Iraqi parliament holds new session

Iraqi parliament holds new session

Iraq's legislators have headed back to parliament for what was expected to be a lackluster session that will not address the key decisions on who will run the new government.

Instead, Iraq's 325 members of parliament were expected only to discuss internal parliamentary bylaws and forming legislative committees during the session that began in the early afternoon on Sunday.
It is only the fourth meeting of parliament since the members of parliament were elected in March.
Ali al-Dabbagh, Iraq's government spokesman, said it will likely be several more days before Jalal Talabani, the re-elected president, formally asks Nouri al-Maliki, Iraq's prime minister, to begin forming the new government and picking cabinet ministers.
A power-sharing agreement designed by Iraq's Kurdish leaders has assured that al-Maliki, a Shia, will remain prime minister even though his State of Law political bloc did not win the most votes in the March 7 parliamentary vote.
A Sunni-backed but secular alliance known as Iraqiya won the most seats in the election, and its leader, Iyad Allawi, the former prime minister, has worked against al-Maliki to prevent him from forming a government.
Allawi was never able to gain enough support to put himself in the prime minister's office, however, and Iraqiya signed off on the power-sharing agreement.
Allawi's role
The agreement returns both al-Maliki and Talabani to power and gives Iraqiya the parliament speaker's post, which went to Osama al-Nujaifi, a Sunni legislator.
Allawi was meant to head a council that is intended to serve as a counterweight to al-Maliki, but he has said that he will not take a post in the new government, calling into question the role of the council.
Al-Dabbagh said Iraqiya has a "very important" role in the new government but did not know what Allawi intended to do.
"There are no positive signals from him," al-Dabbagh said.
After Talabani officially asks al-Maliki to form the government, the prime minister has 30 days to assemble his cabinet - a painstaking process in Iraq's complicated political map.
PHOTO CAPTION
Iraq's newly elected Speaker of Parliament Osama al-Nujaifi (C) chairs the new Iraqi Parliament session in Baghdad, November 11, 2010.
Al-Jazeera

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