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Iraq crisis deepens after PM-designate steps down

By AFP - Mar 03,2020 - Last updated at Mar 03,2020

Student protesters, some wearing protective face masks, march with Iraqi national flags during an anti-gov't demonstration in Iraq's southern city of Nasiriyah in Dhi Qar province on Saturday (AFP photo)

BAGHDAD — Protest-torn Iraq on Monday faced more political gridlock after prime minister-designate Mohammed Allawi withdrew overnight, accusing lawmakers of obstructing his attempt to form a government.

Oil-rich but poverty-stricken Iraq has for five months been rocked by the biggest wave of anti-government demonstrations since the 2003 US-led invasion toppled former president Saddam Hussein.

The mostly youthful protesters demand the ouster of Iraq's entire political elite, which they accuse of being inept, corrupt and beholden to powerful neighbour Iran.

Allawi's departure plunges Iraq deeper into uncertainty and leaves President Barham Saleh 15 days to propose a new candidate — likely intelligence chief Mustafa Al Kazimi, according to political sources.

Iraq has been in legal limbo since outgoing premier Adel Abdel Mahdi stepped down in December, as the constitution makes no provisions for such a resignation.

Allawi's withdrawal a month after his appointment marks another first for Iraq, which has never seen a premier-designate fail to secure parliamentary backing for a Cabinet line-up.

Iraq's bitterly divided parliament had on Sunday failed for a third time to convene a confidence vote on Allawi's proposed government.

In a letter to the president, Allawi charged that some factions were "not serious about reform or fulfilling their pledges to the people".

One Iraqi official, speaking on condition of anonymity, told AFP that "political leaders are living in a bubble" and dealing with the crisis "as though nothing has happened in the country".

 

'Holding Iraq hostage' 

 

Allawi's withdrawal raised fears of a protracted political void, as Abdel Mahdi had pledged to formally step down by March 2 — the constitutional deadline for parliament to approve a new government.

But with Allawi out of the picture, Abdel Mahdi backtracked on Monday, saying he would stay on as premier until a new government is formed.

“The most dangerous thing that we currently face is the prospect of a constitutional and administrative vacuum,” he said in a statement.

Allawi had been nominated as a consensus candidate among Iraq’s divided political parties and had emphasised that his Cabinet would be made up of technocrats and independents.

Anti-government demonstrators had nonetheless rejected him as too close to the political elite.

Powerful populist cleric Moqtada Sadr — who had backed the protest movement before he withdrew his support last month — condemned “corrupt” politicians for “holding the country hostage”.

He hailed Allawi’s decision to bow out as one taken “for the love of Iraq”.

The protesters have backed Alaa Al Rikaby, a pharmacist who has emerged as a prominent activist in the southern protest hotspot of Nasiriyah.

Many celebrated Allawi’s departure as a victory.

“We have already removed Abdel Mahdi and now Allawi,” said Roqiya, a 20-year-old student demonstrating in Baghdad, who charged that “political parties pursue only their own interests”.

Political commentator Hamid Abou Nour said Allawi’s demise came precisely because he tried to reconcile the interests of political parties with those of the street, telling AFP that “he failed on both counts”.

 

Rockets hit Green Zone 

 

Allawi’s successor will inherit the daunting task of reconciling the government with an angry street movement after months of demonstrations that have left nearly 550 dead and 30,000 wounded, most of them protesters.

The new candidate must first secure the backing of the most divided legislature in Iraq’s history and then lead a government until early parliamentary elections, which Abdel Mahdi said could take place in 10 months.

At the best of times, forming a Cabinet is a difficult task in Iraq, as quotas apportion posts to key Kurdish and Sunni and Shiite Muslim communities.

This time around, political factions have again squabbled over how to share power, with ministries “up for sale”, according to political sources.

Compounding the situation, Kurdish lawmakers are expected to hold back support until they receive assurances on their share of the federal budget and of Iraq’s oil revenues.

Kurdish and Sunni MPs are meanwhile at odds with Shiite lawmakers, who are calling for the expulsion of 5,200 US troops stationed in Iraq.

The United States last month outraged Iraqi leaders by killing top Iranian Gen. Qassem Soleimani and others in a drone strike near Baghdad airport.

Tensions had soared after rockets were fired at bases hosting US forces in attacks Washington blamed on Iranian-linked Iraqi Shiite paramilitaries, with further attacks reported in recent weeks.

Most recently, two rockets were fired overnight into Baghdad’s Green Zone, where the US embassy and American troops are based, in the 20th attack against US assets in Iraq in four months.

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