BAGHDAD -Iraqi Cabinet ministers loyal to radical cleric Muqtada al-Sadr quit
the government Monday, severing the powerful Shiite religious leader from the
US-backed prime minister and raising fears al-Sadr's Mahdi Army militia might
again confront American troops.
Relatives carry the coffin of Ahmed Frayih in the Shiite
enclave of Sadr City in Baghdad, Iraq, Monday, April 16, 2007. Ahmed was
kidnapped by unknown men and found killed on Monday. [AP]
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The US military reported the
deaths of seven more American service members: three soldiers and two Marines on
Monday and two soldiers on Saturday.
In the northern city of Mosul, a university dean, a professor, a policeman's
son and 13 soldiers died in attacks bearing the signs of al-Qaida in Iraq.
Nationwide, at least 51 people were killed or found dead.
The political drama in Baghdad was not likely to bring down Prime Minister
Nouri al-Maliki's government, but it highlighted growing demands among Iraqi
politicians and voters that a timetable be set for a US troop withdrawal - the
reason al-Sadr gave for the resignations.
The departure of the six ministers also was likely to feed the public
perception that al-Maliki is dependent on US support, a position he spent months
trying to avoid. Late last year he went so far as to openly defy directives from
Washington about legislative and political deadlines.
In an appearance with families of military veterans, President Bush said he
had spoken with al-Maliki. "He said, 'Please thank the people in the White House
for their sacrifices, and we will continue to work hard to be an ally in this
war on terror,'" Bush said.
White House deputy press secretary Dana Perino said al-Sadr's decision to
pull his allies from the 37-member Cabinet did not mean al-Maliki would lose his
majority in Iraq's parliament.
"I'd remind you that Iraq's system of government is a parliamentary democracy
and it's different from our system. So coalitions and those types of
parliamentary democracies can come and go," she said.
Sadiq al-Rikabi, an adviser to al-Maliki, told The Associated Press that new
Cabinet ministers would be named "within the next few days" and that the prime
minister planned to recruit independents not affiliated with any political
group. The nominees will need parliament's approval.
The Mahdi Army, the military wing of al-Sadr's political organization, put
down its weapons and went underground before the US-Iraqi security crackdown
began in Baghdad on Feb. 14 seeking to end sectarian killings and other
violence.
Although dozens of the militia's commanders were rounded in the clampdown,
al-Sadr kept his militia from fighting back, apparently out of loyalty to
al-Maliki, who was elected prime minister with al-Sadr's help.
With the political link severed, there are signs al-Sadr's pledge to control
the militia might be broken as well. Forty-two victims of sectarian murders were
found in Baghdad the past two days, after a dramatic fall in such killings in
recent weeks. US and Iraqi officials have blamed much sectarian bloodshed on
Shiite deaths squads associated with the Mahdi Army.
A week ago, on the fourth anniversary of Baghdad's fall to US troops, al-Sadr
sent tens of thousands of Iraqis into the streets in a peaceful demonstration in
two Shiite holy cities. Protesters burned and ripped US flags and demanded the
Americans fix a date for leaving.
"I ask God to provide the Iraqi people with an independent government, far
from (US) occupation, that does all it can to serve the people," al-Sadr said in
a statement on the Cabinet resignations.
The departure of al-Sadr's allies from the Cabinet did not affect the 30
seats held by his followers in Iraq's 275-member parliament.
"The withdrawal will affect the performance of the government, and will
weaken it," said Abdul-Karim al-Ouneizi, a Shiite legislator allied with a
branch of the Dawa Party-Iraq Organization, which is headed by al-Maliki.
Saad Taha al-Hashimi, an al-Sadr ally who quit as Iraq's minister of state
for provincial affairs, sought to reassure the cleric's supporters that their
movement would remain influential.
"This does not mean the Sadrist movement will cease contributing to society,"
he told reporters. "The movement, as it always has, will remain in society and
the government to offer what is best and to push forward the political process."
In violence Monday, at least 13 Iraqi soldiers were killed and four were
wounded when more than a dozen gunmen hiding in the back of a truck attacked a
military checkpoint near Mosul, police said.
"When the driver approached the checkpoint and reduced speed, preparing to
stop for a routine search, all of a sudden more than a dozen gunmen ambushed the
checkpoint members and showered them with gunfire," said a security official,
who spoke on condition of anonymity out of safety concerns.
Elsewhere in the city, gunmen killed Jaafar Hasan Sadiq, a professor at the
University of Mosul's college of arts, as he was driving to work around 8:30
a.m. Five hours later, Talal Younis al-Jalili, dean of the university's college
of political science, was slain as he drove home. Shortly after nightfall,
gunmen killed the 17-year-old son of a Mosul policeman.
The brazen nature and the targets of the attacks are similar to previous
assaults that blamed on al-Qaida in Iraq fighters, who are trying to break Iraqi
military resolve and discourage secular activities such as university education.
In Basra, in the deep south of Iraq, about 3,000 protesters angry over
inadequate city services marched peacefully through the streets of Iraq's second
largest city to demand that the provincial governor resign.
The demonstrators gathered near the Basra mosque, then marched a few hundred
yards to Gov. Mohammed al-Waili's office, which was surrounded by Iraqi soldiers
and police officers. The protest ended a few hours later.