Sunday, December 12, 2010

No New Maliki Cabinet Before End of This Year (before the 25th) ...

Prime Minister Nuri Kamal al-Maliki in Baghdad today the foundation stone of the draft Iraqi hospital - the German and the Faculty of Medicine, Germany read article @ Link ~ http://translate.google.com/translate?hl=en&sl=ar&tl=en&u=http://www.pmo.iq/index.htm

December 13, 2010

No new Maliki cabinet before end of this year

IRBIL (Iraq): Iraq’s prime minister said Saturday he was still seeking cabinet nominations from the country’s top politicians, signalling he likely will not form a new government much earlier than the Dec.25 deadline.

Nouri Al Maliki, a Shiite Muslim, had pledged to announce his new government by Dec.15 and end the political deadlock that began after parliamentary elections in March failed to produce a clear winner. The delay announced on Saturday reflects Maliki’s struggle to cobble together an inclusive government.

But Maliki assured political leaders on Saturday that he remains committed to meeting a 30-day constitutional deadline — ending Dec.25 — to bring together Shiite, Sunni and Kurdish factions in a government that can overcome enduring sectarian tensions, and appealed for their help to do so.

“I call upon all blocs to quickly present their candidates,” Maliki said at a meeting of the Kurdish Democratic Party (KDP), promising to announce Iraq’s new leadership by Dec.25.

He also warned politicians not to get distracted with “marginal issues” since the clock is ticking. “We are facing a constitutional deadline and we will not tolerate exceeding it,” he said.

Saturday’s meeting in Irbil, the capital of the Kurdish autonomous region in Iraq’s north, was also attended by Sunni and Shiite Arab politicians with whom Maliki has had to create uneasy alliances after his political party fell short of winning a majority of seats in parliament.

The new government is expected to include all the major factions, including the Kurds, Shiite political parties aligned with Iran and a Sunni-backed bloc that narrowly won the election.

It will have a slew of issues to tackle, including developing the struggling economy and preventing a resurgence of violence as the last American troops leave by the end of next year.

Maliki secured a second-term in large part because of support from Kurdish parties that backed him after months of closed-door negotiations following the election.

http://gulftoday.ae/portal/e92d831f-6116-4d26-8a31-5e5554e6b3e4.aspx