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Iraq-Jordan
Kurds, Shi'ites still working out the politix of Iraqi government
2005-03-16
Iraq's leading Shi'ite Muslim and Kurdish politicians are nearing a deal to form a government after six weeks of wrangling following historic post-Saddam elections, officials from the two sides said on Tuesday. "We expect to sign a declaration in the next few days on general principles that include dealing with the city of Kirkuk according to the interim constitution," Mohammad Bahr al-Uloum, a member of the majority Shi'ite bloc in parliament, said.

That means Iraq would still be without a new government when its first parliament convenes on Wednesday and the session could be largely ceremonial.

Another Shi'ite politician expressed doubt a new government was imminent, saying there were internal disagreements between both blocs that could delay a deal.

"We have been having arguments of the deaf," he said.

In Rome, Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi said on Tuesday Italy would start to withdraw from Iraq in September, adding to the list of U.S. allies looking to cut their troop levels.

The Shi'ite alliance won a slim majority in the Jan. 30 vote and the Kurds came second, winning between them the two thirds of seats needed to form a government.

But efforts to form a government have been stymied by haggling over sharing posts and Kurdish demands over the northern oil centre of Kirkuk.

A senior Kurdish politician said the Kurds had agreed to deal with Kirkuk according to the interim constitution, which says land disputes there must wait until a new constitution is written by October and a census is held to determine the ethnic mix of the city. "There is agreement with the United Iraqi Alliance on these principles," he said.

The parliament session, to be held under U.S. protection, will be televised live to Iraqis desperate for a government that can quickly deliver security after relentless violence since the U.S.-led invasion in March 2003 that ousted Saddam Hussein.

Politicians say resolving delicate issues requires patience, but some Iraqis who risked their lives to vote are starting to question whether their ballots were worth anything.

Iraqi officials hoped the elections would help reduce suicide bombings, shootings, kidnappings and beheadings. But insurgents have kept up the violence in a bid to topple the government and drive out U.S. troops.

A car bomb that targeted a U.S. convoy near a petrol station in Baghdad killed one person and wounded four others on Tuesday, police sources said. In a separate incident, a blast near the Ministry of Health wounded two people.

A suicide bomber in a car blew himself up, killing a U.S. soldier on patrol and injuring several Iraqis and a policeman, the U.S. military said.

Six other soldiers were wounded in the attack which raised to at least 1,158 the number of American troops killed since the 2003 invasion.

Al Qaeda organisation in Iraq said in an Internet statement it carried out the attacks on a highway near al-Amel neighbourhood in Baghdad.

Frustrations with the security crisis were underlined by a third day of protests in several cities by Iraqis enraged by reports that relatives of a Jordanian suicide bomber suspected of killing 125 people in the town of Hilla had celebrated him as a martyr after the attack last month.

In Hilla, thousands of people condemned the blast, the single bloodiest attack in postwar Iraq. They held up banners saying "no to terrorism" and called on Arabs to speak out against praise of suicide bombers.

Al Qaeda's wing in Iraq, led by Jordanian militant Abu Musab al-Zarqawi, claimed responsibility for the blast which targeted people lining up for jobs in the Shi'ite town.

The Iraqi government, led by interim Prime Minister Iyad Allawi, has strongly condemned what it called "the expressions of joy" exhibited by the bomber's family.

A prolonged political stalemate could work in favour of pro-American Allawi, who will stay in power until a new government is formed. Allawi has been trying to forge political alliances in a bid to keep his job.

The United Iraqi Alliance has put forward Shi'ite Islamist Ibrahim al-Jaafari as its candidate for prime minister. But the Kurds fear that Islamic fundamentalism could spread under him.

The Kurds are demanding one of their main leaders, Jalal Talabani, become president.

But Arabs at a gathering in Kirkuk on Tuesday said that would be unacceptable.

"The demands of the Kurds over the presidency are unreasonable. Iraq is an Arab country and its president must be an Arab," said Wasfi al-Assi, general secretary of the Arab Front in Kirkuk, which boycotted the elections.
Posted by:Dan Darling

#2  They're talking, not shooting.
Posted by: Ptah   2005-03-16 3:32:16 PM  

#1  This is to be expected. They've never done this Democracy thingy before. I'd expect progress to come in fits and starts, with mustache cursing and the like -- if it works at all.

It takes time to figure out how to peacefully deal with an "adversary" -- what you have in common falls away during the confrontation - giving the appearance (to the twits) that there are only differences. The deals can be made, they just have to acquire a few new concepts: cooperation, compromise, and true common cause (where all choose to subordinate tribe / clan / flavor of Islam / whatever for the actual common good - some think it merely Nationalism, but it's much more than that, as the EU is belatedly discovering), for starters.

Another concept they might like to try out would be dueling, y'know - the whole Order of the Garter / Chivalry thingy - we had to go through that stage ourselves, and it served its purpose.

If 75% of the legislators and officeholders survive their first year or two of governing, I'd think that a clear success for people leap-frogging a millenia or two in time.
Posted by: .com   2005-03-16 10:17:34 AM  

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