying from "yes," "no" and "vote your conscience."
Insurgents, meanwhile, detonated a bomb outside the Sunni Islamic Party's office in central Baghdad, then set fire to the party's main office in Fallujah. Nobody was injured in what were apparently a symbolic attacks against that group's recent decision to support the charter.
Saturday's referendum, a key stop in Iraq's passage to democratic rule that the U.S. hopes will pave the way for withdrawing foreign troops, takes place as American and Iraqi forces battle an enduring Sunni-led insurgency in Baghdad and areas to the west and north.
"Besides Allah, we need this constitution to protect us," said Rajha Abdul-Jabar, a 49-year-old Sunni Arab mother of five married to a Kurdish dentist. "I, my husband and our children will go and vote yes tomorrow," she said in the small convenience store she runs.
Kurds, a sizable minority that is mainly Sunni, fully support the charter.
Jameel Safar, a 30-year-old Kurd in Baghdad, said the charter will safeguard Iraq's unity, but later added: "The Kurds are entitled to everything. We have a right to our own nation like everyone else."
Tens of thousands of Iraqi army troops and policemen, meanwhile, formed security rings around the nation's estimated 6,000 polling stations and set up checkpoints on highways and inside cities.
The capital's streets were virtually deserted by late afternoon. Most shops did not open at all. Those that did closed early. Lines of cars a mile long waiting to fill up at gas stations provided one of the few signs of normalcy.
Ratification of the constitution requires approval by a majority of voters nationwide.
However, if two-thirds of voters in any three of Iraq's 18 provinces vote "no," the constitution will be defeated and Sunni Arab opponents have a chance of swinging the ballot in four volatile provinces — Anbar, Nineveh, Salahuddin and Diyala.
Iraq's Kurdish President Jalal Talabani and Shiite Prime Minister Ibrahim al-Jaafari appeared on television late Friday to make last-minute appeals for a "yes" vote.
Most of Iraq's Shiites, about 60 percent of an estimated 27 million population, were expected to approve the charter, especially after Shiite spiritual leader Grand Ayatollah Ali al-Sistani called on followers to do so.
In an effort to familiarize voters with the draft, local TV stations aired readings of amendments adopted this week, too late to be included in the U.N.-printed text distributed to Iraqis.
Those amendments persuaded the Iraqi Islamic Party, the country's largest Sunni Arab political group, to drop its opposition to the draft and call on its supporters to vote in favor of the constitution. The move split Sunni Arab ranks and boosted the chances for the charter's passage.
The minority, which had been dominant under Saddam, opposes a federalist system enshrined in the constitution that will let Shiites and Kurds form mini-states in the south and north. The draft was passed despite Sunni objections, but the issue remains.
Most Sunni Arabs see the draft as a recipe for the eventual breakup of Iraq, saying it gives provincial governments too much control over natural resources, including oil, and does not sufficiently assert the country's Arab identity. The amendments endorsed by the Shiite-Kurdish dominated parliament on Wednesday addressed some Sunni Arab concerns, but not the key ones on federalism and Arab links.