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Iraq
Iraqi PM, anti-U.S. group reach local alliance deal
2009-02-22
BAGHDAD - Followers of anti-American ShiÂ’ite cleric Moqtada al-Sadr are nearing a deal with Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki to form coalitions in IraqÂ’s provinces following last monthÂ’s election, officials said on Saturday. Where the Sadrists and allies of the increasingly assertive prime minister together won a majority of seats on provincial councils the two groups may rule as a coalition, said Ameer Tahir al-Kinani, a senior member of a list of candidates backed by Sadr.

“We have an initial agreement to form coalitions in all provinces without exception,” said Kinani. “If we can’t form a local government on our own, we can bring in a third party.”

Hassan al-Sneid, a lawmaker from Maliki’s Dawa Party, said the agreement was just about wrapped up between the Sadrists and the Dawa-led coalition, which trounced other Shi’ite groups in what was Iraq’s most peaceful vote since the 2003 invasion. The provincial alliances may be named “Public Service Front”, he said.

The Jan. 31 election to pick councils governing 14 of IraqÂ’s 18 provinces passed without a major militant attack and boosted hopes for an end to the sectarian slaughter and insurgency as U.S. troops prepare to withdraw from Iraq before 2012.

Maliki emerged as a strong winner, campaigning on a platform that called for a unified, centralised state and setting himself up for a powerful run in parliamentary polls at the yearÂ’s end. He also eschewed the religious overtones and secularism that traditionally characterised his Islamic Dawa Party and which coloured the campaign of his main ShiÂ’ite rivals, the Supreme Islamic Iraqi Council (ISCI).

MalikiÂ’s State of Law coalition performed particularly well in Basra, which includes IraqÂ’s most productive oil fields, and Baghdad, both cities where Maliki used U.S.-backed Iraqi troops last year to crush militias backing the firebrand cleric Sadr.

That would seem to make them strange bedfellows. But Kinani said both had the same aims for Iraq—a strong central government and competent bureaucrats to run local governments. The two parties also share Islamist roots. Sadr’s uncle, the cleric Mohammed Baqir al-Sadr, was an early Dawa leader.

An alliance between the two groups would give them majorities in the provinces of Basra, Baghdad, Maysan, Wasit and Dhi Qar. In addition, they together have nearly half the provincial council seats in Kerbala, Najaf and Qadisiya.

When it came to picking powerful provincial governors, Kinani said party politics would not be the decisive factor. “It is not a condition that they should be picked from the winning lists. We will seek the better, most competent and most honest candidate to run the province,” he said.

Kinani did not rule out inclusion of third parties, including ISCI, so long as it dropped its campaign for autonomy in the oil-rich, Shi’ite south. “We are open to all winning lists, even those that just got one seat,” Sneid said separately. “Our theory is that no one should have a monopoly of the administration of the provinces.”
Posted by:Steve White

#1  Â“Our theory is that no one should have a monopoly of the administration "

This reveals Iraq is not a Democratcy.
Posted by: Glenmore   2009-02-22 09:15  

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