Shiite group willing to talk with Sunnis (AP) Updated: 2005-12-24 14:58 About 1,500 complaints have been lodged about the elections, including 40 or
so that the Iraqi election commission said are serious enough to change the
results in certain areas.
The protesting groups have demanded the disbandment of the Independent
Electoral Commission of Iraq, accusing it of covering up ballot box stuffing and
fraud
The prime minister defended the commission Friday, saying the government does
not meddle in its affairs.
"Our victory as a government, our real victory, is that the election process
included all political groups," al-Jaafari said. "Those who have complaints
should contribute to this feeling and to be confident that their complaints will
be listened to."
Religious parties based in Iraq's Shiite majority called on Sunni Arabs to
accept the election results and consider joining a coalition government after
the final results are released in early January.
"We are very close to our Sunni brothers, more than other groups, and with
them we can form a national unity government," said Bahaa al-Din al-Araji, a
senior member of the United Iraqi Alliance.
"These results reflect Iraqi reality and they have to accept this reality,"
he added.
The U.S. Embassy has said it is in the Iraqis' interest to create a
broad-based government.
Political councilor Robert Ford said he was heartened by strong voter turnout
in places such as the Sunni-dominated western province of Anbar, where more than
50 percent voted last week compared to just 2 percent in last January's election
of an interim legislature.
"There is real progress, there is something to build on even in the most hard
Sunni Arab places such as Anbar. We would like a government that capitalized on
that and which fosters a sense of national reconciliation," Ford said.
Washington hopes broader political participation will weaken support among
Sunni Arabs for the Sunni-dominated insurgency, which would strengthen security
and allow U.S. troops to begin leaving.
Rumsfeld said President Bush had authorized new cuts below the
138,000-soldier level that has prevailed for most of this year.
He did not reveal a specific figure, but the top military commander in Iraq
and the U.S. ambassador said in a statement that it would involve two combat
brigades, or about 7,000 soldiers.
"That will bring down the total level from 17 brigades to 15," Gen. George
Casey and Ambassador Zalmay Khalilzad said.
They said the decision is an "indication of the remarkable progress Iraq is
making. It clearly demonstrates the dramatic increase in capabilities of the
Iraqi Security Forces."
The U.S. military said two American soldiers were killed Friday when their
vehicle struck a roadside bomb in Baghdad. It also reported a bomb killed
another soldier in the capital Thursday. No other details were released.
Gunmen attacked an Iraqi army checkpoint in the city of Adhaim in religiously
and ethnically mixed Diyala province, killing eight soldiers and wounding 17, an
Iraqi army officer said on condition he not be identified for fear of reprisal.
In Balad Ruz, 45 miles northeast of Baghdad, a suicide bomber detonated his
explosives belt outside a Shiite mosque, killing four people and wounding eight,
police said. Among the dead was a policeman guarding the
mosque.
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