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DEMOCRACY
Iraq political row threatens future polls
by Staff Writers
Baghdad (AFP) Aug 29, 2012

Obama goes social with Reddit online chat
Washington (AFP) Aug 29, 2012 - President Barack Obama reinforced his image as the social media president Wednesday as he took questions from the public in an online chat on the Reddit website.

As Republicans gathered for the nominating convention in Florida, Obama chatted about hurricane relief efforts, the space program and Internet freedom in a wide-ranging discussion.

"Hey everybody - this is barack," he wrote.

"Just finished a great rally in Charlottesville, and am looking forward to your questions. At the top, I do want to say that our thoughts and prayers are with folks who are dealing with Hurricane Isaac in the Gulf."

Obama ignored a wide range of chatter and questions such as "Do you like cats?" while responding in several important political areas.

"Internet freedom is something I know you all care passionately about; I do too," he said.

"We will fight hard to make sure that the internet remains the open forum for everybody -- from those who are expressing an idea to those to want to start a business."

The conversation highlighted Obama's wide-ranging use of social media. Last year, he participated in a "Twitter Town Hall" from the East Room of the presidential mansion.

And he promoted the event with a tweet from his verified Twitter account, writing: "Hey, everyone: I'll be taking your questions online today. Ask yours here:"

Some participants appeared skeptical or joked about the Reddit appearance.

"For proof, did he send you a picture of him holding a dated index card? Or did the Secret Service land a helicopter on your house?" one user wrote.

To which another replied -- in a mocking reference to some who still question Obama's nationality: "He faxed a copy of his birth certificate."


A bitter row between Iraq's political blocs is threatening the future independence of the country's election commission and is casting doubt on whether provincial polls due next year will be held on time.

Parties have been locked in stalemate for months over the selection of board members for Iraq's Independent High Electoral Commission (IHEC), with the dispute leaving many to doubt whether those chosen will be able to exercise any independence whatsoever with provincial elections looming.

"Definitely, they (board members) will not be independent," said Mahmud Othman, an independent Kurdish lawmaker. "It's a bad way to build institutions, but that's what is going on."

Hamed al-Mutlak, another MP, admitted that while politicians wanted IHEC to be independent, "unfortunately, this is what is happening now."

"It's not ideal," added the member of the mostly Sunni-backed Iraqiya bloc.

The dispute stems from a months-long row between Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki's bloc and opponents, all of whom are members of a unity government.

Maliki's rivals accuse him of brandishing an authoritarian streak and have pushed, unsuccessfully, to withdraw confidence from his government.

For his part, the premier says he is being restricted from enacting policies by an unwieldy coalition.

"This is no longer about an independent electoral commission," said a Western diplomat who spoke on condition of anonymity. "You cannot look at the IHEC issue in isolation... The consequences could be bigger."

"IHEC hasn't been picked yet, so we don't know how it will operate. But the spat right now suggests it will operate on a sectarian basis."

After months of screening and interviews, MPs and officials managed in May to whittle a field of 7,200 candidates down to 60 finalists for nine commissioner posts.

Since then, no agreement has been reached on who should fill the vacancies with disputes centring around how to ensure the commission reflects Iraq's sectarian, as well as political, composition.

The UN has been so concerned with the protracted dispute that it issued a statement on August 5 in which special envoy Martin Kobler warned further delays "would pose a serious threat to the democratic process in Iraq."

"We want to maintain the electoral date, that is March 2013," Kobler told AFP. "And for good elections, you need a strong IHEC. A strong IHEC needs time to organise elections."

--- 'Nothing independent in Iraq' ---

-------------------------------------

Matters have been further complicated by proposals to expand the board from nine to 15 members in order to accommodate more parties' chosen candidates.

"We call it consensus, but really it's sharing," said Othman, alluding to various parties lobbying to choose particular IHEC board members. "If it will be not independent, that means the elections will not be credible."

Were the current nine-member framework to persist, the commissioners would likely break down as four Shiites, two Sunni Arabs, two Kurds and one Christian, according to diplomats and lawmakers.

