BAGHDAD,
June 11, 2005 (IslamOnline.net) – Iraq's Sunni Arabs have threatened
to seek UN arbitration over a deadlock on their representation in the
55-member committee tasked with writing the constitution.
"We
have not received yet a response from the National Assembly but we
will not accept less than 25 members in the constitution-drafting
committee," Adnan Dulaimi, chairman of the Sunni Waqfs body and a
spokesman for Iraqi's Sunnis, told IslamOnline.net on Saturday, June
11.
"If
our demand is snubbed we would seek arbitration," he said, adding
the job requires a fully neutral party such as the United Nations.
Some
150 Sunni delegates stressed on Wednesday, June 8, that Sunni Arabs
should be represented by least 25 people in the constitution-drafting
committee.
They
threatened to suspend their participating in the writing of the new
constitution if their demand was rejected by the 275-member National
Assembly.
Iraqi
President Jalal Talabani on Thursday backed their demand.
"We
decided to include 25 Sunni members in the constitutional drafting
commission with full rights like the other members elected by
parliament," he told reporters.
However,
a Shiite member of the parliamentary committee warned that such a
number may be impractical.
"Bringing
in 25 members would distort the body's balance. We are talking about
adding 13," said MP Ali Dabbagh.
Main
Sunni powers, along with other political groups, shunned the January
general elections election, leaving Shiites and Kurds dominating the
parliament.
Sunnis
running as independents or members of other parties won only 17 seats
in the parliament.
Islam
& Constitution
In
another related development, the Iraqi Islamic Party, the leading
Sunni political power, stressed that the constitution must recognize
Islam as "the main source of legislation" and that there
should be no treaties with the occupier.
"We
are also seeking a compromise acceptable to all Iraqis instead of
mobilizing Sunni Arabs to vote down the draft constitution,"
Ammar Wageih Al-Abidine, the party's media officer, told IOL.
The
constitution-drafting committee has an August 15 deadline but has the
option of announcing a one-off six-month delay by August 1.