Some Iraqis may have voted for Food ?!
Hard News: Some Just Voted for Food
Dahr Jamail of Inter Press Service reports that voting in Baghdad may have been linked with receipt of food rations. Several voters are cited in the article:
Please click "More" to read the re-post of the article.
If true, this is really sad (not as if everything else about this election was truly cheering). This is the kind of news that many of us hope turns out inaccurate.
Dahr Jamail of Inter Press Service reports that voting in Baghdad may have been linked with receipt of food rations. Several voters are cited in the article:
Please click "More" to read the re-post of the article.
However, the author writes that there are no indications that people who did not vote would be denied rations either. Nonetheless:
Many Iraqis said Monday that their names were marked on a list provided by the government agency that provides monthly food rations before they were allowed to vote.
”I went to the voting centre and gave my name and district where I lived to a man,” said Wassif Hamsa, a 32-year-old journalist who lives in the predominantly Shia area Janila in Baghdad. ”This man then sent me to the person who distributed my monthly food ration.”
Mohammed Ra'ad, an engineering student who lives in the Baya'a district of the capital city reported a similar experience.
Ra'ad, 23, said he saw the man who distributed monthly food rations in his district at his polling station. ”The food dealer, who I know personally of course, took my name and those of my family who were voting,” he said. ”Only then did I get my ballot and was allowed to vote.”
Many Iraqis had expressed fears before the election that their monthly food rations would be cut if they did not vote. They said they had to sign voter registration forms in order to pick up their food supplies.
Their experiences on the day of polling have underscored many of their concerns about questionable methods used by the U.S.-backed Iraqi interim government to increase voter turnout.
Just days before the election, 52 year-old Amin Hajar who owns an auto garage in central Baghdad had said: ”I'll vote because I can't afford to have my food ration cut...if that happened, me and my family would starve to death.”
Hajar told IPS that when he picked up his monthly food ration recently, he was forced to sign a form stating that he had picked up his voter registration. He had feared that the government would use this information to track those who did not vote.
If true, this is really sad (not as if everything else about this election was truly cheering). This is the kind of news that many of us hope turns out inaccurate.
1 Comments:
News like this (if accurate) confirm that Mr.Rove has succesfully managed to export his electioneering tactics abroad; this puts further questioning to the US's foreign policy (or lack thereof)
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