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    Cheney visits Iraq amid surge of violence
    (AP)
    Updated: 2005-12-19 08:32

    Iraqi authorities were still tallying the ballots that will determine the allocation of the parliament's 275 seats for four-year terms.

    The election commission said it had received raw preliminary results in the form of tally sheets from seven provinces representing about 70 percent of the total vote. Official Safwat Rashid said that they included Baghdad, Babil, Karbala, Najaf and Irbil, Anbar and Kirkuk and that the rest were "on their way."

    He added that on Monday "we'll be able to provide you with 80 percent of the results for Baghdad province. The rest will be completed in the coming days."

    Rashid said the commission had so far received 345 complaints about the election, more than half claiming violations of campaigning rules. Other complaints were about names missing from voter rolls and some alleged interference with voters by party officials, police or elections workers.

    The commission began examining complaints Sunday. "Some of the complaints are minor and others may be grave enough to cancel the results of a ballot box," Rashid said.

    The complaints have to be dealt with before election results are released, a process that officials have said would take about 10 days.

    U.S. Vice President Dick Cheney (R) meets with Iraqi Prime Minister Ibrahim al-Jaafari in Baghdad December 18, 2005.
    U.S. Vice President Dick Cheney (R) meets with Iraqi Prime Minister Ibrahim al-Jaafari in Baghdad December 18, 2005. [Reuters]
    Shiite Arabs account for about 60 percent of Iraq's estimated 27 million people, compared with 20 percent for Sunni Arabs and a similar proportion for Kurds. Both Shiite and Sunni political leaders have said they likely will have to form a coalition Cabinet to govern.

    At least one hardline Sunni Arab politician, Saleh al-Mutlaq, said Sunday that the big turnout was a sign that insurgents are ready to participate in the political process. A number of militant groups pledged not to attack polling stations to allow Sunni Arabs to vote.

    "Not participating in the previous elections was a mistake," said al-Mutlaq, who heads the Iraqi Front for National Dialogue. "By abiding to its promise not to attack the voting process, the resistance has proved that it is ready to lay down its arms if the dialogue and democratic process is genuine."

    Al-Mutlaq said a coalition of all groups was necessary, otherwise the "scheme of dividing Iraq on the basis of Shiites and Sunnis, Kurds and Arab is looming."

    In Berlin, German Foreign Minister Frank-Walter Steinmeier offered no details in announcing the release of aid worker Susanne Osthoff, saying only that she was free and now at his country's embassy.

    Osthoff, 43, and her Iraqi driver disappeared Nov. 25 in northern Iraq. Days later, the two were shown in a videotape blindfolded and sitting on a floor, with militants 錕斤拷 one armed with a rocket-propelled grenade 錕斤拷 standing beside them.

    The captors threatened to kill the hostages unless Germany stopped dealing with the Iraqi government. German Chancellor Angela Merkel responded that her country would not be "blackmailed."

    While Germany strongly opposed the U.S.-led invasion of Iraq and refused to send troops here, it does train Iraqi soldiers and police outside this country.


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