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Iraq-Jordan
Al-Yawir declines speaker post
2005-03-29
Interim Iraqi President Ghazi al-Yawir has declined a nomination to become the speaker of the new Iraqi parliament, according to an aide to al-Yawir. Sunni Arab MPs have been calling on al-Yawir to refuse the post, offered to him by a Kurdish and Shia bloc who between them have the two-third majority needed to form a government, saying it would signal the marginalisation of their once politically dominant sect. "The president has declined the nomination. He does not wish to say why at present," an official in al-Yawir's office said on Monday.

Al-Yawir has said Sunnis, who won only 17 of the 275 parliamentary seats after largely boycotting the 30 January elections, must retain the presidency to help stabilise the country and ensure their involvement in the political process. The presidency could still go to another Sunni candidate, Fawaz al-Jarba, a general in the former Iraqi army. But al-Jarba is among the few Sunnis on the Shia list which won the election and which many Sunnis are wary of.
Posted by:Fred

#4  I don't care how long it takes, so long as they're not shooting at each other.
Posted by: Robert Crawford   2005-03-29 10:12:31 AM  

#3  al yawer wants a VP post, which is not unreasonable, he WAS prez, and they HAVE been saying theyre going to give a VP slot to a Sunni Arab - I dont think they were planning on giving it to Yawer though, but to another (whom?) Yawer isnt so much maneuvering for more Sunni slots, as trying to ensure that HE gets the best one. I think. Pachachi (the defeated State Dept/UN choice for prez back in June) and Husseini (sp?) of the monarchists would be the next most prominent Sunni Arabs in the Assembly, but the Shias are not fond of either, IIUC.

In any case a COMPETENT Shia leadership would have sorted this out a tad earlier. This is all reflecting rather badly on the back room political competence of the UIA leaders (Hakim, Jaafari, Chalabi, Sistani) Sausage is one thing, but it shouldnt take THIS much time to make.

Which isnt necessarily a bad thing. While I certainly applaud the election, and affirm the right of the UIA to take the lead based on the election results, it might not be a bad thing if ordinary Shias consider other alternatives in the NEXT election. More homegrown pols instead of exiles, and maybe even (relatively) more secular pols.
Posted by: Liberalhawk   2005-03-29 9:29:40 AM  

#2  I'm amazed. I didn't think ANYBODY would be able to rise to the level of the Palestinians when it comes to taking every opportunity to miss an opportunity.

Keep it up, Al-Yawn. The competition is stiff and experienced, but you're doing great.

Asshats.
Posted by: Ptah   2005-03-29 6:33:52 AM  

#1  The Sunni Strategy. ClueBat™ is MIA.
Posted by: .com   2005-03-29 2:22:26 AM  

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