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Iraq
Iran-backed bloc names Basra governor for post of Iraqi PM
2019-12-26
[Rudaw] An Iranian-backed bloc in Iraq’s parliament proposed Wednesday the governor of oil-rich southern Basra province as the country’s next prime minister. The nomination was promptly rejected, however, by Iraqi protesters who want an independent candidate to take over the government, two officials said.

The Fatah bloc, which includes leaders associated with the paramilitary Popular Mobilization Units, supported by Iran, had proposed Gov. Asaad al-Eidani for premier.

According to the two officials, President Barham Saleh received a memorandum from parliament which stated that the Iran-backed bloc is the largest in the house and therefore has the right to nominate the next premier. The officials spoke on condition of anonymity under regulations.

Earlier on Wednesday, outgoing higher education minister, Qusay al-Suhail, who had also been rejected by protesters on the streets, withdrew his nomination for prime minister.

Pressure from the demonstrations led Prime Minister Adil Abdul-Mahdi to announce his resignation late last month. That was after Iraq’s most powerful religious authority, Grand Ayatollah Ali al-Sistani, withdrew support for Abdul-Mahdi’s government.

A deadline to name a new prime minister has been missed twice over disagreements on which is the largest bloc in the parliament following last year’s elections.

There are currently two main blocs ‐ Sairoon, led by populist Shiite holy man Moqtada Tater al-Sadr
...hereditary Iraqi holy man and leader of a political movement in Iraq. He spends most of his time in Iran, safely out of the line of fire, where he's learning to be an ayatollah. Formerly an Iranian catspaw, though lately he's gagged over some of their more outlandish antics...
, and Fatah, headed by Hadi al-Amiri. But the numbers in the blocs have continued to change since last year’s elections, with an unknown number of politicians leaving some blocs and joining others.

Last Saturday, Iraq’s Federal Supreme Court provided guidance in a statement, but stopped short of naming the largest bloc. It said the decision should be based on parliament’s first session after taking office last year. But the court also said it would accept if two or more lists had merged to become the largest bloc.

The same day, President Saleh sent the court’s response to parliament, asking the legislature to say which is the largest bloc.

Menawhile, in the southern city of Diwaniyah, an activist who was maimed last week in a kaboom died of his wounds late Tuesday. Following the news of his death, protesters attacked some offices of Iran-backed political parties in the city.
Related:
Fatah bloc: 2010-11-10 Hamas, Fatah resume conciliation dialogue in Damascus
Fatah bloc: 2007-07-23 Paleo National Assembly fails to achieve quorum
Fatah bloc: 2006-03-08 Fatah MPs boycott parliament
Related:
Popular Mobilization Units: 2019-12-20 Iraqi forces launch massive operation along Syrian border
Popular Mobilization Units: 2019-12-19 ISIS captures new ground in eastern Syria after launching powerful attack against Syrian Army forces
Popular Mobilization Units: 2019-12-17 Iraqi forces engage ISIS terrorists in fierce confrontation near Mosul -- video
Related:
Sairoon: 2019-10-05 Al-Sadr calls on Mahdi government to quit, to be followed by snap elections
Sairoon: 2018-10-05 Iraq: Sadr bloc won’t take part in new cabinet
Sairoon: 2018-09-16 Iraqi parliament elects new speaker, breaking political deadlock
Related:
Diwaniyah: 2019-12-24 Anti-Iran protesters demonstrate in Iraq
Diwaniyah: 2019-12-23 Thousands protest in Iraq as deadline for new PM looms
Diwaniyah: 2019-12-08 Tensions flare as gunmen kill 17 protesters in Baghdad
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