BAGHDAD,
April 1 (IslamOnline.net) - A number of Iraqi parties and religious
leaders tabled a draft constitution to act as alternative to the
transitional law signed last month by the U.S.-picked Governing Council
and blessed by occupation authorities.
More
than 118 political, tribal and military groups - with no representation
in the council - met in Baghdad late on Wednesday, March 31, to probe
the alternative measure, calls for handing over power to a
“constituent assembly” instead.
The
attendees said the old constitution - called the transitional
administrative law - is lacking serving no interests of the Iraqis.
The
new draft law states that the permanent constitution could be approved
in a general referendum with the nod of 75 percent of at least 50
percent of those eligible voters.
Clauses
in the original draft reportedly stipulate that two-thirds of voters in
any three provinces can veto the permanent charter in a referendum. The
Kurds' self-rule region includes three provinces, raising fears that
they could control the fate of the whole country.
The
alternative law made no change to the clause providing for a federal
state with two official languages, where Islam will be a source of
legislation but not the basis for it.
It
calls for the president of the country to be also the commander of its
armed forces - against the clause of the original draft which says the
army should be under the occupation forces.
The
alternative law was discussed in the conference, sponsored by Al-Sharif
Bin Ali, the leader of the Constitutional Monarchy Movement for Iraq.
The
proposed draft stipulates the government should include a constituent
assembly, a presidency council, a cabinet which also have authority over
the judicial body.
‘Confusing’
The
participants launched a scathing attack against the council-approved law
for leaving the role of the army or its mission shrouded in vagueness.
“It
is disconnected and confusing as to the mission of the army,”
brigadier Mahmoud Ezzat told IslamOnline.net.
Ezzat
said that the alternative law clarified the role of the army, including
the approval of the legislature as a precedent to deploying troops
outside the country.
Ibrahim
Al-Basri, of the Iraq Victims Society, said the law drafted by the
Governing Council, whose members he stressed are selected by the
governing council, would end in the “dustbin of history”.
“The
genuine law is the one made by the Iraqis themselves,” Basri said.
The
basic law, which lays the foundations for direct elections before the
end of January 2005, came under fire after U.S. civil administrator Paul
Bremer said a few days before the jovial signing ceremony that he could
veto the country's temporary constitution if it did not fit the
“American vision” of democracy.
“Our
position is clear, and the text that is in there now is as I say. It
can't become law until I sign it,” he has said.
IGC
members and U.S. occupation officials had indicated the interim
constitution may end up offering general guidelines, but leave the
details on the biggest and thorniest issues for the writers of a
permanent charter.
Comprising
more than 60 articles, it enshrines values like freedom of speech and
religion and is a big step in clearing the way for the June 30 transfer
of sovereignty from the U.S. military to an interim Iraqi authority.
Although
in principle the draft accepted the concept of a federal state, the
question of self-rule for the Kurdish minority would only be decided
finally by a future elected national assembly.