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EDITOR IN CHIEF- ABDULLAH BIN SALIM AL SHUEILI

Iraq parties locked in talks over new PM as clock ticks

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BAGHDAD: Iraq’s political factions were in high-stake talks on Thursday to name a new prime minister, after the president set a February 1 deadline to replace Adel Abdel Mahdi.


Months of mass anti-government protests led Abdel Mahdi to resign in December, but he has stayed on since in a caretaker role while political factions have struggled to find a successor.


Any contender would need the approval not only of the political class but also of Iraq’s religious authority, Iran, the United States and the protest movement.


Two days ahead of the Saturday deadline, “President Barham Saleh is hosting the various political blocs to try to find a consensus candidate,” a source from his office said.


Saleh had sent a letter to Iraq’s deeply-divided parliament, giving it until Saturday to nominate a new premier after months of paralysis. Otherwise, he said, he would name someone unilaterally.


As the clock was ticking, the United Nations’ top official in Iraq ramped up pressure, too.


“It is high time to restore confidence by setting aside partisanship, acting in the interest of the country and its people,” said Jeanine Hennis-Plasschaert in a statement.


“Iraq cannot afford the ongoing violent oppression nor the political and economic paralysis.”


According to Iraq’s constitution, parliament’s largest bloc must nominate a prime minister within 15 days of legislative elections.


The candidate is then tasked by the president with forming a government within one month.


But Iraq is in uncharted waters, as the constitution makes no provisions for the PM’s resignation and the 15-day period since Abdel Mahdi stepped down has long expired.


It is also unclear if the constitution allows the president to name his own candidate in this situation.


Saleh’s letter sent factions into last-minute crisis talks, with one political figure saying they were “tense”.


— AFP


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