By Akbar Atri on 6.1.05 @ 12:06AM
The French referendum offers a silver lining.
While leaders of European Union nations are trying to decide how
to interpret the French people's "no" vote on the EU constitution
-- and what to do next -- I see the event as having great potential
significance for my country, Iran.
My interest is not in why the French people turned down the new
EU treaty by 54-to-46 percent, but rather the fact they had the
opportunity to do so. By the time of last Sunday's French
referendum nine of the 25 EU countries had approved the
constitution--some by referendum, some by parliament.
In France the government of President Jacques Chirac was solidly
for a "yes" vote, as were leaders of the Socialist opposition and
most of the policy and intellectual elite of the country. The
stakes were high. All member states must approve the constitution
for it to take effect. Thus, President Chirac and others campaigned
intensely, with appeals to unity, statesmanship, patriotism, trade
interests. Alas for them, the people had other ideas.
A referendum, a vote of the people, is the ultimate expression
of democracy in action. Democratically elected governments like to
do the right thing. That is, to make decisions that are in their
nation's interest, are fair, and will be accepted by their
constituents, the voters. After all, they like being in office and
want to stay there. Despite careful readings of the temperament of
the electorate, such governments do not always gauge these things
correctly. By putting the matter to a vote of the people, as they
were required to do by law, the French leaders were staking their
popularity and their future on a "yes" vote. In this case they
failed to get the consent of the governed.
In my country the government never seeks the consent of the
governed, the people. It stacks the deck. While we have regularly
scheduled elections, the Guardian Council, a committee of Muslim
clerics -- mullahs -- decides which of the registered candidates
may stand and which will be ruled off the ballot. And, this
unelected body has veto power over the elected government's
actions.
Eight years ago our growing student democratic movement was
assured by then-presidential candidate Hojatoleslam Khatami that he
would institute a number of democratic reforms if elected. They
supported him. He won, but now, eight years later as his second and
last term ends, the reforms have yet to take place. Election for a
new president will take place June 17. Some candidates wrap the
"reform" label around themselves, but the student movement
mistrusts them all and is urging voters to boycott the election.
(Approximately 15 million voters -- 21 percent of those eligible --
voted in the last presidential election in 2001.)
What the student democratic movement is calling for now is a
nationwide referendum -- just as France and other nations have.
Petitions are being circulated to gather signatures for it. The
petition puts forth this proposition: "We, the signers of this
appeal, call for a national referendum -- in which all Iranian
citizens may participate -- under the supervision of appropriate
international institutions and monitoring by international
observers, in support of a new Constitution that is compatible with
the Universal Declaration of Human Rights and all its associated
covenants."
Signing the petition carries some risk in present-day Iran, for
the mullahs do not like dissent. They rule through their unelected
Guardian Council and they prefer that the international spotlight
be on their nuclear program rather than suppression of democracy
and human rights and their support of terrorism. Nevertheless,
momentum for the referendum is growing in Iran and the example of
the French people exercising their right to tell their government
what to do is a powerful example for the people of Iran to
behold.
There is an old saying, "What is good for the goose, is good for
the gander." France and the Western democracies with their open,
nationwide referendums are the goose in this case; Iran is the
gander. With enough international pressure it may be forced to take
the same path.
topics:
Trade, Constitution, Law, Iran, European Union