Iraq PM Maliki stays in power for second term with help of tentative deal
November 11th, 2010 - 12:57 pm ICT by ANIBaghdad (Iraq), Nov.11 (ANI): Iraq Prime Minister Nuri Kamal al-Maliki will remain the country’s Prime Minister for a second term, thanks to leaders reaching a tentative agreement late Wednesday night to create a unity government embracing the country’s major ethnic and religious factions, ending an eight-month political impasse.
According to the New York Times, the agreement assures, for now at least, the participation of Sunni Arabs, who supported the bloc led by Maliki’s chief rival, Ayad Allawi, which narrowly won the most seats in the March election.
The deal was struck when Allawi’s group relented and agreed to join the new government, said Jaber al-Jaberi, one of Allawi’s chief allies, despite months of adamantly insisting it would never do so.
In exchange, Allawi’s bloc, called Iraqiya, was given the position of speaker of the Parliament as well as leadership of a newly created committee overseeing national security, officials from three factions said.
The creation of the committee was a compromise pushed by the Obama administration to ensure the participation of Sunnis, Iraq’s former rulers, who have been underrepresented in the Iraqi government since the American invasion.
More details will be filled in on Thursday when the country’s new Parliament is scheduled to meet, for only the second time since the election, to ratify the agreement.
The agreement is being seen as a victory for Maliki, who has proven a forceful and wily politician, unwavering in his determination to remain in office.
Now, it is to be seen how Maliki manages the unwieldy alliance, given the rivalries that exist among various factions, including a bitter historical opposition between Maliki and Sadr. (ANI)
- Opposition leader agrees to join Maliki Government in Iraq - Dec 16, 2010
- Iraq's ex-PM gets life threats - Jun 19, 2010
- Iraqi parliamentary race remains close - Mar 15, 2010
- Rival edges past al-Maliki in Iraq's vote count - Mar 20, 2010
- Iraq's speaker criticises human rights violation - Jan 03, 2012
- Iraqi court orders manual recount of votes - Apr 19, 2010
- Iraqi court ratifies parliamentary election results - Jun 01, 2010
- Former prime minister Allawi's list wins Iraqi polls - Mar 27, 2010
- Iraqi factions sign peace pact proposed by radical Shiite cleric - Dec 25, 2011
- UN Security Council urges Iraqis to form new government - Jun 04, 2010
- Biden asks Iraqi leaders to form own government - Jul 04, 2010
- Allawi vows to work with all parties in Iraq - Mar 27, 2010
- Iraq nominates oil expert as OPEC chief - Mar 06, 2012
- 53 killed in twin blasts in Iraq ahead of poll results - Mar 27, 2010
- Biden pays surprise visit to Iraq - Nov 30, 2011
Tags: al maliki, american invasion, ayad allawi, baghdad iraq, iraqi government, jaberi, national security officials, new york times, political impasse, prime minister nuri, prime minister nuri kamal, religious factions, rivalries, sadr, second term, sunni arabs, sunnis, tentative agreement, tentative deal, unity government