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Iraq parties in talks over new premier

Iraq’s rival parties were negotiating the contours of a new government Monday, after the previous Cabinet was brought down by a two-month protest insisting on even more deep-rooted change.

After just over a year in power, premier Adel Abdel-Mahdi formally resigned Sunday after a dramatic intervention by top Shiite religious authority Grand Ayatollah Ali al-Sistani. That followed a wave of violence that pushed the protest toll to over 420 dead - the vast majority demonstrators.

Parliament Sunday formally tasked President Barham Saleh with naming a new candidate, as prescribed by the constitution.

But Iraq’s competing factions typically engage in drawn-out discussions and horse-trading before any official decisions are made.

Talks over a new premier began even before Abdel-Mahdi’s formal resignation, a senior political source and a government official told AFP.

“The meetings are ongoing now,” the political source added.

Such discussions produced Abdel-Mahdi as a candidate in 2018, but agreeing on a single name is expected to be more difficult this time around. “They understand it has to be a figure who is widely accepted by the diverse centers of power, not objected to by the marjaiyah [Shiite religious establishment], and not hated by the street,” said Harith Hasan, a fellow at the Carnegie Middle East Center.

The candidate would also have to be acceptable to Iraq’s two main allies, archrivals Washington and Tehran. “The Iranians invested a lot in the political equation in last few years and won’t be willing to give up easily,” Hasan said.

Tehran’s point man on Iraq Qasem Soleimani, who heads the Iranian Revolutionary Guard Corps’ foreign operations arm, was in Iraq for talks on the political crisis, government sources told AFP.

Protesters hit the streets in October in Iraq’s capital and Shiite-majority south to denounce the ruling system as corrupt, inept and under the sway of foreign powers.

Iraq is the 12th most corrupt country in the world, according to Transparency International.

Despite the oil wealth of OPEC’s second-biggest crude producer, one in five people live below the poverty line and youth unemployment stands at one quarter, the World Bank has said.

Demonstrators say those systemic problems require more deep-rooted solutions than Abdel-Mahdi’s resignation.

“We demand the entire government be changed from its roots up,” said Mohammad al-Mashhadani, a doctor protesting in Baghdad’s iconic Tahrir Square Monday.

Nearby, young law student Abdel-Majid al-Jumaili said that meant the Parliament and even the president would have to go.

“If they get rid of Abdel-Mahdi and bring someone else from the political class, then nothing changed. They’d just be two sides of the same coin,” Jumaili said. But the protesters’ demand for an entirely new face has complicated the search for a new premier.

Two political heavyweights said they had opted out of talks on a new prime minister: former premier Haider al-Abadi and the unpredictable religious leader Moqtada al-Sadr, who had backed the previous government until protests erupted.

“They’re aware the bar is too high and it’s too difficult for them to please the street,” Hasan said.

At the same time, the established political class is unlikely to trust a totally new player.

“The discussions now are over someone from the second or third tier of politicians,” the government source told AFP.

“It’s not possible to have someone new. It has to be someone who understands the political machine to push things along.”

The government and political sources said parties were considering a “transitional” Cabinet that would oversee electoral reform before an early parliamentary vote.

“This process will take no less than six months, in order to prepare for new elections according to a new electoral commission,” the official said.

Abdel-Mahdi, 77, is the first premier to step down since Iraq adopted a parliamentary system following the U.S.-led invasion that toppled dictator Saddam Hussein in 2003.

The factions that have accumulated power since then are struggling to “think outside the box” to resolve the current political crisis, Hasan said.

“This is the main pressure on them - they realize they are dealing with a different situation and it needs completely different solutions,” he told AFP.

Meanwhile, protesters have kept up rallies in Baghdad as well as further south in Diwaniyah, Hillah, Kut and the Shiite shrine city of Najaf.

The latter was rocked by massive clashes late into the night Sunday between protesters and armed men protecting a revered tomb of a Shiite religious leader.

Tribal fighters intervened to keep the peace, and a tense calm reigned over the city Monday morning.

And in Nasiriyah, Abdel-Mahdi’s birthplace and the site of most of the deaths in recent days, demonstrators clung to their city center protest sites.

AFP
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