Monday, 30 January 2012, 07:50 GMT
Iraqiya MPs to end boycott, easing crisis



An Iraqi soldier stands guard in front of a banner picturing Premier-elect Iyad Allawi in Baghdad in 2010. / AFP

AFP"Iraqiya decided its deputies would return for parliament meetings," A secular bloc which won the most seats in Iraq's March 2010 vote will end a boycott of parliament that it began in mid-December, a spokeswoman said on Sunday, easing a political crisis. "Iraqiya decided its deputies would return for parliament meetings," Maysoon al-Damluji told a news conference after a gathering of Iraqiya leaders and MPs.


Among those attending were former premier Iyad Allawi, deputy prime minister Saleh al-Mutlak, parliament speaker Osama al-Nujaifi, and the finance minister, Rafa al-Essawi. "The deputies of the Iraqiya list will return back to participate in the meetings of parliament next Tuesday. That's what we decided today," MP Aytab al-Duri told reporters.

The decision has not, however, been taken to end a boycott of cabinet sessions by Iraqiya ministers, according to Duri, who said "that will be the next step."

A row erupted over a month ago between the Shiite-led government and the Iraqiya bloc as authorities charged Vice President Tareq al-Hashemi, a Sunni and Iraqiya member, with running a death squad. Iraqiya began a boycott of parliament and cabinet to protest what it charged was Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki's centralisation of power, and it has since called for Maliki to respect a power-sharing deal or quit.

Authorities have issued an arrest warrant for Hashemi while Maliki, a Shiite, has said his Sunni deputy Saleh al-Mutlak should be sacked after the latter said the premier was "worse than Saddam Hussein". Hashemi, who denies the charges, has been holed up in the autonomous Kurdish region of northern Iraq and Kurdish officials have so far declined to hand him over to Baghdad.

"Iraqiya decided to return back to the parliament to prepare the success of the national conference proposed by President (Jalal) Talabani, Damluji said, referring to a proposed conference of parties aimed at resolving the crisis.

The bloc's MPs will participate in a vote on the budget and a vote on an amnesty for people involved in violence, Damluji said. They will also try to find a solution to the issue of Hashemi, and oppose Maliki's request to dismiss Mutlak, she said. The White House said on Saturday that US Vice President Joe Biden had urged Iraqi leaders to resolve their differences ahead of the possible national conference. Biden called Allawi on Friday and Nujaifi on Saturday, and discussed "the importance of resolving outstanding issues through the political process."

The two Iraqi leaders, meanwhile, briefed Biden on the deliberations under way "among all Iraqi political factions and parties in the run-up to a proposed national conference led by President Jalal Talabani," the White House said. Other international attention to the row has been less well-received, with Turkey and Iraq trading accusations since Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan telephoned Maliki on January 10 to discuss the political crisis. Erdogan said on January 24th that "Maliki should know that: if you start a conflict in Iraq in the form of sectarian clashes, it will be impossible for us to remain silent."

Maliki responded with a statement saying that "all Iraqis are proud of belonging to their country and no other. Erdogan has provoked all Iraqis with his comments, particularly those he believes he is defending."