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Sadr Movement Will Back Independents;

by juan cole (reposted)
From a Monday, June 16, 2008 entry on Informed Comment, Juan Cole's blog

Sadr Movement Will Back Independents;

Salah al-Ubaidi, a spokesman for the Sadr Movement, says that it will not boycott the fall provincial elections, exactly. The Movement will not run candidates under its own name, but will rather have some Sadrists run on other party lists, and will through support behind independents. This strategy is similar to that of the Muslim Brotherhood in Egypt, which cannot field candidates because it is a religious organization, but which has its candidates run under other party banners. The strategy appears to have been necessary in Sadr's case because he does not intend to dissolve his Mahdi Army militia, and the al-Maliki government is threatening not to allow his party to run because the party workers are tied to the militias.


McClatchy reports political violence in Iraq on Sunday:

' Baghdad

Unknown gunmen attacked a home in Adil neighbourhood, killed the mother, father and daughter and injured the son at 5 am Sunday. Investigation as to the motives behind this attack is still on going.

A roadside bomb targeted a National Police patrol in Rustamiyah, southeast Baghdad, near the Jabha petrol station injuring 2 policemen and one civilian at 8 am today.

A roadside bomb exploded injuring 2 civilians in Wahda neighbourhood at 7 am Sunday.

3 unidentified bodies were found in Baghdad today by Iraqi Police. 1 in Zayuna; 1 in Mansour and 1 in al-Risala.

Nineveh

Mosul University teacher, Weleed Saadalla was assassinated by gunmen on his doorstep at 8 am Sunday. He was about to head for work with his two young sons who were injured in the incident.

A suicide car bomb targeted the Directorate of Police in the town of Tilkeif, 20 km to the north of Mosul, Sunday. The guards in the watch towers suspected the car and shot the driver but still the car detonated killing one policeman, injuring 4 others.

Gunmen broke into the offices of lawyer Adel Hussein al-Wagaa in al-Dargaziyah neighbourhood, northeast Mosul, shot him dead and escaped.

Kirkuk

1 civilian and 1 Iraqi army soldier killed and 2 soldiers injured in explosion of IED targeting the army patrol in central Kirkuk, near the Fourth Bridge. The army vehicle was completely destroyed.

Salahuddin

1 Iraqi soldier killed and 3 injured as a roadside bomb targeted their patrol on the main route between Kirkuk and Tuz Khormatu this morning.'


Tom Engelhardt on hardended US bases in Iraq as invisible ziggurats hidden from the US public.

Labels: Iraq

posted by Juan Cole @ 6/16/2008 12:10:00 AM

§Sadr group to 'boycott' Iraq polls
by Al Jazeera (reposted)
Sunday, June 15, 2008 : Iraqi Shia movement vows to boycott provincial elections scheduled for October.

Supporters of Muqtada al-Sadr, the Iraqi Shia leader, have said they will boycott provincial elections due in October.   The announcement by Sheikh Salah al-Obeidi, a spokesman for al-Sadr in the city of Najaf, is the latest blow to the embattled Iraqi political process.

"The Sadr group will not take part in the [provincial] elections as we did in the parliamentary election," al-Obeidi said.   "This is the decision as of now by Muqtada and the Sadrists. We want to avoid making the same mistakes of being part of the sectarian divisions."

Iraq is due to hold elections in its 18 provinces on October 1, a move intended to give more power to local provincial councils.   The provincial elections law was passed in February, amid criticism that some aspects of it were in contradiction with the Iraqi constitution.   The elections are a benchmark set by Washington.

  'Anti-American movement'

  The al-Sadr group has 32 legislators in Iraq's 275-member parliament and its decision not to take part in the elections is seen as a step to consolidate its image as a nationalist and anti-American movement.  

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