Iraqis brace for constitution vote

Written By DNA Web Team | Updated:

One of Iraq’s main Sunni parties offices were attacked after it called on Iraqis to vote ‘Yes’ in today’s referendum

BAGHDAD: Iraqis prepared on Friday for a referendum on their draft constitution amid a tight security lockdown as rebels launched triple attacks against a Sunni party which backed the text.

Three offices of the Sunni party and the office of the Iraqi Islamic Party, were attacked. Gunmen set fire to the party's office in the western city of Falluja, and ransacked its office in Baiji, north of Baghdad. No injuries were reported. Many Sunni parties oppose the text, and have called on Iraqis to boycott the poll or vote No.

Security is being increased ahead of the referendum. Iraq's borders have been closed and private cars will be banned from Baghdad's roads for the vote on Saturday.

A new nighttime curfew was imposed from Thursday night and a four-day public holiday is under way across the country, shutting government offices and schools. Iraqi army Maj Salman Abdul Yahid said the attack on the Islamic Party offices "was expected because of its new stand toward the referendum".

Alaa Makki, a senior party official, condemned the Baghdad attack, saying the party would "use the political process to fight terrorism and promote stability in Iraq", a news agency reported.

Earlier this week, the Islamic Party said it would encourage Sunnis to support the constitution after Shia and Kurdish political leaders agreed to consider further revisions after elections in December.

Sunni leaders fear the current proposals may lead the country to split, with a Kurdish north and Shia south, depriving Sunnis Arabs of access to the country's oil resources.

Some 15.5 million voters are expected to walk to around 6,000 polling stations to register their view on the charter.

The election commission says it has managed to set up polling stations even in the regions worst affected by violence, including the vast Anbar province, seen as the heartland of the insurgency.

If voters in three of Iraq's 18 provinces muster a two-thirds majority against the constitution, it will fail. The Sunnis are dominant in four provinces and so therefore effectively hold a power of veto if they turn out in large numbers to vote against it.


Draft constitution

Iraq to be federal, parliamentary democracy

Official languages to be Arabic and Kurdish

Official religion to be Islam but religious freedoms guaranteed

Equal rights for all

Independent judiciary

Elections every four years