Friday, September 24, 2010

Iraqi List looms again boycott the political process ...

Link ~ ***Supreme Judicial Council: that form the biggest bloc in parliament are entitled to form a government ...

24/09/2010

Iraq looms again boycott the political process

Baghdad, A member of the Iraqi List led by Iyad Allawi, said Friday that the decision taken by the Iraqi List, on its withdrawal from the political process if they give the constitutional right to form a government still in place, pointing to the existence of other options before it.

Omar al-Jubouri told the Kurdish news agency (Rn) that "the Iraqi List, has many options open and one of them is to withdraw from the political process," noting that he "is still an unfinished map of the agreements did not reach all the negotiations to impasse."

He continued, "and thus remains with the option of pulling existing options to reach agreements with other blocs within the basic principles announced by the Iraqi political project guarantor of the peaceful rotation of power."

He explained, "there are no ends of any negotiations and may change from time to time has been the subject of the agreement fall apart within the National Alliance, which is outside the time limit on 27 of the month."

The Jubouri that "the agreement between the coalition of national and state law can not be predicting in advance what will accrue to their talks," noting that "Iraq has a firm position and keen to implement its policy and is keen on the process of devolution of power, which is the essence of the democratic process in respect of the elections and constitutional."

Jubouri and that "Iraq posed no candidate with the National Alliance respects the principles of al-Maliki of Iraq, whether or Abdul-Mahdi," noting that "the Iraqi violation of the principles, it would not be a political process is correct and there will dictatorships will have recipes Auargip sectarian."

The Iraqi List, had earlier threatened to boycott the political process and not to participate in the formation of the next Iraqi government in case the "right" in the formation of the government as the winning list in the elections, stressing that the lack of participation in the next government will lose the last of any legitimacy inside and outside Iraq.

The process of delaying the formation of the government of concern to many Iraqis, especially with the end of combat missions for the U.S. Army last Tuesday, as commanders have warned Iraqis from the pursuit of insurgent groups to exploit the political vacuum, in order to enter Iraq into a cycle of sectarian violence, such as those experienced in 2006 and 2007.