Some MPs, who were barred from attending after chanting for parliament speaker's removal, say they will mount legal challenge. | |||||
Middle East Online | |||||
BAGHDAD
- Iraqi lawmakers approved five of the prime minister's candidates for a
new cabinet on Tuesday after weeks of delays and chaos at parliament,
as thousands of people demonstrated for reforms.
But
some MPs, who were barred from attending after chanting for the
parliament speaker's removal and disrupting an earlier session, said
they would mount a legal challenge.
Iraq has been hit
by weeks of political turmoil surrounding Prime Minister Haider
al-Abadi's efforts to replace the cabinet of party-affiliated ministers
with a government of technocrats.
The crisis comes as
Iraqi forces battle to regain more ground from the Islamic State group,
and both the United Nations and Washington have warned that it could
undermine the fight against the jihadists.
Iraq has
also been hit hard by the plummeting price of oil, revenues from which
account for the vast majority of government funds.
The
proposed cabinet changes have been opposed by powerful political parties
that rely on control of ministries for patronage and funds, and
parliament has repeatedly failed to vote on a new cabinet list.
Lawmakers
approved Abadi's candidates for the ministries of electricity, health,
higher education, labour and water resources, MP Sarwa Abdulwahid and
two parliamentary officials said.
But they rejected some of Abadi's nominees, and the premier will present additional candidates on Saturday, the sources said.
Earlier
in the day, some MPs prevented Abadi from speaking at parliament and
threw water bottles in his direction, lawmakers and a parliamentary
official who was present at the session said.
Some
lawmakers also chanted against parliament speaker Salim al-Juburi,
terming him "illegitimate" and saying: "Salim! Out, out!"
The
protesting lawmakers were then barred from attending the second session
at which the partial cabinet was approved, vowing to file a court case
over the issue.
Parliament has repeatedly been hit by
chaos in recent weeks, with MPs holding an overnight sit-in at
parliament, brawling in the chamber and seeking to sack Juburi, electing
an interim replacement who has chaired his own rival sessions.
Abadi
called a week ago for parliament to put aside its differences and do
its job, but the antics in the legislature have continued.
- Only 'poverty and killing' -
As
the latest political turmoil played out in parliament, thousands of
protesters demonstrated for reforms nearby, answering a call from
powerful Shiite cleric Moqtada al-Sadr to do so.
The
demonstrators, many carrying Iraqi flags, marched from Tahrir Square in
central Baghdad to an entrance to the heavily fortified Green Zone where
the government is headquartered, chanting that politicians "are all
thieves".
The government "did not bring the country and
Iraqis anything but poverty and killing," said demonstrator Abu Ali
al-Zaidi, who travelled from Maysan province in the south for the
protest.
"The political quotas and the parties that
control everything are the reason for the failure of the government,"
said Abu Mohammed al-Sudani, a protester from Baghdad who carried an
Iraqi flag.
Key government posts have for years been
shared out based on political and sectarian quotas, a practice
demonstrators want to end.
Ali al-Bahadli, a cleric
from the Sadr Movement who was taking part in the demonstration, said:
"We want the ministers to be independent, outside the control of the
political parties and parliament."
Sadr, the scion of a
powerful clerical family who in earlier years raised a rebellion
against US-led forces and commanded a feared militia, had called for a
mass demonstration in Baghdad on Tuesday to pressure the government to
carry out reforms.
He organised a two-week sit-in at
entrances to the Green Zone last month, calling it off only after Abadi
presented a list of cabinet nominees.
Abadi called in
February for "fundamental" change to the cabinet so that it includes
"professional and technocratic figures and academics".
That
kicked off the latest chapter in a months-long saga of Abadi proposing
various reforms that parties and politicians with interests in the
existing system have sought to delay or undermine.
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blog archive
Wednesday 27 April 2016
Iraqi lawmakers approve PM’s partial cabinet
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