http://www.suntimes.com/output/pickett/cst-nws-pickett26.htmlLack of detail bedevils Iraq's new constitution <snip>
Guaranteed, unless it isn'tThings just get more complicated from there, as the constitution goes on to list some of the rights and freedoms that are "guaranteed" to Iraqi citizens.
Article 17 says that each person has the right to privacy "as long as it does not violate the rights of others or general morality."
And, similarly, Article 36 guarantees freedom of expression, assembly, protest and the press, "as long as {this freedom} does not violate public order and morality."
There's no mention of how morality should be defined, but, if you check out the writings of the senior Shia cleric in Iraq, Grand Ayatollah Ali Sistani, it becomes clear that, for many of our, ahem, democratic allies in Iraq, morality has a certain know-it-when-I-see-it quality. According to Sistani, chess and backgammon are unquestionably sinful, as is playing the lottery and maintaining a friendship with a member of the opposite sex, while birth control, betting on horses and drinking nonalcoholic beer are all totally OK, as is plastic surgery.
Open, unless they're secret
Article 19 says that Iraqi court sessions will be open "unless the court decides to make them secret." Which, when you get down to it, is not exactly ironclad protection against a tyrannical regime of secret laws and secret courts.