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http://www.commondreams.org/views02/0626-06.htm


Published on Wednesday, June 26, 2002 by
CommonDreams.org 


Arafat Calls for Democratic Elections in the United
States -- World Reaction is Mixed  
by Rahul Mahajan
 Palestinian Authority President Yasir Arafat stunned
the world yesterday by demanding that the United
States hold democratic elections for a new Chief
Executive before it attempts to continue in its role
as broker between Israel and Palestine. 
"Mr. Bush is tainted by his association with
Jim-Crow-style selective disenfranchisement and
executive strong-arm tactics in a southeastern
province controlled by his brother," said Mr. Arafat,
who was elected with 87% of the vote in 1996 elections
in the West Bank and Gaza, declared to be free and
fair by international observers, including former U.S.
president Jimmy Carter. "Our count shows that he would
have lost the election if his associates hadn't
deprived so many thousands of African-Americans, an
oppressed minority, of the right to vote. He is not
the man to bring peace to the Middle East." 
Hugo Chavez, elected president of Venezuela with 62%
of the popular vote, concurred with Mr. Arafat. Chavez
has long been a victim of Bush's anti-democratic
attitude, as the Bush administration funneled hundreds
of thousands of dollars through the "National
Endowment for Democracy" to anti-Chavez forces and
reportedly gave the go-ahead for an attempted military
coup by those forces. "After it was over and I was
back in power," said Chavez, "his administration
actually told me 'legitimacy is not conferred by a
majority vote.' Unless, of course, it's a majority of
the Supreme Court. I respect the local traditions,
however quaint, of the United States, but he hardly
sets the best example for the Middle East, does he?
Why don't we get back to that idea of an international
conference to settle the question of Palestine?" 
Bush was not without his supporters, however. Israeli
Prime Minister Ariel Sharon, elected head of a country
that legally discriminates among its citizens on the
basis of religious belief, forbids political
candidates from advocating an end to that
discrimination, and disenfranchises an entire people
through military occupation, dismissed the call as
"absurd." 
Hamid Karzai, recently "elected" head of Afghanistan
by a grand council, or "loya jirga," in which a
foreign body, controlled by the United States,
selected delegates; unelected warlords who had ravaged
the country were permitted to control the meeting and
to threaten delegates who refused to vote their way;
and the U.S. special envoy to Afghanistan, Zalmay
Khalilzad, refused to allow at least two other
candidates to stand for election, added his support
for Mr. Bush in his hour of need. Said Karzai, "In
Afghanistan, we have the loya jirga. In the United
States, you have your own process -- as we understand,
it's traditional over there for corporations to play a
large part in electing officials and writing
legislation. We're very interested in looking into
that kind of system ourselves." 
Vojislav Kostunica, chosen head of Yugoslavia in an
election where the United States spent an estimated
$25 million to influence the results, was also keen to
rush to Bush's defense, indicating that he saw no
procedural problems with the 2000 elections. 
And Mahathir Mohamad of Malaysia, long derided for his
claim that "Asian culture" is at odds with universal
human rights, added, "The elections are strictly an
internal matter, and should have no bearing on the
status of the United States as a broker. The
Palestinians' high-handedness is a serious threat to
national independence." 
In a surprise move, British Prime Minister Tony Blair,
long an ally of the United States, supported Arafat's
call, saying, "While we're at it, let's take another
look at our agreement on American independence. George
Washington was not only unelected, he did rather
associate with terrorists. Benedict Arnold would have
been a much more suitable partner for peace, n'est ce
pas?" 
Arafat, busy working on a plan to find a new Israeli
leader not tainted with the massacre of hundreds of
innocents in Sabra and Shatila to negotiate with,
could not be reached for further comment. 
Rahul Mahajan is a member of the Nowar Collective
(http://www.nowarcollective.com) and serves on the
National Board of Peace Action. His book, "The New
Crusade: America's War on Terrorism,"
(http://www.monthlyreview.org/newcrusade.htm) has been
described as "mandatory reading for anyone who wants
to get a handle on the war on terrorism." His other
work can be seen at http://www.rahulmahajan.com He can
be reached at [EMAIL PROTECTED] 


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