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Key Iraq bloc to boycott parliament Published: December 18, 2011

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BAGHDAD (AFP) - The secular Iraqiya bloc, which won most of the votes of Iraq’s disenchanted Sunni Arab minority, walked out of parliament on Saturday sparking a political crisis days after US forces ended their mission.
The bloc, led by former premier Iyad Allawi, said it was suspending its participation in parliamentary business in protest at what it charged was Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki’s monopolisation of all decision-making. “We can no longer remain silent about the way the state is being administered, as it is plunging the country into the unknown,” said the bloc, which holds 82 of the 325 seats in parliament, second only to Maliki’s National Alliance.
“The Iraqiya bloc is suspending its participation in parliament from Saturday and calling for the opening of a round-table to find a solution that will support democracy and civil institutions,” it said.
“Iraqiya rejects this system of policy-making that consists of ignoring other political parties, politicising the justice system, exercising sole power and violating the law.” It accused the Maliki government of “placing tanks and armoured cars in front of the homes of Iraqiya leaders in the Green Zone,” the heavily fortified central Baghdad district that houses the official residences of leading politicians and government ministers as well as the British and US embassies.
“This sort of behaviour drives people to want to rid themselves of the strong arm of central power as far as the constitution allows them to,” it said in allusion to moves by majority Sunni Arab provinces to take up the option of similar autonomy to that enjoyed by the Kurds in northern Iraq. Votes in favour of autonomy by the provincial authorities in Anbar, Salaheddin and Diyala have drawn an angry response from the prime minister.
When Salaheddin provincial council voted in October to push for autonomy, Maliki retorted that it “does not have the right to announce this,” citing constitutional procedures that were not followed. The head of the National Alliance’s parliamentary bloc, Ibrahim Jaafari, criticised the Iraqiya walkout, and mocked unnamed Sunni parties, which “were hostile to federalism at the time of drafting the constitution and today use it to divide the country into regions.”
He also accused Iraqiya of staging its boycott at a time when the country needed to focus on more pressing issues.
“We are getting bogged down in a marginal fight instead of preparing ourselves for the of the withdrawal of foreign forces.”
The walkout by Iraqiya MPs represents one of Iraq’s most serious political crises and comes a day after US forces handed over control of their last remaining base.
The Shiite radical movement of firebrand cleric Moqtada al-Sadr said it was ready to undertake a “mediation mission to try to secure a change of heart”.
“Taking that sort of decision a day after the end of the US occupation is going to light the fire of division and we will do all can to put it out,” the leader of the movement’s parliamentary bloc Baha al-Araji.
An independent lawmaker from the autonomous Kurd region, Mahmud Othman, urged the prime minister “to negotiate with all political parties so that Iraqiya does not feel marginalised.”
But he also criticised Deputy Prime Minister Saleh al-Mutlaq, an Iraqiya member, for his rhetoric in a recent television interview, when he compared Maliki to an unjust dictator who is worse than Saddam Hussein.
“This is not the way to speak of the head of government”, Othman said.

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