Iraq's parliament approved a national unity government 
on Saturday, achieving a goal the US hopes will reduce widespread violence so 
that US forces can eventually go home. But as the legislators met, at least 27 people were 
killed and dozens wounded in a series of attacks. 
 
 
 | ![Residents walk past the scene after suspected insurgents set off a bomb near a food stand where men gathered to wait for jobs as day laborers in the Sadr City area of Baghdad, Iraq Saturday, May 20, 2006. The bomb killed 19 people and wounded 58, as the Iraqi parliament prepared to inaugurate the country's first fully constitutional government since the collapse of Saddam Hussein's regime three years ago. [AP Photo]](xin_1805032018229911678066.jpg) Residents walk past the scene after suspected 
 insurgents set off a bomb near a food stand where men gathered to wait for 
 jobs as day laborers in the Sadr City area of Baghdad, Iraq Saturday, May 
 20, 2006. The bomb killed 19 people and wounded 58, as the Iraqi 
 parliament prepared to inaugurate the country's first fully constitutional 
 government since the collapse of Saddam Hussein's regime three years ago. 
 [AP Photo]
 | 
Police also found the bodies of 21 Iraqis who apparently 
had been kidnapped and tortured by death squads that plague the capital and 
another area. The wounded included two British soldiers whose convoy was hit by 
a roadside bomb in the southern city of Basra, police said.
In a show of hands, the 275-member parliament approved each Cabinet minister 
proposed by incoming Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki. The new ministers then took 
their oaths of office in the nationally televised session in Baghdad's heavily 
fortified Green Zone.
In his first address, al-Maliki told parliament that he would make restoring 
stability and security the top priority of his new administration. He said he 
would "work fast" to improve and coordinate Iraqi forces so they can reduce 
attacks by insurgent groups and militias.
Al-Maliki said he would set "an objective timetable to transfer the full 
security mission to Iraqi forces, ending the mission of the multinational 
forces."
But his failure to fill the top two security porfolios illustrated the 
challenges ahead. Al-Maliki, a Shiite, said he would be acting interior minister 
for now, and he made Salam Zikam al-Zubaie, a Sunni Arab, the temporary defense 
minister.
That angered some legislators, and before the Cabinet was approved by a show 
of hands, parliament turned down a motion by Sunni Arab leader Saleh al-Mutlaq 
to postpone the session.
Al-Mutlaq then walked out with about 10 other Sunni deputies.
The defense ministry oversees the army, while the interior ministry is 
responsible for police.
The United States hopes the new national unity government of Shiites, Sunnis 
and Kurds can calm the violence and pave the way for Washington to begin 
withdrawing US troops.
"This is a historic day for Iraq and all its people," deputy parliament 
speaker Khalid al-Attiyah said at a nationally televised news conference as the 
legislators gathered.
"It is the first time that a full-term, democratically elected government has 
been formed in Iraq since the fall of the ousted regime. This government 
represents all Iraqis," said al-Attiyah, a bearded Shiite cleric wearing a white 
turban.
The legislative session began at about 1:30 p.m., two and a half hours later 
than planned as al-Maliki held last-minute meetings with other politicians, 
apparently to hammer out final agreements on some of the Cabinet portfolios.
US and Iraqi forces didn't impose day time curfews or ban traffic in Baghdad 
and major cities, as they did during previous national elections and 
constitutional referendum. But security was heavy in the Green Zone and the 
capital's airspace was closed to commercial flights at Baghdad's international 
airport. The government and US officials declined to say why.
About 100 stranded passengers and airport workers crowded around a television 
set in the departure lounge to watch the parliament session.
Meanwhile, violence continued in Iraq.
At 6:30 am on Saturday, several hours before legislators began to arrive at 
the Green Zone, suspected insurgents set off a bomb hidden in a paper bag in a 
Shiite district of Baghdad, killing 19 people and wounding 58, police said. The 
blast occurred near a food stand in Sadr City where men gather to wait for jobs 
as day laborers, police Maj. Hashim al-Yaser said. 
"It was a huge explosion," said Mohammed Hamid, who works in a bakery in the 
area. "We carried many of the injured to ambulances and helped remove the 
bodies." 
Police Lt. Col. Falah al-Mohammedawi said 19 people were killed and 58 
wounded. Many of the injured were rushed to nearby Imam Ali Hospital, where 
hallways were filled with doctors and nurses treating and bandaging the wounded. 
Sadr City is the stronghold of radical Shiite cleric Muqtada al-Sadr, who 
operates a powerful militia, one of many that exist in the capital outside the 
control of the government. Al-Maliki hopes to disband such militias and 
integrate them into the country's military and police forces as a way of 
reducing violence. 
In the western border town of Qaim, a suicide car bomber killed at least five 
people and wounded 10 in an attack on a police station, the head of the local 
hospital said. Hamdi al-Alousi, the head of the Qaim hospital, did not have any 
details about the attack. 
In the northern city of Mosul, a suicide bomber reportedly trying to target a 
US military convoy instead killed three Iraqi civilians. Police Brig. 
Abdul-Hamid al-Jibouri said the attack took place in Mosul's eastern 
neighborhood of Sukar. 
Elsewhere, police found the bodies of 21 people who apparently had been 
kidnapped and tortured, six in Baghdad and 15 in Musayyib, about 40 miles south 
of the capital.