Baghdad, 22 April
- The Shi'ite alliance nominated a tough-talking
Shi'ite politician, Jawad al-Maliki, as prime
minister in a move that breaks the long impasse over
forming a new government aimed at pulling Iraq out
of its sectarian strife.
Al-Maliki replaces outgoing Prime Minister Ibrahim
al-Jaafari, whose attempt to stay for a second term
had raised sharp opposition from Sunni Arab and
Kurdish leaders and caused a deadlock that lasted
months as the country's security crisis worsened in
the wake of last December's election.
Sunni and Kurdish politicians signalled on Friday
that they would accept al-Maliki -- a close ally of
al-Jaafari in the Shi'ite Dawa Party -- clearing the
way for Parliament on Saturday to elect top
leadership positions, including the president, and
launch the process of putting together a government.
United States and Iraqi officials are hoping that a
national unity government representing Shi'ites,
Sunnis and Kurds will be able to quell both the
Sunni-led insurgency and bloody Shi'ite-Sunni
violence that has raged during the political
uncertainty. If it succeeds, it could enable the US
to begin returning home its 133 000 troops.
White House spokesperson Scott McClellan said the
Bush administration is hopeful that the latest
political developments in Iraq will lead to
significant progress in forming a permanent
government.
"We hope to see good progress in the coming days,"
McClellan told reporters travelling with US
President George Bush to California. "We'll be
watching."
Violence continued on Friday with at least 21 people
killed, including six in a car bombing in Tal Afar
and six off-duty Iraqi soldiers slain in Beiji,
police said. The US military announced that a marine
was fatally injured in combat on Thursday in Anbar
province. |

New prime ministerial candidate Jawad al-Maliki
speaks at a news conference along with outgoing
prime minister Ibrahim al-Jaafari, second left,
Saturday April 22, 2006 in Baghdad, Iraq. A
breakthrough in months of political deadlock cleared
the way Saturday for Iraq's parliament to launch the
process of putting together a new government aimed
at pulling the country out of its sectarian strife.
Photo:AP |
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Al-Maliki has a reputation as a hard-line, outspoken
defender of the Shi'ite stance -- raising questions
over whether he will be able to negotiate the
delicate sectarian balancing act.
From exile in Syria in the 1980s and 1990s, he
directed Dawa guerrillas fighting Saddam Hussein's
regime. Since returning home after Saddam's fall, he
has been a prominent member of the commission
purging former Ba'ath Party officials from the
military and government. Sunni Arabs, who made up
the backbone of Saddam's ousted party, deeply resent
the commission.
Al-Maliki was also a tough negotiator in drawn-out
deliberations over a new Constitution that was
passed last year despite Sunni Arab objections. He
resisted US efforts to put more Sunnis on the
drafting committee as well as Sunni efforts to water
down provisions giving Shi'ites and Kurds the power
to form semi-autonomous mini-states in the north and
south.
In talks on Friday, the largest party in the
seven-member Shi'ite alliance -- the Supreme Council
for the Islamic Revolution in Iraq (Sciri) --
initially pushed for the nomination of another Dawa
party leader, Ali al-Adeeb, seen as more moderate
and less likely to alienate Sunnis.
But Dawa insisted on al-Maliki, who is closer to al-Jaafari.
Al-Adeeb, who spent part of his 20-year exile in
Iran, was said to have frequent conflicts with al-Jaafari.
Sciri backed off as Sunnis and Kurds said they could
accept al-Maliki, apparently out of eagerness to end
the political deadlock as long as al-Jaafari was out
of the picture.
"If anyone is nominated except al-Jaafari, we won't
put any obstacles in his way. He will receive our
support," said Adnan al-Dulaimi, head of the main
Sunni Arab coalition in Parliament.
Saleh al-Mutlaq, a leading Sunni politician who was
also in the constitutional drafting committee, said
al-Maliki is "firmer and a much more insistent"
person than al-Jaafari. But he said that despite his
toughness, al-Maliki is "practical" and more
flexible.
"I think if al-Maliki worked hard to get rid of his
Ba'ath Party complexes, he will succeed," al-Mutlaq
said.
Sunnis and Kurds had blamed the rise of sectarian
tensions on al-Jaafari for failing to rein in
Shi'ite militias and interior ministry commandos,
accused by the Sunnis of harbouring death squads.
Those parties refused to join any government headed
by al-Jaafari.
Al-Jaafari, who has served as prime minister since
April 2005, was nominated by the alliance for a
second term in February by a one-vote margin,
relying on support from radical, anti-American
cleric Muqtada al-Sadr.
Since then, al-Jaafari had stalwartly rejected
pressure to give up the post, until Iraq's most
powerful Shi'ite cleric, Grand Ayatollah Ali al-Sistani,
sent word that he should go. On Thursday, al-Jaafari
gave the alliance the go-ahead to pick a new
nominee.
With the deal on al-Maliki, Shi'ite, Sunni and
Kurdish parties were set to fill the other top posts
of government in a Parliament vote expected on
Saturday, said Humam Hammoudi, the spokesperson for
the Shi'ite alliance.
Shi'ite lawmaker Ridha Jawad Taqi said all sides
were agreed on a package deal for the top spots:
Jalal Talabani, a Kurd, would remain as president
for a second term, with Sunni Arab Tariq al-Hashimi
and Shi'ite Adil Abdul-Mahdi holding the two
vice-president spots.
Mahmoud al-Mashhadani, a Sunni, would become
parliament speaker with two deputies -- Khalid al-Attiyah,
a Shi'ite, and Aref Tayfour, a Kurd.
The new prime-minister nominee will now face the
task of putting together a national unity
government, meaning divvying up the ministries among
Shi'ite, Sunni and Kurdish parties.
One source of conflict is likely to be the powerful
interior ministry, which currently held by Sciri.
Sunnis will probably push for a change and demand
the uprooting of Shi'ite militias from the
ministry's security forces.
Once the president is approved by Parliament, he
will designate al-Maliki to form a government within
30 days. Lawmakers must then approve each member of
the government by a majority vote.
Politicians will then face another tough fight over
amendments to the Constitution that Sunni Arabs plan
to pursue.
Al-Maliki -- whose real name is Nouri Kamel al-Maliki
but took the name Jawad while in exile -- fled Iraq
in 1980, when Saddam's regime launched a crackdown
on the Dawa Party, then a leading Shi'ite opposition
movement.
He went first to Iran, then left for Syria along
with al-Jaafari in the mid-1980s after the party
split between a pro-Iran faction and those who
refused to join the Iranian army to fight against
the Iraqi army.
While in Syria, al-Maliki was in charge of the
"Jihad Office", a branch responsible for directing
activists and guerrillas inside Iraq.- Sapa-AP
Associated Press correspondents Qassim Abdul-Zahra
in Baghdad and Salah Nasrawi and Omar Sinan
contributed to this report from Cairo, Egypt.
Guardian.co.uk
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