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Deputy Iraqi: Maliki will lose his post due to face Kurdistan Alliance

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Deputy Iraqi: Maliki will lose his post due to face Kurdistan Alliance

06-04-2012

Baghdad-the lighthouse


Description of leadership in Iraqi pool and the Iraqi list MP Talal Hussein alzobei, Kurdistan Alliance "rock solid," he said, adding that the confrontation between the rock and a coalition of State law will lead to the loss of Al-Maliki a lot, including Office.

Alzobei said: the Federal Government, which is headed by Nouri al-Maliki came across conventions held in Erbil, Kurdistan, thanks to Al-Maliki became Prime Minister of the current Government, stating: the confrontation between the State of law coalition and the Kurdistan Alliance, which is the first coherent bloc and "rock solid", will lead to loss of Maliki.

Iraqi Deputy said in his context: the impact of losses the ascertainable Al-Maliki Al-Kurd showdown is stepping down from his post through new agreements between the coalition and political blocks alkordstanet blocks والمجيئ to another person for the Prime Minister

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Iraq Kurd leader warns Maliki


April 9, 2012

Iraqi Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki is monopolising power and preparing the ground for a return to dictatorship, Kurdish leader Massoud Barzani charged in an interview published yesterday.
“Iraq is moving towards a catastrophe, a return to dictatorship,” said Barzani in the interview published in pan-Arab newspaper Al Hayat, adding that it was “unacceptable” that Maliki was also Iraq’s “defence minister, interior minister, intelligence chief and commander of the armed forces”.

Barzani, who was received at the White House on Wednesday, said on his return to Arbil he would call a meeting of Iraqi leaders to “save” Iraq which is facing a political crisis.
In Baghdad, Maliki’s spokesman, Ali Mussawi, sharply criticised Barzani’s remarks.

“There is an incomprehensible escalation from Mr Massoud Barzani and it is rejected, and no one among the Iraqi people or others accepts it,” he told AFP.
“Many different Kurdish leaders called us and informed us of their rejection of such tendencies, which could be useful to some factions that do not carry good intentions to the Iraqi and the Kurdish people,” he said.

Iraq’s political woes deepened after the central government in Baghdad issued in December an arrest warrant against Vice President Tareq al-Hashemi, a Sunni, accused of running a death squad.
Hashemi sought shelter in the autonomous Kurdistan region run by Barzani.

Barzani said the meeting he would call must come up with “radical solutions... specific timeframe to exit the crisis”, and if it failed “we will take another decision”—a reference to the possible secession of Kurdistan.

“This is not blackmail or a threat. I’m serious. I will put a referendum to the Kurdish people. Whatever the price, we will never accept a return to dictatorship in Iraq,” Barzani said, referring to Saddam Hussain’s rule.

Tensions have been running high between Maliki’s Shia National Alliance coalition, Iraqi Kurds and the Sunni-backed Iraqiya bloc to which Hashemi belongs, mainly over the distribution of the country’s oil wealth.

Barzani said he refused to hand over Hashemi to the Baghdad authorities and would not ask him to leave Kurdistan, if he decides to return there after his current regional tour.
“I will not ask him to leave Kurdistan and I am not opposed to his return if he decides to return,” he told Al Hayat.

Elsewhere Al Hayat quoted Barzani as saying an agreement with US energy giant ExxonMobil—considered null and void by the Baghdad authorities—was still valid.
“Rumours of the contract being cancelled are unfounded and were made under threat of the Iraqi government,” he said.

ExxonMobil in mid-October signed an agreement for oil exploration with the autonomous region of Iraqi Kurdistan, earning the wrath of the Iraqi central government in Baghdad.
Baghdad does not recognise such agreements and so far has prevented any oil company having a contract with Kurdistan to participate in tenders in the rest of the country.

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