Briefly: International
Iraq reverses poll rules change
Iraq’s parliament made a U-turn Wednesday over changes in the law governing next week’s referendum on a new constitution, partly reversing a provision that would have made it more difficult to reject the charter.
The move, under strong pressure from the United Nations, came only three days after MPs had changed the rules in a way that also drew sharp criticism from the increasingly alienated Sunni Arab minority.
On Sunday, they approved new rules specifying that while a simple majority of those turning out to vote was needed to approve the charter, rejection would require two-thirds of registered voters in at least three provinces.
In effect, for the referendum to pass, only half of those who vote must tick the Yes box, the assembly confirmed.
However, Shia and Kurdish legislators, aiming to make a No victory even harder, opted for a wider definition of “voter”, based on registered, rather than actual, voters.
After a brief debate - and with only about half of its 275 members present - the Assembly voted 119 to 28 to restore the original voting rules for the referendum, which will take place Oct. 15.
With low turnout expected in the provinces where Sunni Arabs predominate, because of poor security conditions, this would have given the No side no serious chance of blocking the draft.
More than 14m Iraqis are registered to vote in the referendum, following the additional registrations of 1m voters in the past month. Registrations were rising markedly in the three provinces dominated by Sunni Arab populations.
Kurd-Shiite clash looms
Iraq’s Kurdish president has called on the country’s Shiite prime minister to step down escalating a political split between the two factions that make up the government.
President Jalal Talabani has accused the Shiite-led United Iraqi Alliance, which holds the majority in parliament, of monopolizing power in the government and refusing to move ahead on a key issue for Kurds, the resettlement of Kurds in the northern city of Kirkuk.
“The time has come for the United Iraqi Alliance and the Kurdistan coalition to study Prime Minister Ibrahim al-Jaafari’s stepping aside from his post,” said Azad Jundiyani, a spokesman for Talabani’s Patriotic Union of Kurdistan.
“This is for the benefit of the political process.”
Jundiyani would not say whether the Kurds would withdraw from the government if the Shiite alliance does not back them in removing al-Jaafari. Talabani has made indirect threats to withdraw from the coalition if Kurdish demands are not met.
The two blocs have been the bedrock of the temporary government. Its collapse would add a new layer of political instability and underline how struggles for power are undermining efforts to get Iraq’s fractious communities to work together in a new political system.(AP)
Darfur peace talks underway
The Sudanese government and two rebel movements fighting in the war torn Darfur region began substantive peace talks aimed at bringing to an end a 30-month-old civil war which has left 300,000 dead, as the African Union called for an end to a recent upsurge in violence.
“We cannot understand the repeated acts of banditry in Darfur,” AU conference chairman Salim Ahmed Salim admonished government and rebel delegates, as he declared open the plenary stage of the dialogue in the Nigerian capital Abuja.
Last week the head of the African Union’s ceasefire monitoring team in Darfur accused the government of supporting an attack by an armed militia on villages and displaced persons’ camps in north Darfur which left around 44 people dead.
The government has firmly denied involvement in the attack, and said Monday that it remained committed to the dialogue in Abuja.
Spokesmen for Darfur’s rebel groups - the Sudanese Liberation Movement (SLM) and the Justice and Equality Movement - thanked the AU monitors for their criticism of the alleged government attacks and called on the international community to step up pressure on Khartoum.
Salim told delegates that talks on power-sharing would begin on Monday and continue until around October 10. Talks on security arrangements are scheduled to begin on October 15 and this round of negotiations is expected to end around October 20, he said.
The latest round of the year-old conference began on September 15, but delegates have so far been divided into groups discussing side issues and setting the conference agenda.(AFP)
Japan to cut UN contribution
With its prospects for obtaining a permanent seat on the Security Council fading, Japan is to seek to reduce its contribution to the United Nations by up to a quarter, press reports said.
Japan will propose an up to five percentage point cut in its contribution, currently 19.5 percent of the UN budget, when negotiations for countries’ portions of 2007-2009 funding start next March, the Nihon Keizai Shimbun said.
Japan, whose contribution in dollar terms is second only to the United States (22 percent), wants to show it will refuse to shoulder the financial burden without a say on the powerful council, the economic daily said.
A bid by Japan and its partners in the so-called G4 group - Brazil, Germany and India - to secure permanent council membership has stalled in the face of opposition from the United States and China and insufficient support from the 53-member African bloc.
Japan has repeatedly threatened to slash its contribution to the UN.
The Sankei Shimbun reported last week that Japan planned to ask China and Russia, which have veto power on the Security Council, to hike their contributions while cutting its own.
Foreign Minister Nobutaka Machimura, in an interview published last week with The Times of London, said Japan’s share of the UN budget was “disproportionately big.”
He also criticized the US contribution, saying “contribution basically should be in proportion to GDP - based on that the US should be bearing about 30 percent.”(AFP)
Bali bombings condemned
Region governments and world powers this week condemned Saturday’s suicide bombings on the Indonesian resort island of Bali and offered help to overcome the latest in a string of terrorist attacks in the country over the past three years.