Within those groupings, further fragmentation would occur along party lines -- on the Shiite side, for example, Maliki's State of Law alliance would choose at least one commissioner, the movement loyal to anti-US cleric Moqtada al-Sadr would select one, and another Shiite bloc would choose another.

A similar distribution would be implemented if the IHEC board were expanded to 15, though with greater representation for smaller parties.

As a result, diplomats have voiced concern that commissioners will not be independent, and point to national elections due in 2014 as a key marking point for parties to count on their loyalty.

Further ammunition came through on Tuesday for those who argue IHEC has become politicised when the outgoing commission chief and two other board members were handed suspended prison sentences.

Faraj al-Haidari told AFP that he and two others received one-year suspended sentences, effectively barring them from public office for life.

"During this process, they (the finalists) are lobbying to get support," said one diplomat with experience in advising countries on polls. "If they were independent before, they will not be independent at the end of the process."

"There is nothing independent in Iraq ... so why do we think that the electoral administration is going to be an oasis, surrounded by partisan institutions?"

"It's like playing football, but because nobody scores, you change the rules to let people use their hands -- fine, but don't call it football. If you change (the IHEC board) from nine to 15 only because you need to include all the political parties, then don't call it an independent election commission."

The diplomat warned that IHEC would require at least six months to organise elections, putting planned provincial council polls due in March 2013 in doubt.

Complicating matters is the fact that MPs are considering an amendment to the law governing IHEC that would require its staff reflect the population distribution of Iraq's 18 provinces, meaning countless trained election workers would be fired.

This, the diplomat said, could extend the timeline to two years.

"If it slips a couple months, that's OK," said the Western diplomat who raised concerns IHEC could operate on a sectarian basis. "But if it slips into next summer? I don't know."

"If I was to put money on whether provincial council elections are going to be held on time, I would say probably not."

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Myanmar moves to welcome back expatriates
Yangon, Myanmar (UPI) Aug 29, 2012 - Myanmar has lifted a ban on more than 2,000 of its citizens, including journalists, allowing those living abroad to return home.

A brief announcement in the state-run New Light of Myanmar newspaper said 2,082 of 6,165 "blacklisted persons" have been cleared as part of the country's move toward a more democratic society.

"In the past, companies and persons from all fields including media were blacklisted and banned by the government in the national interest," the New Light report said.

"But the government is lifting the ban on them in accordance with the reforming system."

The report gave no other details of the decision, such as who are the people and why they had been blacklisted.

Blacklisted people living in Myanmar are free to travel abroad, the BBC reported.

People blacklisted include government critics, foreign journalists and public sector workers who went abroad during decades of military rule which ended after a national election in November 2010.

The new government of ex-junta members took office in January last year.

Many Western countries initially called the election process and result fraudulent at the time but moves toward a more open society by Thein Sein, former junta prime minister and now Myanmar's civilian president, have been welcomed.

Blacklisted people have included actress Michelle Yeoh, who played Myanmar's pro-democracy leader Aung San Suu Kyi in the film "The Lady." Also, Benedict Rogers, who wrote the biography of former military leader Than Shwe, has been blacklisted, the BBC said.

The wording of the announcement in New Light suggests that the move is primarily for getting expatriates to return home, the Irrawaddy news Web site, run by expatriate Myanmar journalists operating in Chiang Mai, Thailand, said.

Even so, the government move was welcomed by a former political prisoner, Ko Ko Gyi, a leader of the 88 Generation Students group, a pro-democracy group set up in 2005. It took its name from a series of student protests against the military dictatorship in 1998.

"We can say that taking names off of the blacklist is an improvement," Ko Ko told Irrawaddy.

However, former political prisoners must wait a year from their release before they can get a passport, he said.

"They discriminate against us, even though we have the same rights as other citizens. They released us from prison, but they still shackle our feet," Ko Ko said.

In October the government announced a major prisoner amnesty that included the release of up to 200 political prisoners among some 6,000 inmates overall released.

But many more political prisoners remain in jail, the United Nations said at the time, as well as the country's Human Rights Commission that the government created last year.

Western governments consider the release of political prisoners essential for improved relations with Myanmar, which for years was a political outcast because of its military governments.



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