Pressure on Iraq's al-Jaafari intensifies (AP) Updated: 2006-03-06 08:49
Sunni Arab and Kurdish politicians increased pressure Sunday on Shiite Prime
Minister Ibrahim al-Jaafari to abandon his bid for a new term, while leaders of
Iraq's Shiite majority struggled to overcome growing internal divisions.
Rashid is reported
to have been kidnapped by unidentified gunmen in February 2006, and a
ransom demanded, but details are unclear, and the circumstances of the
death of Rashid are also not clear. [AP] | Despite
the squabbling, there were reports the new parliament would be called into
session for the first time as early as the end of the week, starting the clock
on a 60-day period during which it would have to elect a president and approve a
prime minister and Cabinet.
The struggle to form a broad-based governing coalition acceptable to all the
country's main groups has been further hampered by the surge in sectarian
conflict.
Targeted sectarian violence killed at least five people Sunday. Three men
died in a gunfight at a Sunni mosque in Baghdad and two relatives of a top Sunni
cleric were slain in a drive-by shooting. Sunnis accused deaths squads allied to
the interim government, allegations denied by the Shiite-dominated Interior
Ministry.
U.N. envoy to Iraq Ashraf Jehangir Qazi expressed serious concern Sunday
about human rights in the country, citing reports of excessive use of force,
illegal detention centers and disappearances 锟斤拷 many of them the responsibility
of insurgents.
The political turmoil has left a dangerous leadership vacuum as Iraq's armed
forces, backed by the U.S. military, battle to contain sectarian violence that
has pushed Iraq toward civil war.
The Pentagon's top general said Sunday he did not think a full-blown civil
conflict would break out, although he acknowledged "anything can happen."
"I do not believe it has deep roots. I do not believe that they're on the
verge of civil war," Gen. Peter Pace, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff,
said on NBC's "Meet the Press."
A day earlier, the commander of the U.S. military's Central Command, Gen.
John Abizaid, said sectarian divisiveness had been worsened by the bombing of a
revered Shiite shrine in Samarra last month and was a threat to Iraq's
stability.
During a meeting with Iraqi leaders Saturday, Abizaid urged them to resolve
the differences stalling the formation of a government.
"The shrine bombing exposed a lot of sectarian fissures that have been
apparent for a while, but it was the first time I've seen it move in a direction
that was unhelpful to the political process," Abizaid said afterward.
The U.S. government sees a government with participation across Iraq's
communities as a key step toward improving security and weakening support for
insurgents, which would allow Washington and its allies to lower troop numbers.
Under the constitution, the Shiites' United Iraqi Alliance, the largest bloc
in parliament, has the first crack at forming a government and chose al-Jaafari
as its nominee for prime minister.
But the Alliance has too few seats to act alone. And it is facing a drive by
Sunni, Kurdish and some secular parties that want to prevent al-Jaafari from
continuing at the end of the government, favoring instead current Vice President
Adil Abdul-Mahdi.
Abdul-Mahdi lost in the Shiite caucus by one vote to al-Jaafari, who won with
the support of radical cleric Muqtada al-Sadr. Abdul-Mahdi is backed by
Abdul-Aziz al-Hakim, a powerful Shiite leader who is frequently at odds
politically with al-Sadr. Both have strong militias behind them.
Underlining the divisions within the Alliance, some Shiite leaders are
troubled by al-Jaafari's ties to the radical and openly anti-American al-Sadr.
The Sunni Arab minority, meanwhile, blames al-Jaafari for the Shiite
militiamen who attacked Sunni mosques and clerics after the Feb. 22 bombing of
the shrine in Samarra. More than 500 people died in the violence that followed,
according to police and hospitals.
Khalaf al-Olayan, a leader of the main Sunni bloc in parliament, said Iraq
has gone from "bad to worse" under al-Jaafari.
"Al-Jaafari's government failed to solve the chaos that followed the Samarra
explosions and did not take any measures to solve the security crisis that could
have pushed the country into civil war," he said in comments posted on the Web
site of the Iraqi Accordance Front, a Sunni group.
Kurds are angry because they believe al-Jaafari is holding up resolution of
their claims to control of the oil-rich city of Kirkuk in northern Iraq.
"If al-Jaafari tries to form a government, he will not get any kind of
cooperation," said Mahmoud Othman, a leading figure in the Kurdish bloc.
President Jalal Talabani, also a Kurd, was one of the first to publicly
initiate the dump-Jaafari movement, calling for a candidate who could build
consensus.
Two lawmakers from al-Jaafari's Dawa Party hinted Saturday that they got an
endorsement for their leader during a meeting with Grand Ayatollah Ali
al-Sistani, Iraq's most influential Shiite cleric.
But a senior al-Sistani aide, speaking on condition of anonymity because of
the sensitivity of the dispute, said Sunday that the spiritual leader indirectly
suggested al-Jaafari step aside.
Sectarian attacks remained a problem.
Gunmen stormed a Sunni mosque in west Baghdad early Sunday, killing three
people in a 25-minute gunbattle. Witnesses said U.S. helicopters hovered above
the exchange of fire and U.S. troops forces moved in to stop the fighting and
remove casualties.
Iraqi police and mosque officials said commandos from the Interior Ministry
staged the attack.
Later, the office of one of the country's top Sunni leaders said one of his
nephews and a cousin were killed by gunmen in another part of west Baghdad.
The Interior Ministry denied involvement in either attack.
Sunni and Shiite clerics jointly appealed for an end to the violence and
called for Muslim unity and the protection of religious sites.
"Extinguish the flames of the sectarian treachery. Every drop of blood shed
is a waste," said the statement by followers of al-Sadr and members of the Sunni
Endowment, a government agency responsible for Sunni mosques and shrines.
|