Suicide bombers wearing explosive vests targeted tourist resorts on Bali with coordinated attacks that devastated three crowded restaurants on Saturday night, killing at least 25 people and injuring 101.
In an outpouring of support, Australia offered medical and police aid. Britain sent an emergency assistance team, and the United States and New Zealand pledged to help in any way possible to catch the terrorists.
White House spokeswoman Erin Healy said the U.S. government was ready to assist in any way.
“The United States stands with the people and government of Indonesia as they work to bring to justice those responsible for these acts of terrorism,” Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice said.
U.N. Secretary General Kofi Annan called it a “cowardly attack.”
Singapore Foreign Minister George Yeo said the attack is “a reminder that although weakened, terrorist groups remain a threat to our societies.”
New Zealand Prime Minister Helen Clark said such “callous and cold-blooded” acts “are an affront to humanity.”
No one claimed responsibility for the attacks. But suspicion fell on the al-Qaida linked militant group Jemaah Islamiyah, which officials say was also behind the Oct. 12, 2002 bombings in Bali which killed 202 people.(AP)
India, Pakistan sign ballistic missile accord
India and Pakistan signed an agreement on Monday making it obligatory for either country to notify the other at least 72 hours before testing ballistic missiles within a 40-km radius of the International Boundary and the Line of Control (LoC).
The pact, which was reached after months of discussions, was signed in Islamabad in the presence of External Affairs Minister K. Natwar Singh and his Pakistani counterpart, Khurshid Mehmood Kasuri.
Indian Foreign Secretary Shyam Saran and his Pakistani counterpart, Riaz Mohammad Khan, signed the agreement after a 90-minute meeting of the Ministers in which the status of the composite dialogue was reviewed.
The pre-notification agreement entails the countries to provide each other notification before undertaking any surface-to-surface ballistic missile test.
Both sides are now examining a draft Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) on measures to reduce the risks of accidental or unauthorised use of nuclear weapons.
“The talks went off in a very cordial atmosphere,” Mr. Kasuri told reporters at the Foreign Office. All the eight subjects listed in the composite dialogue format, including Kashmir, came up for scrutiny.
Pakistan laid emphasis on quickening the pace of negotiations, particularly on settlement of the Kashmir dispute, without getting into specifics. The Indian response was that dialogue covered all outstanding issues, and New Delhi expected a conducive atmosphere to continue the process.
An MoU establishing communication links between the Coast Guard and the Pakistan Maritime Security Agency (PSMA) was also signed.(The Hindu)
Iraq’s parliament made a U-turn Wednesday over changes in the law governing next week’s referendum on a new constitution, partly reversing a provision that would have made it more difficult to reject the charter.
The move, under strong pressure from the United Nations, came only three days after MPs had changed the rules in a way that also drew sharp criticism from the increasingly alienated Sunni Arab minority.
On Sunday, they approved new rules specifying that while a simple majority of those turning out to vote was needed to approve the charter, rejection would require two-thirds of registered voters in at least three provinces.
In effect, for the referendum to pass, only half of those who vote must tick the Yes box, the assembly confirmed.
However, Shia and Kurdish legislators, aiming to make a No victory even harder, opted for a wider definition of “voter”, based on registered, rather than actual, voters.
After a brief debate - and with only about half of its 275 members present - the Assembly voted 119 to 28 to restore the original voting rules for the referendum, which will take place Oct. 15.
With low turnout expected in the provinces where Sunni Arabs predominate, because of poor security conditions, this would have given the No side no serious chance of blocking the draft.
More than 14m Iraqis are registered to vote in the referendum, following the additional registrations of 1m voters in the past month. Registrations were rising markedly in the three provinces dominated by Sunni Arab populations.
Kurd-Shiite clash looms
Iraq’s Kurdish president has called on the country’s Shiite prime minister to step down escalating a political split between the two factions that make up the government.
President Jalal Talabani has accused the Shiite-led United Iraqi Alliance, which holds the majority in parliament, of monopolizing power in the government and refusing to move ahead on a key issue for Kurds, the resettlement of Kurds in the northern city of Kirkuk.
“The time has come for the United Iraqi Alliance and the Kurdistan coalition to study Prime Minister Ibrahim al-Jaafari’s stepping aside from his post,” said Azad Jundiyani, a spokesman for Talabani’s Patriotic Union of Kurdistan.
“This is for the benefit of the political process.”
Jundiyani would not say whether the Kurds would withdraw from the government if the Shiite alliance does not back them in removing al-Jaafari. Talabani has made indirect threats to withdraw from the coalition if Kurdish demands are not met.
The two blocs have been the bedrock of the temporary government. Its collapse would add a new layer of political instability and underline how struggles for power are undermining efforts to get Iraq’s fractious communities to work together in a new political system.(AP)
Darfur peace talks underway
The Sudanese government and two rebel movements fighting in the war torn Darfur region began substantive peace talks aimed at bringing to an end a 30-month-old civil war which has left 300,000 dead, as the African Union called for an end to a recent upsurge in violence.
