Khaleej Times

Iraq’s rushed constituti­on is further dividing its people

The official document has failed to deliver on the promises of human rights, freedom and democratic integrity

- Bamo Nouri ISSUES

Iraqi democracy hasn’t come far since 2003. The outside powers invaded, occupied and eventually departed the country with a democratic political system on paper, but profoundly flawed in practice. Failure is not an accident of history. This is the inevitable effect of the rushed and poorly written Iraqi Constituti­on of 2005.

Almost 12 years since it was ratified and approved, the constituti­on is, in short, an abject failure. It has failed to deliver on the promises of human rights, freedom and democratic integrity, the very values invoked to justify first the US-led invasion and then the constructi­on of a new government. Its vagueness has been taken advantage of. Its lack of provisions has been manipulate­d, and sectarian divisions have been exacerbate­d, resulting in a fractured and chaotic country.

The constituti­on is a highly divisive text. It is the first-ever official document in Iraq’s history to enshrine ethnic difference­s into law, and by doing this its drafters hoped to achieve national unity by having all sects participat­e in government and public life. To do so, they created a system that allocates public sector roles based on sect and ethnicity. To this day, this principle permeates all Iraq’s institutio­ns from the central government downwards.

The result is a climate of nepotism and clientalis­m, in which uneducated, unqualifie­d and corruption-prone individual­s take key posts that ultimately affect the lives of millions of Iraqis. These individual­s are only making Iraq’s shortcomin­gs worse, and paralysing its politics. They are not competing to advance the nation, but instead engaged in the sectarian warfare that pervades civic life from top to bottom.

These are the same corrosive forces, corrupt decisions and misguided policies that contribute­d to the rise of Daesh in 2014 — and the parties responsibl­e are rarely, if ever, held accountabl­e.

Hopes dashed

One of the ways the constituti­on tried to balance the concerns of different groups was by giving regional government­s a good deal of local control. As with other of its noble aims, some of the ways it tried to do this have backfired badly.

Under articles 115, 121 and 126 of the constituti­on, where regional and national legislatio­n contradict each other on matters outside exclusive federal authority, the regional power has the right to amend the applicatio­n of the national legislatio­n within that region. In practice, these ambiguous provisions mean that when it comes to making and implementi­ng policy, regional government­s can do as they please.

The unpleasant implicatio­ns are particular­ly visible in Kurdistan, which is host to an unaccounta­ble, ruthless and very manipulati­ve political class of two dominant parties. Just like the government in Baghdad, the authoritie­s in Kurdistan variously obstruct, manipulate and regulate their political opposition as they see fit. And regardless of the suffering and tough ordeals that Iraqis living in the Kurdish region face, Baghdad is hard pressed to intervene until

It’s time for the same outside forces that helped create this new order to help Iraq through this most critical period. In the meantime, the next generation of Iraqis are watching their hopes for a better country wither away. things reach a dangerous peak.

Sure enough, on September 25, 2017, after 14 years of failed dialogue, the Kurdish Region of Iraq held a referendum for statehood through independen­ce from Iraq. The vote will hardly settle the question of Kurdistan’s future, but that it was held at all is a sign that the federal system has failed.

What happened next was even worse. After more than 92 per cent voted “yes” to statehood, the Iraqi prime minister, Haider Al Abadi, called in the Iranian Islamic Revolution­ary Guard Corps and Iraq’s Popular Mobilisati­on Forces, an umbrella group of militias, to take back the historical­ly disputed Kurdish capital, Kirkuk, from Kurdish Peshmerga forces.

The offensive displaced hundreds of thousands of Sunnis and Kurds; many of their homes were looted and destroyed. The fighters who turfed them out carried both Iraqi and Shia flags, a sign that national security is increasing­ly left up to sectariani­sed religious militias. And even though Al Abadi ostensibly deployed these forces to curb Kurdistan’s secessioni­st aims, his move will do more to divide Iraq than to protect the integrity of its borders.

Silenced and crushed

All the while, Iraqi political life remains in a sad state of violent repression. The constituti­on’s framers had high hopes for the security of civil society, but in vain.

While article 38 of the constituti­on protects freedom of speech, as far as the civilian population and journalist­s are concerned, it might as well never have been drafted. Those who dissent, in print or in the street, are targeted and often killed. Since 2005, numerous organisati­ons have documented consistent violations of constituti­onal rights: Amnesty Internatio­nal, Human Rights Watch, the US Department of State, the UN Assistance Mission for Iraq and the Office for the High Commission­er for Human Rights have all have reported extensivel­y on violations of freedom of press, expression and peaceful assembly.

More than a decade after it was invaded in the name of spreading democracy, Iraq is a democratic state only on paper, and even the letter of the law is questionab­le. It’s time for the same outside forces that helped create this new order to help Iraq through this most critical period. In the meantime, the next generation of Iraqis are watching their hopes for a better country wither away. —The Conversati­on Bamo Nouri is Research associate, City,

University of London

 ??  ?? Iraq’s constituti­on is a highly divisive text and the first-ever official document in its history to enshrine ethnic difference­s into law. Here, cyclist Durra Ahmed at the Baghdad Marathon for Peace in Baghdad.
Iraq’s constituti­on is a highly divisive text and the first-ever official document in its history to enshrine ethnic difference­s into law. Here, cyclist Durra Ahmed at the Baghdad Marathon for Peace in Baghdad.
 ?? —AFP photos ?? Iraq’s constituti­on gives undue rights to regional government­s. The unpleasant implicatio­ns were particular­ly visible in Kurdistan recently. Above, students holding posters of Massud Barzani. Below, Iraqi troops participat­ing in a ceremony at the...
—AFP photos Iraq’s constituti­on gives undue rights to regional government­s. The unpleasant implicatio­ns were particular­ly visible in Kurdistan recently. Above, students holding posters of Massud Barzani. Below, Iraqi troops participat­ing in a ceremony at the...
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