Iraqi leaders delay crucial constitutional conference
BAGHDAD: A crucial national meeting of Iraqi leaders scheduled for Friday to resolve constitutional problems was postponed for two days because of an emergency meeting of the Kurdish autonomous parliament.
The delay came against a backdrop of unremitting violence that has killed about 40 military personnel in 10 days, and new Al Qaeda warnings that the United States and Britain risked more death and destruction if they do not leave Iraq and other Muslim lands.
“The meeting of leaders was delayed from today to Sunday in order to allow for a greater number of participants to attend as a large number of people had not received invitations,” a spokesman at President Jalal Talabani’s office said. Talabani had called the meeting to break the deadlock on a new constitution and resolve outstanding questions which constitutional committee members have so far failed to agree. The issues include federalism, official languages, the relation between religion and state, the name of the republic, the rights of women and the question of the oil-rich centre of Kirkuk which Kurds want included in their own autonomous region.
Iraqi leaders have pledged to draft a new constitution by August 15 ahead of a referendum in mid-October, to be followed by elections in mid-December and the inauguration of a new government at the start of 2006.
Mahmud Othman, a Kurdish member of the constitutional committee, told AFP the national conference was delayed because of an emergency meeting Saturday of the Kurdish autonomous parliament to discuss the charter.
Kurdish leader Massud Barzani “cannot come to Baghdad before Sunday” because of the parliamentary meeting, Othman said.
“The leadership in Kurdistan asked for the Kurdish committee members to come back and explain to our parliament what has been discussed in Baghdad,” said Falah Mustafa, a spokesman for Barzani’s Kurdistan Democratic Party.
“We are worried about comments from some on the committee regarding federalism, Kurdish rights, democracy and women’s rights,” Adnan Mufti, head of the Kurdish regional parliament and senior official of Talabani’s Patriotic Union of Kurdistan Party told AFP from Arbil.
He said the Kurds are ready to endorse the charter “if all parties understand that a constitution should be based on rights for all Iraqis, if not we cannot reach an agreement.”
“We are insisting on federalism, there is no way to have a unified Iraq without federalism.”
Mufti hoped others in Baghdad would accede to Kurdish federalist demands, but said three issues could be problematic - the future of Kirkuk, the name of Iraq and the role of Islam. afp
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