BAGHDAD: Nuri al-Maliki was awarded a second term as Iraq’s prime minister on Thursday, signalling an end may finally be in sight to the country’s eight month impasse following a general election in March.
President Jalal Talabani’s nomination of Maliki, delayed to give him as much time as possible to negotiate ministerial posts, comes after a power-sharing deal between Iraq’s divided factions was sealed two weeks ago and gives Maliki 30 days to complete the difficult task of forming a cabinet.
The months-long tussle has seen Iraq shatter the world record for the longest period without a new government after polls. “I charge you … Nuri al-Maliki to form the new government, which we hope will be a real national partnership government which will not exclude any faction,” Talabani said at a ceremony at the Al-Salam presidential palace in Baghdad. “You have 30 days to form the cabinet.”
In remarks following his nomination, Maliki called for political blocs to present candidates for ministerial positions who were “qualified and honest” and asked Iraqis to support the security forces as they fight a still present insurgent threat.
“I call for all the Iraqi people, the sects, my political brothers, to work hard to move past all our disputes, to put them behind us, and open a new page based on cooperation,” he said.
The ceremony was attended by parliament speaker Osama al-Nujaifi, the top judge of Iraq’s Supreme Judicial Council, Medhad al-Mahmud, as well as representatives of the country’s political factions. The rival blocs have all formed committees to negotiate their share of ministries and cabinet positions, which will be apportioned via a points-based system. Each bloc will be assigned points based on its success in the March 7 election, and each ministry and government post will cost a set number of points depending on its importance.
Under Iraq’s constitution, Talabani was allowed 15 days to appoint a prime minister following his re-election by MPs on November 11. He had earlier been expected to name Maliki, who first took the top job in 2006 when Iraq was mired in a brutal confessional war, as premier last Sunday, immediately after the Muslim holiday of Eid al-Adha.
But he delayed the decision to give the incumbent more time to negotiate ministerial posts. “Thirty days (to form a cabinet) is more than enough,” independent Kurdish MP Mahmud Othman told AFP. “They have been working on this issue for nine months now, so they should be able to do it.
“Nobody is confident of anything, but I think it is enough time if the political blocs will cooperate with each other and with him (Maliki). It’s a big if, but that’s what I think.”