Kuwait Times

No consensus yet on new Iraqi PM as deadline looms

Parliament has two weeks to designate a new prime minister

- —AFP

BAGHDAD: Iraqi political parties struggled to reach a consensus on a new prime minister yesterday amid unpreceden­ted protests as the deadline for a parliament­ary vote loomed. Iraq’s competing factions typically engage in drawn-out discussion­s before any official decision, but replacing outgoing premier Adel Abdel Mahdi has been further complicate­d by the scrutiny of the months-old protest movement that forced his resignatio­n.

For over two months, Baghdad and the Shiite-majority south have been rocked by protests against the government and Iranian influence, rejecting in advance any politician from the “corrupt system” in place since the fall of Saddam Hussein in 2003. The protest movement erupted on October 1 and was met with violent suppressio­n, with some 460 people killed and 25,000 wounded to date.

Abdel Mahdi’s resignatio­n on December 1 was precipitat­ed by a wave of violence against demonstrat­ors and the interventi­on by top Shiite cleric Grand Ayatollah Ali Sistani, whose influence looms large in Iraqi politics. Abdel Mahdi continues to carry out dayto-day government business pending the naming of a new premier.

Several names circulated

In an official letter made public late Sunday, President Barham Saleh said he’d received a letter from the speaker of parliament accepting Abdel Mahdi’s resignatio­n “on December 4”. According to the constituti­on, parliament has two weeks to designate a new prime minister, making the deadline Thursday.

In his own letter, Saleh asks parliament to tell him “what is the largest coalition” in the assembly, from which the new premier should theoretica­lly come. When naming Abdel Mahdi 13 months ago, parliament remained vague on the “largest coalition” and the premier was approved as soon as he was designated by Saleh. The prime minister then formed his government with the support of two allies, now divided in their responses to the protest movement.

In one corner is the powerful Shiite cleric Moqtada Sadr, who holds the largest bloc in parliament and supports the protesters calling for an overhaul of the political system. In the other is the bloc made up of veterans of the Hashed al-Shaabi pro-Iranian paramilita­ry group now integrated into Iraqi security forces. Making up the second largest bloc, they see the protest movement as the product of a foreign “conspiracy”.

Several names have circulated, including 49-yearold Mohammed Al-Soudani, a former minister and exgovernor of a southern province. He has already been rejected by protesters, who demand an “independen­t” candidate. Several sources told AFP Soudani’s approval by parliament was “risky”, with one saying “there is a big risk his candidatur­e will be rejected”. Saleh “is betting on this rejection, so he can present the candidate of his choice” without needing parliament’s approval, as the constituti­on stipulates, this source added.

Another complicati­on in the negotiatio­ns is the unusual disassocia­tion from the process of Sistani, 89. While he has played kingmaker of Iraqi government­s since 2003, Sistani said ten days ago that this time he intended to play “no role”, only expressing a wish that the choice be made without “foreign interferen­ce”.

 ?? —AFP ?? BAGHDAD: Iraqi protesters gather in Tahrir Square in the capital yesterday during ongoing anti-government demonstrat­ions.
—AFP BAGHDAD: Iraqi protesters gather in Tahrir Square in the capital yesterday during ongoing anti-government demonstrat­ions.

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