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Saturday, November 21, 2009

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Iraqi parliament speaker Ayad al-Samarai speaks to the press following an Iraqi Parliament session about the election law on Sunday, Nov. 8, 2009. Iraq's parliament Sunday night passed a long-delayed election law needed to carry out nationwide elections, a debate that has been intensely watched over fears the holdup could delay the January elections and possibly delay the planned U.S. plans to withdraw their forces.
AP Photo

Iraqi PM: no election alliance with Shiite rivals

Associated Press Writer

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<i>Petros Giannakouris  - AP Photo</i><br /> Newly graduated Iraqi police officers embrace during their graduation ceremony, at Baghdad's Police College, at the Ministry of Interior complex, Iraq, Monday, Nov. 9 , 2009. Hundreds of police officers, including fifty women, graduated during a ceremony Monday.<i>Karim Kadim  - AP Photo</i><br /> Iraqi workers clean the newly reconstructed Mohamed al-Qassim bridge in front of the damaged building of the finance ministry, in Baghdad, Iraq, on Tuesday, Nov. 10, 2009. The bridge which was damaged after a truck bomb attack on Aug. 19, will reopen for the public soon, Iraqi officials said.<i>Karim Kadim  - AP Photo</i><br /> A security guard hold his rifle as he walks next to an advertising billboard reading in Arabic, 'Updating your statement is your path for voting', in central Baghdad, Iraq, on Tuesday, Nov. 10, 2009. Iraq's election head proposes a national vote on Jan 21 after parliament  passed a crucial election law Sunday night. Under President Barack Obama's plan, all U.S. combat troops will remain in Iraq for the elections to act as a security cushion, and will then withdraw by the end of August 2010. The remaining 50,000 trainers and support troops left in the country would leave by the end of 2011.

Iraq's prime minister on Tuesday denied reports he will form an alliance with the nation's leading Shiite parties ahead of national polls in January.

Nouri al-Maliki said the suggestions that he will create an election bloc with the rival Shiites of the Supreme Iraqi Islamic Council and the followers of anti-American cleric Muqtada al-Sadr, are "not true."

But al-Maliki also welcomed all parties - including his Shiite rivals - to come under the umbrella of his party for the vote or afterward.

"We said if they want to form fronts now, they are welcome to, and if they want to form them after elections, they are also welcome to do so," al-Maliki told reporters. "The door is open for all."

Earlier this year, the Supreme Council and the Sadrists joined together to form the Iraqi National Alliance. Both parties enjoy close ties to Iran. The bloc also includes smaller Shiite, Sunni and secular groups.

It replaces a Shiite alliance that won the last election in December 2005, dominating the 275-seat legislature and securing al-Maliki, whose Dawa party was part of the alliance at the time, the prime minister's job.

The alliance has emerged as the main threat to al-Maliki's hopes to win another four-year term at the helm after elections.

Al-Maliki rejected joining the new Shiite bloc and instead has formed a broad coalition - known as the State of Law list - that emphasizes secular policies and reconciliation with Sunnis after years of sectarian bloodshed.

He has staked his political reputation upon his ability to boost security in a country weary of years of bloodshed. But his once dominant political position has taken a hit by two major bombings in Baghdad since August.

The most recent attack took place Oct. 25 in central Baghdad, killing 155 people and wounding some 500. The bombings seemed designed to paint al-Maliki as a leader incapable of providing security, undermining much of his political support.

On Tuesday, the prime minister blamed Baathists, supporters of former dictator Saddam Hussein, for the attacks, and said "their aim is to undermine the elections."

He said 73 people - all with ties to the outlawed Baath party - have been detained in connection with the attacks, which struck the Justice Ministry and the Baghdad provincial administration building, akin to city hall. The August attacks targeted the foreign and finance ministries, also in the heart of Baghdad.

Associated Press writers Qassim Abdul-Zahra and Rebecca Santana contributed to this report.


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