With the Jan. 30 elections just one week away, the security situation is
increasingly tense in the violence-hit Arab country.
On Sunday, al-Qaida ally Abu Musab al-Zarqawi declared war on the Iraqi
election in a warning intended to scare away voters. Next Sunday's election will
be Iraq's first since the 2003 US-led invasion that toppled Saddam Hussein's
government.
"We have declared a bitter war against the principle of democracy and all
those who seek to enact it," a speaker identified as Zarqawi said in an audio
tape on the Internet.
"Candidates in elections are seeking to become demi-gods while those who vote
for them are infidels. And with God as my witness, I have informed them (of our
intentions)," he said.
However, Interim Prime Minister Ayad Allawi dismissed Zarqawi's threats.
"We are insisting on smashing this aggressor group," Allawi told Al-Arabiya
television. "The Iraqi people insist on victory and we will win."
Zarqawi, a Jordanian militant who is on top of America's most wanted list in
Iraq, criticized the country's Shiite majority for embracing the election and
urged the Sunni minority to wage a war against it.
Zarqawi's network has kidnapped foreigners and targeted Iraqi politicians in
the countdown to the election. Despite a 25-million-US-dollar bounty on his
head, he has managed to stay at large and continued to attack American troops.
Almost daily attacks, many of which were masterminded and conducted by
Zarqawi's group, have raised fears of a bloodbath during the coming election,
which is expected to select a Shiite-dominated parliament.
On Sunday, 10 Iraqis were killed in attacks north of Baghdad when insurgents
blew up a voting center, a government building anda police station across the
country.
The US military said American troops and Iraqi security forces have rounded
up more than 100 suspected insurgents since Saturday in a bid to thwart rebel
attempts to torpedo the election.
Many Sunni leaders have called for a boycott of the election, saying
insurgent attacks in the Sunni heartland will prevent voting and produce an
outcome in favor of Iraq's 60-percent Shiitemajority. A low Sunni turnout could
damage the election's credibility. Enditem