BAGHDAD,
March 2, 2006 (IslamOnline.net & News Agencies) – Iraq's Kurds
and Sunnis reaffirmed on Thursday, March 2, opposition to the
nomination of outgoing Shiite Premier Ibrahim Jaafari to keep the post
in the new cabinet, dealing a blow to ongoing talks on government
formation.
"The
Kurdish and the Sunni groups think that he is not appropriate and they
cannot form a cabinet with him as he is not neutral," Mahmud
Othman, a senior Kurdish lawmaker, told Agence France-Presse (AFP).
Jaafari
was re-selected for the post of premier last month by the dominant
Shiite United Iraqi Alliance (UIA), which won 128 of the 275
parliamentary seats in the December general elections.
"The
Kurdish and the Sunni lists will ask the Shiite list to revise their
decision about him as the PM candidate," added Othman, whose
Kurdish coalition got 53 seats in the new parliament.
"The
prime minister should be somebody who is agreed upon by everyone. They
(Kurds and Sunnis) have decided to talk to Shiites on this in the next
couple of days," he said.
Jaafari
won the nomination by just one vote over incumbent Vice President Adel
Abdel Mahdi.
The
Iraqi constitution specifies that the prime minister be selected by
the leading party in parliament.
Incompetent
 |
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Shiite leaders vowed support to Jaafari's nomination despite objections. (Reuters)
|
The
Kurdish lawmaker said that Jaafari is seen as unsuccessful.
He
asserted that Kurdish and Sunni leaders "think the experience
with him has not been good and may lead to similar problems in
future."
Jaafari
had come under strong criticism from Iraqi President Jalal Talabani, a
Kurd, for holding talks this week in Turkey without prior approval
from other members of the caretaker government.
Last
October, Talabani accused Jaafari of breaking an agreement between the
ruling Shiite UIA and the Kurdish alliance and overly dominating the
government.
The
main Sunni political coalition also reaffirmed opposition to the
candidacy.
"We
have nothing against him (Jaafari) but his performance has been below
expectations," said Alaa Maki, a senior leader of Islamic Party,
which is part of the National Concord Front (NCF).
"He
was unable to control the security situation... and what has happened
in the last few days is a proof of what we have said," he told
AFP, referring to a surge in sectarian violence across Iraq that has
left hundreds dead after the bombing of a celebrated Shiite shrine in
northern Iraq.
Last
week, Sunni leaders boycotted government formation talks to protest
reprisal attack against Sunni mosques and properties across Iraq.
Maki
said Jaafari should go and give his seat to "someone
competent."
"It
is not a Sunni question," Maki said.
"It
is a question of Iraq and we have to be unified and have a common
goal. Even the Shiite alliance understands that it is a political
question and not a sectarian," he said.
The
Sunni NCF and the National Dialogue Front command 55 seats in the
legislature.
Defiant
No
The
Kurdish MP said former prime minister Iyad Allawi, who has 25 seats in
the new parliament, has also raised objections to Jaafari's
candidature.
Allawi,
a secular Shiite, accused Jaafari's outgoing government of being
responsible for forming death squads and setting up secret torture
centers in the war-torn country.
Allawi,
who gained a reputation as a tough politician with security as his
main trump card, had also accused Jaafari government of allowing
powerful militias to hold sway, posing a threat to communal harmony in
the country.
Shiite
leaders, however, rejected the Kurdish and Sunni position, stressing
support to the Shiite politician.
"It
is an internal affair of the Alliance and the decision to change the
candidate is our prerogative. Even if other groups come to us with
requests, we will not even discuss it," said outgoing
Transportation Minister Salam al-Maliki.
Iraq's
national security advisor Muwaffak Rubaie also said Jaafari's
selection would stand.
"We
would like our partners to respect our decision," he said.
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