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by Staff Writers Baghdad (AFP) April 15, 2012
The head of Iraq's electoral commission said after his release on Sunday that his detention on suspicion of corruption was due to just one of many often-frivolous court cases brought against the body. Faraj al-Haidari, the head of the Independent High Electoral Commission (IHEC), was released along with Karim al-Tamimi, another member of the body who was detained with him on Thursday, on bail of 15 million Iraqi dinars ($12,500) each, Haidari said. In an interview with AFP in the heavily fortified Green Zone following his release, Haidari said his and Tamimi's arrest "was not a good act, and does not serve the democratic political process." "Insulting IHEC like that harms the political process as a whole, and endangers its independence, and the pressures on IHEC mean a retreat in the democratic political process and even a retreat in elections, he said. Haidari complained that IHEC, which is responsible for organising all elections in Iraq, has been hit with a barrage of court cases. He said that Hanan al-Fatlawi, an MP from Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki's State of Law coalition, had pursued a large number of complaints against IHEC that eventually wound up with the Iraqi judiciary. "For the last 6 months... the judiciary was sending warrants of investigation every day to the employees," Haidari said. "More than 500 employees and IHEC officials went to the courts for that, and 70 percent or 80 percent of those cases were refused by the courts and were considered as trivial, and make no sense," he said. Haidari said the case for which he and Tamimi were detained on Thursday was over bonuses paid to some employees of the property department in Bayaa in south Baghdad who divided land for IHEC. "When those four or five employees finished all the administrative process for the land, IHEC decided to give bonuses for them," of 100,000 to 150,000 Iraqi dinars ($83 to $125) each. The case was dropped several months ago, but Fatlawi appealed it when parliament was discussing an extension of the terms of current IHEC members, which are to expire on April 28, he said. A judge then ruled there was reason to move forward with the case, but Haidari said he believes the bonuses were within IHEC regulations and had received the necessary approvals. Haidari's arrest sparked condemnation from a number of leading Iraqi political factions, which accused Maliki of orchestrating a slide away from the electoral process and towards dictatorship. "The situation is tense among all political factions," Haidari said, adding that the solution is for "State of Law to change its policy toward IHEC specifically, and toward all political factions in general." Maliki has said he was not aware of the arrest operation, but Haidari said he must have known about Fatlawi's actions. "The prime minister knows it was (Fatlawi) who raised those complaints, and he could have prevented her from doing so."
Iraq PM says Syria neutrality best for country Thousands of people have been killed in a crackdown by President Bashar al-Assad's regime on a 13-month uprising against his rule but Iraq has strongly opposed proposals from Gulf states, including Qatar and Saudi Arabia, to arm rebel fighters. "Our policy is not to interfere in the internal affairs (of Syria) and to oppose violence and everything that fuels it, from arming to provocation," Maliki said in the interview to be published on Tuesday, excerpts of which were released in advance. "We found that this policy is the best to preserve our interests," Maliki said, adding: "We should not be tempted by some passing developments to leave this policy, and to lean towards one side or the other." Maliki said that Iraq wants a solution in Syria that prevents further bloodshed. "Iraq gathered all its political and diplomatic capabilities to reach a political solution in Syria that achieves the legitimate goals of the Syrian people and prevents shedding more blood and wars in Syria and the region," he said.
Iraq: The first technology war of the 21st century
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