BAGHDAD,
October 16 (IslamOnline & News Agencies) - Iraqi President Saddam
Hussein, received a hundred percent vote from this people on Wednesday,
October 16 as a London-based Iraqi opposition group slammed the
referendum as an “illegitimate” event, claiming that terrified
citizens voted out of fear of punishment.
Hussein
did not just win all the votes in Tuesday’s presidential referendum,
all eligible voters turned out too, Agence France-Presse (AFP) reported.
Ezzat
Ibrahim, Saddam’s number two dubbed Saddam the “great leader” and
announced: “The president, leader Saddam Hussein, God preserve him,
has won 100 percent of the vote.”
Ibrahim,
head of the committee supervising the referendum said that 11,445,638
people voted for him, a total turnout.
Anyone
who went round a voting centre would have quickly understood that the
officially “secret” ballot was anything but.
Some
people went to vote and found they had already declared “yes” for
Saddam, others voted in blood, hardly anyone was seen using private
voting booths which were provided, reported AFP.
Even
the president’s elder son Uday had a child vote in his place.
Iraq’s
government had demanded a display of total support for Saddam, the sole
candidate, at a time when Washington is trying to overthrow him and that
is what the ruling Baath Party delivered.
Ibrahim
himself, vice chairman of the Revolution Command Council, had already
announced Tuesday night just as the polls were closing that Saddam had
secured 100 percent of the vote.
“Turnout
was absolute and the yes vote was absolute,” he said, adding “the
people are voting unanimously for their leader.”
Certainly
journalists could not find anyone who voted “no”. “If you want to
say no, you stay at home,” the young man said.
Ibrahim
described the referendum as “a unique experience in the world which
foreigners, for whom 51 percent of the vote is enough to win an
election, cannot explain.”
Non-Iraqis
“cannot understand how a people, all of them, can vote unanimously for
their leader,” he said.
“The
democratic experience in Iraq is different from all others. It does not
exist either in America or Vietnam, to take as examples two countries
with antagonistic political systems.
“It
is all the more unique because not one incident of any type troubled the
voting process.”
The
official Iraqi News Agency did however report that one person had been
wounded in south Baghdad.
In
the last and first referendum in Iraq in 1995, Saddam won an official
99.96 percent of the vote, but 3,052 people officially voted no
On
Tuesday, a London-based Iraqi opposition group slammed the referendum as
an “illegitimate” event, claiming that terrified citizens voted out
of fear of punishment.
“If
you don’t go to vote, they believe you are against the regime,” said
Sharif Ali-Ben al-Hussein, president of the Iraqi National Congress
(INC).
“They
wouldn’t let someone they think is against the regime (go) without
severe punishment.”
Al-Hussein
said food coupons distributed by the government would be withheld from
Iraqis who refused to vote.
An
INC spokesman called the results of Tuesday’s vote, in which the
ruling Baath Party sought to give Saddam a 100-percent success rate,
“illegitimate” and a “joke”.
“Saddam
is a totalitarian dictator, a megalomaniac,” the spokesman, who asked
not to be named, said.
“People
are scared. People will go and vote out of fear of reprisals. They could
lose their ration, be arrested, intimidated.”
The
officials said the vote, in which some Iraqis drew their own blood in
order to mark their ballot, was not an overt sign of defiance in the
face of threats from the United States.
“Iraqis
look forward to having truly free elections with international monitors,
not rigged by the Iraqi secret police,” al-Hussein added.
“The
Iraqis are waiting for the West to liberate them from Saddam Hussein,”
the spokesman added.