U.N. official satisfied Iraq election was fair

Uprising at Baghdad prison leaves at least nine dead

? The top U.N. elections official in Iraq said Wednesday that the country’s heavily criticized parliamentary election was “transparent, credible and good” and that he saw no reason to rerun it.

The statement by Craig Jenness, a U.N. special commissioner, was the strongest independent endorsement of an election that has sparked accusations of rampant fraud and threats of increased insurgent violence during near-daily protests in cities across the country. Issued at the start of a news conference where Jenness appeared alongside officials from Iraq’s election commission, his statement also amounted to a show of support for the beleaguered panel.

Also Wednesday, a shootout inside a Baghdad prison left at least nine people dead and six wounded, including a U.S. soldier, according to U.S. and Iraqi officials.

Since the Dec. 15 election, which preliminary results suggest was dominated in much of the country by the Shiite Muslim religious parties that control Iraq’s transitional government, monitors and observers filed about 1,500 complaints with the election commission, many of which have been investigated.

The commission has fined some parties for violations and acknowledged mistakes by monitors. The commission’s chairman, Abdul-Hussein Hendawi, said Wednesday that votes cast in the northern city of Kirkuk by tens of thousands of displaced ethnic Kurds were initially disqualified because of a mistake by an international election official. The votes eventually were allowed, he said.

Jenness called the number of complaints “low” but acknowledged that “not all candidates will be satisfied” with the results. He said, however, that “we at the United Nations see no justification in calls for a rerun.”

Sunni Arab and secular parties have led the calls for a new vote, threatening greater unrest if their demands are not met.

Prison violence

The violence at the Iraqi-run prison, known as Camp Justice and located in a neighborhood in north Baghdad, began just after 8 a.m. when at least 16 inmates tried to escape by storming the armory and seizing weapons, the U.S. military said in a statement. A firefight ensued, and four guards and four inmates were killed, along with an interpreter, the military said.

A statement by the military Wednesday afternoon said all prisoners were accounted for, but a spokesman for Iraq’s Defense Ministry, Muhammed Askary, told al-Arabiya television Wednesday evening that Iraqi forces were still searching for three inmates.

The high-security facility holds about 200 prisoners, most incarcerated for violent crimes. Several sources said the inmates began the assault by overpowering a guard and taking his rifle.

Hostage tape aired

Also Wednesday, al-Arabiya aired footage purporting to show a French citizen abducted by insurgents Dec. 5.

The man, identified as Bernard Planche, an employee of a nongovernmental organization involved in water projects, said on the video that he was “sorry for everything that has happened” and thanked “those who are trying to help me.”

About 425 foreigners have been abducted in Iraq since the U.S. invasion, a Western official said late last week.