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IRAQ: New assembly meets amid tight security but no agreement made - OCHA IRIN
Friday 25 March 2005
 
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IRAQ: New assembly meets amid tight security but no agreement made


[ This report does not necessarily reflect the views of the United Nations]



©  IRIN

Baghdad kids celebrating Wednesday's opening of parliament

BAGHDAD, 16 Mar 2005 (IRIN) - The new Iraqi National Assembly, elected six weeks ago in an historic poll, met for the first time on Wednesday amid tight security, but the meeting ended without a deal to form a new government.

Despite a heavy police and army presence in the area around the parliament and the closure of many surrounding streets, shortly before procedings got under way, four explosions rattled windows in the convention centre where parliament was sitting. But the attacks failed to disrupt the meeting. The assembly was barely a third full at the time and there have been no reports of casualties so far.

Iraqis had keenly anticipated the meeting and many gathered around their TV sets to watch the occasion, which was broadcast live. Most watched with high expectations, hoping that despite ongoing insecurity, the country could take another step towards building a new Iraq.

"I decided not to go to my work this morning so I could hear the speeches at the new assembly meeting. I believe that it's important for all Iraqis to participate in the rebuilding of our country," Salah Ibraheem, 43, shopkeeper in the Mansour district of the capital, told IRIN.

But little progress was made as the Shi'ite alliance, which won just over half the seats in the 275-member assembly in January's poll, and the kingmaking Kurdish coalition failed to agree on the new government's composition.

A tentative agreement was made that Ibrahim Jaafari of the Shi'ite Dawa party would be prime minister and the head of the Patriotic Union of Kurdistan (PUK), Jalal Talabani, would be president. But the parties remained divided on the question of Kurdish demands for oil-rich Kirkuk to be incorporated into an autonomous northern zone.

The issue of a permanent constitution was also high on the agenda. Both the current Prime Minister Iyad Allawi and President Ghazi al-Yawar said that the new constitution should be as inclusive as possible.

[ENDS]


Other recent IRAQ reports:

Barbers threatened by hardliners,  24/Mar/05

Interview with the UN Special Representative for Iraq, Ashraf Qazi,  24/Mar/05

Extra semester for Fallujah students,  22/Mar/05

Demonstrators defy eviction,  22/Mar/05

Focus on threats against progressive women,  21/Mar/05

Other recent Democracy & Governance reports:

MIDDLE EAST: Weekly round-up Number 14 for 19-25 March 2005, 25/Mar/05

ANGOLA: Outgoing ambassador urges greater transparency and donor patience, 25/Mar/05

LIBERIA: Basic services still in tatters as people return to Lofa County, 25/Mar/05

NIGER: Authorities arrest leaders of price hike protests, 25/Mar/05

COTE D IVOIRE: UN warns of spiral back to war, elections in jeopardy, 24/Mar/05

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