Monday, April 16, 2007

Sadr supporters to withdraw from Government?

I have not heard any word of Maliki's firings and cabinet changes. Maybe this is a way of avoiding some of the firings or is a deal between Sadr and Maliki. Maliki is hardly likely to ask for a withdrawal without US permission!

Shiite cleric vows to pursue U.S. troop exit
MUSSAB AL-KHAIRALLA AND PAUL TAIT

Reuters

BAGHDAD — The political movement of fiery Iraqi Shiite cleric and militia leader Moqtada al-Sadr said on Sunday it would withdraw from the government on Monday to press its demand for a timetable for a U.S. troop withdrawal.

Officials from the movement, which holds six ministries and a quarter of the parliamentary seats in Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki's Shi'ite Alliance, said the formal announcement would be made on Monday at a news conference.

The move is unlikely to bring down the government, but it could create tensions in Mr. al-Maliki's fractious Shiite-led government of national unity at a time when it is trying to heal sectarian divisions that threaten to tip Iraq into civil war.

“We are going to declare our withdrawal from government because the prime minister does not want to make a timetable for the withdrawal of foreign forces from Iraq,” said one official in Mr. al-Sadr's movement who declined to be identified.


There was no immediate comment from the government.

Mr. al-Maliki says he sees no need to set a timetable. He said last week his government was working to build up Iraq's security forces as quickly as possible so U.S.-led forces could leave.

Two other al-Sadr officials confirmed the intention to pull out of the government but stressed the movement would continue to give “cautious” backing to a U.S.-Iraqi security crackdown in the capital. The Sadrists will remain in parliament.

Mr. al-Sadr's Mehdi Army militia, regarded by the Pentagon as the greatest threat to peace in Iraq, has kept a low profile during the two-month-old crackdown, reportedly on the orders of Mr. al-Sadr.

Despite the offensive, violence raged in Baghdad on Sunday.

Up to 34 people were killed and 100 wounded by bombs in mainly Shiite districts. Police also found 30 bodies, a sharp rise from the usually much lower number of victims of sectarian death squads found in the capital's streets each day since the security plan began.

Two British military personnel died when two helicopters crashed north of Baghdad. Four more people were injured when the Puma transport helicopters crashed near a U.S. air base in Taji, 20 kilometres from Baghdad, British officials said.

The helicopters may have collided in mid-air, the U.S. military said.

The Sadrists ended a two-month boycott of parliament in January after pulling out in protest over the timetable issue and a meeting between Mr. al-Maliki and U.S. President George W. Bush. They returned after a deal was brokered.

A senior official in Mr. al-Sadr's movement, Abdul-Mehdi al-Muteyri, said Mr. al-Sadr had also ordered the pullout, saying Mr. al-Maliki was hamstrung by political parties in his government pulling him in different directions.

“We don't believe in partisan quotas. Under the direct orders of Moqtada al-Sadr we have decided we are going to leave the government in order to give the prime minister the best possible options so that he can run his government,” Mr. al-Muteyri said.

Tens of thousands of Iraqis answered a call by Mr. al-Sadr to rally in the holy Shiite city of Najaf last week to protest against the presence of some 140,000 U.S.-led forces in Iraq.

Mr. al-Sadr led two uprisings against American forces in 2004 but later entered mainstream politics. He is a key backer of Mr. al-Maliki.

The U.S. military says Mr. al-Sadr is now in hiding in Iran, but the cleric's aides insist he is still in Iraq.

Mr. Bush said last week that setting timetables for a troop withdrawal would undermine the crackdown in Baghdad, which he said was beginning to show signs of progress in curbing sectarian violence.

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