Iraq's
new parliament will meet, leaders say
March 15, 2005
- By Todd Pitman, Associated Press:
Kurdish and Shi'ite leaders agreed yesterday to convene Iraq's
new parliament this week even if they fail to work out the remaining
details of their agreement to form a coalition government.
Shi'ite officials said they also agreed to reach out to the country's
Sunni Arab community to name the parliament speaker for the 275-member
National Assembly that convenes tomorrow.
The Shi'ite clergy-backed United Iraqi Alliance and a Kurdish coalition,
which won the two biggest blocks of seats in the Jan. 30 elections,
agreed last week to form a coalition government with Islamic Dawa
party leader Ibrahim al-Jaafari as prime minister. In return, Jalal
Talabani will become Iraq's first Kurdish president.
''We discussed the blueprint of the agreement reached Thursday.
Some issues were revised and those revisions are still being discussed,"
alliance member Ali al-Dabagh said.
Dabagh expressed optimism that a final deal would be reached soon,
but added that even without an agreement ''the first session of
the National Assembly will be held on Wednesday anyway."
Barham Saleh, a Kurd, indicated the two groups want to reach out
to other factions to fill some Cabinet posts.
He said Shi'ite and Kurd negotiators planned to meet today with
representatives from interim Prime Minister Ayad Allawi's Iraqi
List, which placed a distant third in the parliamentary elections.
The interim government, meanwhile, announced that Iraqi security
forces had captured two men with family ties to Saddam Hussein in
his hometown of Tikrit and alleged they helped launch terrorist
attacks in Iraq.
Its statement said one-time Hussein bodyguard Marwan Taher Abdul
Rashid and Abdullah Maher Abdul Rashid were arrested last Tuesday.
State-run Iraqiya television said the two men were cousins and Abdullah
was a brother-in-law of Hussein's slain son Qusai.
Abdullah was strongly believed to have ''used big amounts of money
that he received from
Qusai . . . to finance terrorism in Iraq," and Marwan ''has
been involved in number of attacks against the security forces,"
the government statement said, giving no other details. Neither
man was listed on any of the American most-wanted lists.
Dabagh declined to discusses details of the issues that had snagged
the Shi'ite alliance's talks with the Kurds, but did say that the
negotiators meeting at a home inside Baghdad's heavily fortified
Green Zone talked about who should get the parliament speaker post.
''We still do not have an agreement on who will be parliament speaker,"
he said. ''We do not want to name the speaker; the Sunnis must participate
in this decision." He said they would meet with Sunni Arab
representatives today.
Sunni Arabs, who make up only about 20 percent of the population
but were the dominant group under Hussein's regime, largely stayed
away from the elections. They are thought to make up the core of
the insurgency and including them in a future government or in the
political process is seen as a way to isolate the militants.
The Shi'ite alliance won 140 seats in the National Assembly, but
need the Kurds' 75 seats to assemble the two-thirds majority required
to elect a president, who will then nominate the
prime minister.
Since the Gulf War of 1991, Kurds have enjoyed de-facto independence,
protected from Hussein's military by a US-enforced no-fly-zone.
The Kurdish enclave has remained off-limits to the new Iraqi Army
formed since Hussein's ouster two years ago.
Source Link: http://www.boston.com/news/world/middleeast/articles/2005/03/15/iraqs_new_parliament_will_meet_leaders_say/
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