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18. January 2006, 12:04   #33
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Zitat:
Zitat von Ben-99
... die Ergebnisse der angeblich "demokratischen" Wahlen im Irak sind anscheinend keinen Pfifferling wert.
Die Unabhängige Wahlkommission im Irak (IECI) veröffentlichte gestern nach der Überprüfung von 1.985 Beschwerden, von denen sie nur 58 als so schwerwiegend einschätzte, daß sie Einfluß auf das Wahlergebnis haben könnten, ihre Einschätzung:
Zitat:
IECI Announces Decisions Taken ON Red Complaints

Baghdad 17 January, 2006. The IECI announced on Monday the decisions it has taken on all of the red complaints the Commission received in connection with the 15 December Council of Representatives elections.
Red complaints are ones that could affect the results of particular polling stations and may lead to voiding of one or more ballot boxes. Of 1,985 total complaints received by the IECI, only 58 were classified as red.
97% of the complaints were non-red ones. As a result of fully investigating the red complaints the IECI has decided to cancel results from 227 polling stations. This represents less than 1% of the nearly 32,000 polling stations that opened in Iraq on Election-Day. The IECI’s Commissioner Hussain Hindawi says the Commission has learned many valuable lessons from the complaints and that this will help the IECI to improve future elections in Iraq.
For example, Mr. Hindawi says the IECI needs more resources to be able to process the complaints it receives. “Dealing with complaints took a lot of time. With more and better trained staff in the complaints office, the IECI would have been able to release preliminary results at an earlier date.” The IECI also received a number of complaints related to the voters list. “The IECI is aware that there were some problems with the voters list and that this is an area where we can make improvements for the next electoral process,” Mr. Hindawi said.
About 200,000 people worked in the IECI’s polling centers. The vast majority of them performed exceptionally well under what were sometimes high-pressure working conditions. However, through the complaints process the IECI has realized that more training is needed for polling staff workers. This is another area the IECI will focus on in the future.
“The next step major step in the Council of Representatives elections will be the release of preliminary results,” Mr. Hindawi said. The IECI is planning to release those results in the coming days.
MfG
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