IRAQ A push for delay in voting



The government, however, is moving ahead with plans for Jan. 30 balloting.
BAGHDAD, Iraq (AP) -- Leading Sunni Muslim politicians urged postponement Thursday of the Jan. 30 national elections, and a senior official said the government had agreed to meet outside the country with Saddam Hussein supporters to try to persuade them to abandon the insurgency.
Elsewhere, U.S. troops said they had uncovered the largest weapons cache to date in Fallujah, where Iraqi officials said more than 2,000 people died in the weeklong U.S.-led offensive aimed at curbing the insurgency so that elections could be held nationwide.
The Fallujah siege angered many in the influential Sunni minority, producing calls to boycott the ballot, a move that could cost the new government much-needed legitimacy.
Sunni politician Adnan Pachachi, a former foreign minister and a member of the Iraqi National Council, said delaying the ballot by three months or more would enable political leaders to convince Sunni clerics and others to abandon their boycott call.
"I think that it will not be in the interest of anyone to let large segments of the Iraqi population be completely left out of the political process," Pachachi, leader of the Independent Democrats party, told The Associated Press.
Seven other Sunni parties also demanded a delay in the election, saying they want guarantees that they won't be marginalized in any new government expected to be dominated by rival Shiites.
In a bid toward drawing Sunni support, Foreign Minister Hoshyar Zebari said an Iraqi delegation would meet in Amman, Jordan, with "a number of political opposition movements," including some former Saddam supporters on the "most wanted list," to persuade them to abandon the insurgency and take part in the election.
No date for the meeting with former Baath Party figures was announced, and Zebari did not say who would attend, although he ruled out contacts with "terrorists." He said the meeting was encouraged by Arab governments at this week's international conference on Iraq at the Egyptian resort of Sharm El-Sheikh.
It appeared the contacts were aimed at trying to strike a deal with "nationalist" opposition groups and dividing them from religious extremists such as Al-Qaida-linked terror boss Abu Musab al-Zarqawi, a Jordanian.
However, a statement posted Thursday on an Islamist Web site and purportedly from the Baath Party criticized the Sharm El-Sheikh conference for meddling in Iraqi affairs. It vowed that "the Iraqi armed resistance" would keep fighting "to expel the [American] occupation" and "destroy the agent authority," meaning the Iraqi government.
The authenticity of the statement could not be determined, but it was written in a style routinely used by the party.
Fears of domination
Many Sunni Arabs fear that the Shiites, estimated to form about 60 percent of Iraq's nearly 26 million people, will dominate the new government. Sunni Arabs make up an estimated 20 percent of Iraq's total population and form the core of the insurgency.
Pachachi said if many Sunnis boycott the elections, the result would be an "illegitimate" parliament with "no guarantee that the security situation will improve."
Iraq's Shiite clerical hierarchy, led by Grand Ayatollah Ali al-Sistani, has demanded the election be held as scheduled. However, Lebanon's most senior Shiite cleric also voiced doubts Thursday about the feasibility of a January ballot because of Sunni objections.
"There is a big group on the sectarian and political levels who oppose and will boycott the elections. Therefore, the elections will not represent all sections of the Iraqi people," Grand Ayatollah Mohammed Hussein Fadlallah, an Iraqi-born Lebanese, said in an interview in Beirut.
Nevertheless, the government is pressing ahead with plans for the balloting, the first since the April 2003 collapse of Saddam's regime. Iraq's electoral commission extended until Thursday the deadline for registering political parties in the insurgent-riddled provinces of Salaheddin, Anbar and Mosul to give local politicians time to meet the registration requirement.
The weapons cache, described by the U.S. military as the largest uncovered so far in Fallujah, was discovered Wednesday in the Saad Bin Abi Waqas Mosque, where fugitive rebel leader Abdullah al-Janabi often preached.
Troops discovered small arms, artillery shells, heavy machine guns, and anti-tank mines inside the mosque, the U.S. military said.
U.S. forces also uncovered what may have been a mobile bomb-making factory as well as mortars, rocket-propelled grenades, launchers, and parts of surface-to-air weapons systems elsewhere in the mosque compound, the military added.
Findings
At a press conference in Baghdad, National Security Adviser Qassem Dawoud said troops found the suspected mobile lab in the southwestern district of Fallujah, where pockets of insurgents are still holding out following the Nov. 8 U.S.-Iraqi assault.
"We also found in the laboratory manuals and instructions spelling out procedures for making explosives," he said. "They also spoke about making anthrax."
Dawoud showed pictures of a shelf containing what he said were various chemicals -- about two dozen glass and plastic bottles as well as plastic sacks full of some powdered substance labeled in Arabic potassium cyanide. One of the pictures showed a line of plastic-covered computer terminals and chairs in a row.
Dawoud also said a key aide of al-Zarqawi, who was believed to have been based in Fallujah, had been arrested in Mosul, where insurgents rose up this month in support of the Fallujah fighters.