Wrangling over Iraq government; 4 US troops killed
Posted on: Thursday, 18 May 2006, 09:40 CDT
By Mariam Karouny and Hiba Moussa
BAGHDAD (Reuters) - Last-minute competition for jobs among and within Iraq's main political blocs kept a national unity government on hold on Thursday but negotiators were hopeful of a deal in time for a parliamentary vote on Saturday.
Four U.S. soldiers and an Iraqi interpreter were killed by a roadside bomb near Baghdad, the kind of violence Washington says a viable coalition of Shi'ites, Sunnis and Kurds can confront in order to bring stability and let U.S. forces start withdrawing.
While the insurgency against the occupying forces and their mostly Shi'ite allies goes on among the once dominant Sunni minority, five months of political stalemate since an election in December has seen sectarian violence mount on all sides.
More than 20 Iraqis as well as a fifth member of the U.S. forces were reported killed on Thursday in incidents that attracted attention. With 30-50 people found killed daily in Baghdad alone, it is clear many attacks go largely unreported.
The police chief of Iraq's second city Basra survived an assassination attempt at the height of a bitter public dispute with the local governor and intense Shi'ite factional fighting.
Officials were trying to secure the release of 15 members of the national tae kwondo martial arts squad, kidnapped as they drove through a rebellious desert region for training abroad.
Though broad agreements have been struck on which posts will go to each party, senior negotiators told Reuters that several candidates were still in the running for many of the top jobs.
Parliament has said it will vote on Saturday to confirm Shi'ite Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki's new team in office.
"All options are open," a top negotiator said.
COMPETING BIDS
Several cautioned, however, that Maliki risked being overwhelmed by competing bids for nominations, not least from the various factions of his own Shi'ite Islamist Alliance bloc.
A source close to Maliki said Shi'ite former army officer Nasser al-Amery was close to securing the Interior Ministry, the most sensitive post in the complex geometry of the government.
However, opposition to Amery, a little-known figure said to be close to the powerful Alliance party SCIRI which has run the Interior Ministry for the past year, meant a compromise candidate might be needed, other negotiators said.
Complaints of Shi'ite domination of the Interior Ministry and police under the interim government had led to demands from minority Sunnis and the United States for non-partisan figures to run the ministry in the new, full-term administration.
The choice of interior minister has largely been left to the Alliance. But it has agreed to find a figure acceptable to all. Under the deal, a Sunni is likely to head the Defense Ministry.
Under a constitutional deadline, he has until Monday to present his cabinet to parliament. The speaker said on Wednesday that parliament expected to vote on the government on Saturday.
The United States, which has 133,000 troops in Iraq suffering daily casualties three years after Saddam Hussein's overthrow, hopes a broad-based coalition will help end violence.
Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld told senators on Wednesday he could not promise to withdraw any U.S. troops this year but hoped to do so. Italy's new centre-left prime minister Romano Prodi, calling the U.S.-led invasion of 2003 a "grave error," said he would propose withdrawing all of Rome's 3,000 troops.
In the five months it has taken to form a government since the mostly peaceful and well supported election in December, sectarian and ethnic violence has increased, particularly after the bombing of a major Shi'ite shrine in Samarra in February.
Hundreds of people are killed every month in Baghdad alone, their bodies turning up often handcuffed and mutilated. Tens of thousands of people have fled their homes in fear of falling foul of religious and ethnic hatred among neighbors.
Gunmen killed six Baghdad laborers going to work in a minibus and a bomb in the capital killed seven people, including four policemen. A U.S. sailor was killed in western Iraq.
(Additional reporting by Ahmed Rasheed, Fredrik Dahl, Aseel Kami and Alastair Macdonald)
Source: REUTERS
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