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Iraqis Already Frustrated with Government

by IWPR (reposted)
In the new prime minister's home province, people will await results before judging the government a success.
By Emad al-Shara' in Karbala (ICR No. 178, 24-May-06)
In the new Iraqi prime minister's home province of Karbala, people say they are unhappy that ministers in the new cabinet have been appointed because of their sect or ethnicity rather than their qualifications.

The announcement that the 37-member cabinet had finally been formed was met with less than full-on enthusiasm in Karbala, even though this central province is home to both Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki and his predecessor Ibrahim al-Jaafari.

As in much of Iraq, the mix of rising violence and a dwindling economy in Karbala has left people disgruntled with their government, and the new cabinet will have to prove itself before it gains their trust.

The division of ministerial posts was hammered out by allocating most positions to political slates, not individual leaders. The blocs, most of which represent one or another ethnic or sectarian group, each nominated members for ministerial posts.

Like many of the political analysts interviewed by IWPR, Karbala residents did not appear greatly concerned about which party was going to get which particular post - the issue which caused so much bickering between the various political groups and resulted in an agonising five-month gap between the parliamentary election and the formation of a cabinet.

But people told IWPR they viewed the new cabinet with scepticism because of the horse-trading involved in its creation – and not least because the most controversial posts, relating to the security sector, were still unfilled when it was announced at the weekend.

"It's a government of interests and parties," said Ahmed Jaafar al-Zubaidi, a political analyst at al-Mustaqbal research centre in Baghdad.

The Islamic Fadhila party dropped out of the negotiations, publicly scolding politicians for looking after their own instead of pursuing the goal of a united government. But according to Walid Khalid al-Abudi, a political analyst at Baghdad university, the party would probably have abandoned this principle and stayed in the talks, if only its demand for the coveted oil ministry post had been met.

One of the biggest arguments delaying the announcement of a cabinet was how the powerful interior and defence ministries should be divided among Sunni Arab, Shia and Kurdish political factions. The debate took place as Iraq's security situation continued to deteriorate and various factions battled one another on the streets.

Bayan Jabr, a former anti-Saddam activist who held the post of interior minister in the outgoing government, was widely criticised after his ministry secretly detained and tortured Sunni Arabs. In the new cabinet he has been shifted from the interior ministry, but instead of being ousted altogether, he has been given the important job of finance minister.

More
http://www.iwpr.net/?p=icr&s=f&o=262110&apc_state=henh
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