“We cannot understand the repeated acts of banditry in Darfur,” AU conference chairman Salim Ahmed Salim admonished government and rebel delegates, as he declared open the plenary stage of the dialogue in the Nigerian capital Abuja.
Last week the head of the African Union’s ceasefire monitoring team in Darfur accused the government of supporting an attack by an armed militia on villages and displaced persons’ camps in north Darfur which left around 44 people dead.
The government has firmly denied involvement in the attack, and said Monday that it remained committed to the dialogue in Abuja.
Spokesmen for Darfur’s rebel groups - the Sudanese Liberation Movement (SLM) and the Justice and Equality Movement - thanked the AU monitors for their criticism of the alleged government attacks and called on the international community to step up pressure on Khartoum.
Salim told delegates that talks on power-sharing would begin on Monday and continue until around October 10. Talks on security arrangements are scheduled to begin on October 15 and this round of negotiations is expected to end around October 20, he said.
The latest round of the year-old conference began on September 15, but delegates have so far been divided into groups discussing side issues and setting the conference agenda.(AFP)
Japan to cut UN contribution
With its prospects for obtaining a permanent seat on the Security Council fading, Japan is to seek to reduce its contribution to the United Nations by up to a quarter, press reports said.
Japan will propose an up to five percentage point cut in its contribution, currently 19.5 percent of the UN budget, when negotiations for countries’ portions of 2007-2009 funding start next March, the Nihon Keizai Shimbun said.
Japan, whose contribution in dollar terms is second only to the United States (22 percent), wants to show it will refuse to shoulder the financial burden without a say on the powerful council, the economic daily said.
A bid by Japan and its partners in the so-called G4 group - Brazil, Germany and India - to secure permanent council membership has stalled in the face of opposition from the United States and China and insufficient support from the 53-member African bloc.
Japan has repeatedly threatened to slash its contribution to the UN.
The Sankei Shimbun reported last week that Japan planned to ask China and Russia, which have veto power on the Security Council, to hike their contributions while cutting its own.
Foreign Minister Nobutaka Machimura, in an interview published last week with The Times of London, said Japan’s share of the UN budget was “disproportionately big.”
He also criticized the US contribution, saying “contribution basically should be in proportion to GDP - based on that the US should be bearing about 30 percent.”(AFP)
Bali bombings condemned
Region governments and world powers this week condemned Saturday’s suicide bombings on the Indonesian resort island of Bali and offered help to overcome the latest in a string of terrorist attacks in the country over the past three years.
Suicide bombers wearing explosive vests targeted tourist resorts on Bali with coordinated attacks that devastated three crowded restaurants on Saturday night, killing at least 25 people and injuring 101.
In an outpouring of support, Australia offered medical and police aid. Britain sent an emergency assistance team, and the United States and New Zealand pledged to help in any way possible to catch the terrorists.
White House spokeswoman Erin Healy said the U.S. government was ready to assist in any way.
“The United States stands with the people and government of Indonesia as they work to bring to justice those responsible for these acts of terrorism,” Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice said.
U.N. Secretary General Kofi Annan called it a “cowardly attack.”
Singapore Foreign Minister George Yeo said the attack is “a reminder that although weakened, terrorist groups remain a threat to our societies.”
New Zealand Prime Minister Helen Clark said such “callous and cold-blooded” acts “are an affront to humanity.”
No one claimed responsibility for the attacks. But suspicion fell on the al-Qaida linked militant group Jemaah Islamiyah, which officials say was also behind the Oct. 12, 2002 bombings in Bali which killed 202 people.(AP)
India, Pakistan sign ballistic missile accord
India and Pakistan signed an agreement on Monday making it obligatory for either country to notify the other at least 72 hours before testing ballistic missiles within a 40-km radius of the International Boundary and the Line of Control (LoC).
The pact, which was reached after months of discussions, was signed in Islamabad in the presence of External Affairs Minister K. Natwar Singh and his Pakistani counterpart, Khurshid Mehmood Kasuri.
Indian Foreign Secretary Shyam Saran and his Pakistani counterpart, Riaz Mohammad Khan, signed the agreement after a 90-minute meeting of the Ministers in which the status of the composite dialogue was reviewed.
The pre-notification agreement entails the countries to provide each other notification before undertaking any surface-to-surface ballistic missile test.
Both sides are now examining a draft Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) on measures to reduce the risks of accidental or unauthorised use of nuclear weapons.
“The talks went off in a very cordial atmosphere,” Mr. Kasuri told reporters at the Foreign Office. All the eight subjects listed in the composite dialogue format, including Kashmir, came up for scrutiny.
Pakistan laid emphasis on quickening the pace of negotiations, particularly on settlement of the Kashmir dispute, without getting into specifics. The Indian response was that dialogue covered all outstanding issues, and New Delhi expected a conducive atmosphere to continue the process.
An MoU establishing communication links between the Coast Guard and the Pakistan Maritime Security Agency (PSMA) was also signed.(The Hindu)