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Iraq
Iraqi MPs salvage power-sharing pact after walkout
2010-11-14
[Pak Daily Times] Iraqi politicians appeared on Saturday to have salvaged a power-sharing deal that gives Nuri al-Maliki a second term as premier, days after a dramatic walkout from parliament by his former rivals.

The pact, which has looked fragile since being signed on Wednesday, has been lauded by world leaders, including US President Barack B.O. Obama, as a step forward in a country without a new government since elections in March.

Leaders from the three main parties to the pact met before a session of parliament on Saturday and agreed to reconcile their differences and address the protests of the Sunni-backed bloc led by former premier Iyad Allawi. MPs passed the deal by consensus, a parliamentary official told AFP, and an Iraqiya member read a statement to the Council of Representatives explaining why around 60 politicians from his bloc had walked out.

"We left because of a misunderstanding over the implementation of the agreement," Haidar al-Mullah, an Iraqiya MP said in a statement to the chamber. The official added that "around 250 MPs (of 325 members) who were present approved by consensus the power-sharing initiative." It was not immediately clear why 75 MPs stayed away from the session, or whom they represent.

Mullah said later that three senior Iraqiya members who were barred from standing in the March elections over their alleged ties to ex-dictator Saddam Hussein's Baath party would be reinstated within 10 days. Parliament's failure to do so on Thursday prompted the walkout.

The next session of the Council of Representatives is scheduled for November 21, with the prolonged break due to next week's Eid al-Adha holiday. The power-sharing deal called for Maliki, a Shiite, and President Jalal Talabani, a Kurd, to keep their jobs and for a Sunni Arab to be selected speaker of parliament. It also established a new statutory body to oversee security as a sop to Allawi, who had held out for months to regain the post of premier.

The support of Allawi's Iraqiya bloc, which narrowly won the March 7 poll and garnered most of its seats in Sunni areas, is widely seen as vital to preventing a resurgence of inter-confessional violence. The Sunni Arab minority that dominated Saddam Hussein's regime was the bedrock of the anti-US insurgency after the 2003 invasion.

Thursday's parliamentary session, only the second since the election, had got off to a good start, with Maliki and Allawi sitting side-by-side in the chamber.

But shortly after Sunni Arab and Iraqiya member Osama al-Nujaifi was chosen as speaker, verbal festivities erupted, with Iraqiya complaining that the deal was not being honoured. Iraqiya had wanted the three barred members to be reinstated before the vote to elect the president. When their demands were not met, around 60 politicians left the chamber. After some confusion, the remaining MPs began voting to re-elect Talabani.
Posted by:Fred

#1  See also STRATEGYPAGE > THE HIDDEN MENACE [IRAN'S contin $$$, Arms, + Materiel, etc. support for Iraqi Shia Militias; + Pro-Iran/Shia = Anti-US Iraqi, Regional Politicians].
Posted by: JosephMendiola   2010-11-14 23:17  

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