A car bomb killed at least
seven people on a busy avenue Saturday as Shiite politicians floated a proposal
to end the standoff over a new government by having Prime Minister Ibrahim
al-Jaafari step down ¡ª but only if his replacement comes from his own party.
The blast occurred at lunchtime outside an east Baghdad restaurant frequented
by police officers, four of whom were among the 24 injured, Sgt. Sabah Mohsen
said. All the dead were civilians, police said.
The explosion shattered windows and damaged shops. Firefighters hosed down
the debris-littered street as bystanders gawked at charred and windowless
vehicles.
Such violence is adding urgency to talks on forming a government of national
unity, a task unsettled four months after parliamentary elections.
Negotiations have stalled over the refusal of Sunni Arab and Kurdish parties
to accept al-Jaafari, the Shiite Muslim nominee to head the new government.
U.S. officials have urged the factions to form a government quickly, seeing
that as a vital step toward quelling sectarian violence that threatens to push
Iraq into civil war. The U.S. military cannot begin sending its 133,000 soldiers
home until the government is in place.
In a bid to break the deadlock, Shiite politicians not affiliated with major
parties proposed that al-Jaafari step aside in favor of another candidate from
his Dawa party, several Shiite officials said.
In return, the biggest Shiite party, the Supreme Council for the Islamic
Revolution in Iraq, would not push Vice President Adil Abdul-Mahdi for the post,
the officials said on condition of anonymity because the talks are at a
sensitive stage.
Al-Jaafari issued no public statement Saturday. On Friday, he told Britain's
Channel 4 news that he would not give up the nomination because he was "the
legitimate and democratic choice" of the Shiite alliance, a block of seven
parties that hold 130 seats in the 275-member assembly.
However, two Shiite officials from separate parties said al-Jaafari had said
privately that he would give up the nomination if asked to do so directly by the
country's top Shiite cleric, Grand Ayatollah Ali al-Sistani. The officials
agreed to discuss the matter only if they were not quoted by name.
Al-Sistani has privately urged Shiite leaders to resolve the dispute over the
prime ministership so a new government can be formed quickly, according to the
elderly cleric's aides. However, the aides also said al-Sistani did not want to
take a high-profile role in the dispute.
The protracted bickering over al-Jaafari has sharpened differences among
Iraq's sectarian and ethnically based parties at a time when the Americans, the
British and many Iraqis themselves are encouraging politicians to show unity.
On Saturday, Shiite politicians suggested that if Kurds and Sunnis stand firm
against al-Jaafari, the Shiites might oppose Sunni and Kurdish candidates for
other leadership posts that require parliamentary approval, including president
and parliament speaker.
"Any candidate for a key post presented by the blocs must be accepted by the
others," Shiite official Hussain al-Shahristani told reporters.
Former interim Prime Minister Ayad Allawi, a secular Shiite, suggested that
if the stalemate could not be broken, Iraqi leaders should hold talks on forming
a "national salvation government" and invite all political groups, including
some not represented in parliament.
Shiite official Hadi al-Amiri dismissed that idea and accused Allawi, whose
party won only 25 seats in the Dec. 15 election, of trying to sidestep the
decision of the electorate.
As the politicians wrangled, 76 Iraqi policemen who survived a deadly ambush
late Thursday near a U.S. base north of Baghdad returned home to Najaf, Brig.
Gen. Abbas Maadal said. Nine officers were killed in the firefight and more than
30 were unaccounted for.
Policemen tried to call their missing colleagues but said their cell phones
were answered by men who laughed and said, "If you want them, come and get
them."
The U.S. military announced Saturday that a Marine assigned to 1st Marine
Logistics Group died the previous day in a vehicle accident in Anbar province
west of Baghdad.
Elsewhere, a roadside bomb exploded Saturday near an Iraqi army patrol in
southern Baghdad, killing three soldiers, the army said. A gunfight between
insurgents and Iraqi forces at a checkpoint in northwest Baghdad killed at least
two civilians, police said. Three other people were killed in separate drive-by
shootings in Baghdad, police said.
In Mosul, gunmen killed an Iraqi army officer, police said.
At least one civilian was killed in clashes between insurgents and the Iraqi
army in Fallujah, police said.
In the southern city of Basra, four gunmen killed the director of traffic
police as he drove to work, police said. Also in southern Iraq, a British
soldier was killed following a bomb blast.
Police also found three bodies believed to have been victims of sectarian
death squads in three separate areas south of Baghdad.