Iraqi political parties seek to resolve crisis

Author: 
Suadad Al-Salhy | Reuters
Publication Date: 
Mon, 2011-12-26 12:43

US officials, diplomats and politicians have been in a flurry of talks to calm a crisis that threatens to push Iraq back in the kind of sectarian strife that took the OPEC oil producer to the edge of civil war only a few years ago.
Just a week after the last US troops left, the upheaval risks scuppering the country’s uneasy power-sharing government that splits posts and ministries among the National Alliance coalition, the Iraqiya bloc and Kurdish political movement.
A string of bombings across Baghdad, including a suicide bombing on a government building, killed 72 and wounded 200 more on Thursday, underscoring Iraq’s still vulnerable security situation as the political crisis gripped the country.
Tuesday could be a key test for how Iraq’s turmoil develops when the cabinet is scheduled to meet and Iraqiya government ministers will decide whether they will attend or boycott the meeting. Iraqiya lawmakers have already temporarily suspended their participation in parliament, which is in recess.
“There was a delegation from the National Alliance that met Iraqiya last night,” said Haider Al-Abadi, a senior lawmaker and Maliki ally.
“If Iraqiya wants to participate in real talks, it has to go back to parliament and the government because a parliament boycott is not acceptable,” he added.
Nearly nine years after the invasion that toppled Saddam Hussein, sectarian tensions still run close to the surface in Iraq, where sustained sectarian violence between communities killed thousands of people in 2006-07.
Maliki last week sought the arrest of Vice-President Tareq Al-Hashemi, a key member of Iraqiya, on charges he ordered his bodyguards to carry out assassinations and bombings.
The prime minister also asked parliament to fire his deputy, Saleh Al-Mutlaq, another Iraqiya leader, after he branded Maliki a dictator.

Hashemi, who says he is victim of a political vendetta, is now in semi-autonomous Iraqi Kurdistan, where he is unlikely to face immediate arrest. He has asked for his case to be transferred there. Kurdistan has its own government and armed forces.
“The political dimension of this is to get rid of all those who oppose Nuri Al-Maliki, it is clear,” Hashemi told Reuters in a weekend interview.
Political leaders allied with Al-Maliki say the Hashemi case is a criminal issue now with the courts and not politically motivated.
But Maliki’s moves are fanning minority fears that they are being marginalized.

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