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DEMOCRACY
New Iraqi parliament to convene June 14

Kuwaiti opposition stages walk out to protest secret session
Kuwait City (AFP) June 8, 2010 - Four members of a Kuwaiti opposition group walked out of a parliamentary session on Tuesday after MPs voted to grill the prime minister over alleged inaction on pollution behind closed doors. Speaker Jassem al-Khorafi then cancelled the grilling because Khaled al-Tahus, an opposition MP who had filed the request to quiz the prime minister, was among those who walked out of the session. Khorafi said that 39 MPs, including the 16 cabinet ministers, voted in favour of the secret session, 19 others voted against, while four members refused to vote and another three were absent. Kuwait's parliament comprises 49 elected MPs and 16 cabinet ministers.

Tahus last month demanded to question Prime Minister Sheikh Nasser Mohammad al-Ahmad al-Sabah, a nephew of the ruler, over allegations that he failed to apply the law to check pollution in a residential area. Tahus and the three other opposition MPs who staged the walk out belong to the Popular Action Bloc, headed by veteran lawmaker Ahmad al-Saadun. The group's spokesman MP Mussallam al-Barrak told reporters that they withdrew from the session because of the decision to hide important information from the Kuwaiti people.

"Our demand is to have an open discussion in the parliament chamber" to allow the Kuwaiti people to hear the truth, Barrak said. Tahus had repeatedly warned that he would grill the prime minister if the government did not shut several polluting industrial facilities. Residents of the Ali Sabah Al-Salem area, 55 kilometers (35 miles) south of Kuwait City, have often complained that excessive pollution from oil and chemical facilities in the area posed a serious health hazard.
by Staff Writers
Baghdad (AFP) June 8, 2010
Iraq's new parliament will finally convene next week, an official said Tuesday, paving the way for the formation of a new government more than three months after nationwide polls.

The June 14 opening of the Council of Representatives comes after Iraq's supreme court ratified the results of the March 7 general election which put ex-premier Iyad Allawi's Iraqiya bloc in the lead, followed closely by Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki's State of Law alliance.

"The president (Jalal Talabani) decided that the parliament will meet on Monday, June 14," Nasir al-Ani, head of the Iraqi presidency's office, told AFP.

Once parliament is convened, Iraq's constitution states that MPs must first select a speaker, and then choose a new president.

The president will then call on the leader of the biggest parliamentary bloc to form a government, giving him 30 days to do so.

Iraq's supreme court on June 1 ratified the results of the election, confirming initial figures which showed Iraqiya won 91 seats in the 325-member parliament, followed by State of Law's 89.

The Iraqi National Alliance (INA), led by Shiite religious groups, came third with 70, while a bloc of Kurdish parties hold 59 seats.

The court has opined, however, that a coalition agreed before parliament first meets would gain primacy over Iraqiya if it held more combined seats.

Earlier this month, State of Law and the INA announced they would form a post-election coalition, leaving them just short of a majority, though they have yet to formalise the arrangement.

The fact that no clear winner emerged from the election has meant that protracted coalition negotiations have ensued as blocs jockey to form a parliamentary majority.

Full results from the election were initially expected to be ratified in early April, but counting delays, multiple complaints and appeals from political groups have caused setbacks.

The impasse over the formation of a government comes as the US military pulls its troops out of Iraq, in line with the terms of a bilateral security agreement between Baghdad and Washington.

All American combat troops are set to leave Iraq by the end of August, leaving about 50,000 to advise and train their Iraqi counterparts. A complete withdrawal is due by the end of 2011.

Figures released earlier this month, meanwhile, showed that 337 Iraqis died as a result of violence in May, the fourth month this year where the overall death toll was higher than the same month in 2009.

US and Iraqi security officials have warned that a long period of coalition formation could give insurgent groups an opportunity to further destabilise the country.



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