Gunmen abduct 50 Iraqis; Bombings kill two (AP) Updated: 2006-03-09 16:40
Wednesday's political breakthrough 锟斤拷 the signing of the decree calling
parliament into session 锟斤拷 did not mean the country's political crisis was over.
It could, however, bring the deepening feud to a head.
The Shiite Alliance is itself divided over al-Jaafari's candidacy. He
defeated Abdul-Mahdi, a Shiite and one of two vice presidents, by a single vote
in the Shiite caucus last month, largely because of al-Sadr's backing.
Talabani, whose job it is to call parliament into session, sought to do that
three days ago but was unable to persuade Abdul-Mahdi to sign as required by the
constitution. Talabani was trying to force the hand of Abdul-Aziz al-Hakim, the
country's senior Shiite politician and head of the Supreme Council for the
Islamic Revolution in Iraq.
Abdul-Mahdi heads the Shiite parliamentary bloc loyal to al-Hakim.
A senior Shiite politician, speaking on condition of anonymity because of the
sensitivity nature of the information, said Abdul-Mahdi signed Talabani's
presidential decree after U.S. Ambassador Zalmay Khalilzad sought al-Hakim's
intervention during a meeting Tuesday.
Political insiders now say al-Jaafari's candidacy depends on how the bloc
loyal to al-Hakim and Abdul-Mahdi decides to vote. Al-Hakim and Abdul-Mahdi are
widely said by politicians to oppose his nomination but have held back from
outright opposition because they fear incurring the wrath of al-Sadr.
Nadim al-Jabiri, head of one of six other Shiite political factions, said the
decision to sign was made on advice Wednesday from Iraq's Federal Court, which
said parliament could be convened through an alternative process if Abdul-Mahdi
continued to hold out.
By law, parliament has 15 days after it is convened to elect a new president.
It then has 15 more days to approve the prime minister, and 30 days after that
to vote on his Cabinet.
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