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Despite being proclaimed a great success,
Iraq's landmark elections on Sunday have sparked significant
complaints from the Christian communities both in Iraq and in
the United States.
Thursday, Feb. 3, 2005
Christian Assyrians
Face Obstacles in Iraqi Elections
The Christian Post
Kenneth Chan
Despite being proclaimed a great success,
Iraq's landmark elections on Sunday have sparked significant
complaints from the Christian communities both in Iraq and in
the United States.
According to a report published yesterday
by the Alabama-based Decatur Daily News, Christian Assyrians-which
include members of the Assyrian Church of the East (Nestorian),
the Chaldean Catholic Church of Babylon, and the Syrian Orthodox
Church-claim that Kurdish officials in North Iraq blocked the
delivery of ballot boxes from Assyrian-dominated villages, leaving
many Assyrians disenfranchised. They also claim that election
officials placed U.S. voting locations in areas that maximized
the distance expatriate Assyrians had to travel.
Susan Patto, chief of staff to the secretary
general of the Assyrian Democratic Movement in Iraq, said officials
failed to deliver ballot boxes to five towns in the Ninevah Plain
of Northern Iraq-all predominantly populated by Christian Assyrians.
"The people of those areas went
to vote. When they found there were no boxes, they headed to
our centers," Patto said, according to the Decatur Daily.
Simon George, co-director of an Assyrian
satellite television station, gave a similar report, saying he
received "at least 100 calls" from Assyrians complaining
about being deprived of the vote in Christian villages around
the northwestern Iraqi city of Mosul.
The Decatur Daily reported that Patto
and others in her organization contacted officials in Mosul,
but were told that the security situation prevented delivery
of the vote boxes. Baghdad officials then instructed election
personnel in Arbil to deliver the boxes, but they failed to do
so.
After the election hours ended Sunday,
Patto said a U.S. helicopter delivered four boxes, and that election
officials instructed local officials to permit three hours of
voting Monday morning to make up for Sunday's missing ballot
boxes.
However, "the next morning people
headed again for the centers, but there were no staff, no ballots
and no ink-just the boxes," Patto reported.
The Assyrians who had gathered to vote
waited until noon before giving up, she continued, at which time
they began a demonstration.
Patto also said that while other Assyrian-populated
towns had ballot boxes, there was an inadequate supply of ballots.
She estimated voting irregularities prevented 50,000 Assyrians
from voting.
Meanwhile in the U.S., where many Iraqi
Americans were not be able to vote in the Iraqi election as a
result of the decision to limit polling places, members of the
Assyrian community also expressed their complaints.
According to a statement made earlier
this month by Nina Shea, the director of Freedom House's Center
for Religious Freedom, the problem stemmed from the decision
of the International Organization of Migration (IOM)-the intergovernmental
body contracted to carry out the operation-to limit polling places
in the U.S. to five with only one of these located west of the
Mississippi, namely Los Angeles. The other four cities include
Nashville, Chicago, Detroit, and Washington.
Frederick Aprim, who lives in an Assyrian
community in California, said the the five U.S. polling locations
were chosen with deference to expatriate Kurdish populations,
but failed to locate polls close to larger Assyrian communities.
Although about 38,000 Assyrians live
in the northern half of California, the closest polling place
was in Southern California, the Decatur Daily reported.
Aprim said he had to travel 800 miles,
round-trip, to the Los Angeles polling site to register for the
election and had to repeat the trip a few days later to vote.
The voting process, which extended over
a period of two weeks, started on Jan. 17 with a seven-day registration
period, while the actual voting itself took place between Jan.
28 and 30.
"Many Assyrians got discouraged
from making the long trip," Aprim said, according to the
Decatur Daily. "Many elderly could not make the trip. Many
(poor Assyrians) could not make the trip. Assyrians lost so many
votes because of this unfair distribution of voting centers."
Aprim said the blocked votes would prevent
Assyrian representation from Ninevah Plain in the Iraqi Transitional
National Assembly, the political body that will determine if
the Iraq constitution adopts Islam as the new Iraq's official
religion.
Patto added that the blocked votes hurt
not just Iraqi Christians, but Iraq as a whole.
"It is not just the number of seats
(on the National Assembly). We want to establish a new country
that believes in human rights and democracy, and (in which) people
are equal and have the same rights," Patto said.
"We want to build it together with
all Iraqis."
Since the expulsion of Saddam Hussein
last year, Iraq's Christian community of 700,000 has grown increasingly
anxious at the rise of Islamic fundamentalism.
According to the secretary general of
the Assyrian Democratic Movement, more than 100 Christians had
been murdered after the U.S.-led war, and about 200 more have
died in the general violence that has gripped Iraq. Meanwhile
around 15,000 to 40,000 of Iraq's 700,000 Christians have fled
to neighboring Jordan and Syria, since the recent wave of church
bombings began last year in August.
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