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Speical
Report: Tension accelerates in Iraq
Related: Iraqi parliament ends opening
session after 40 minutes
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| Iraqi lawmakers take their oath during the
opening session of the new parliament in Baghdad March 16, 2006.
(Xinhua/Reuters) | BAGHDAD, March 16 (Xinhuanet) -- The Iraqi parliament
convened Thursday for the first time under tight security measures after three
months of the Dec. 15 general elections.
The lawmakers gathered in the heavily fortified Green
Zone in central Baghdad as the U.S. and Iraqi security forces deployed in the
capital, especially in the mixed Sunni and Shiite neighborhoods, to impose a
traffic ban.
The opening session is more likely to be ceremonial
rather than a practical meeting as Iraqi politicians are yet to reach an
agreement on forming a national unity government. On Wednesday, Iraqi President
Jalal Talabani hosted a meeting attended by political leaders in his residence
in Baghdad to find out a way to break the deadlock, but it failed to produce any
tangible result.
However, Talabani expressed his personal optimism on
cabinet formation after the meeting, saying that "by the end of the month we
will form a government of national unity and Iraq will be strong and will be
free from terrorism."
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| An Iraqi soldier stands guard at a
checkpoint after authorities imposed a vehicle ban to prevent violence in
Baghdad March 16, 2006.
(Xinhua/Reuters) | Meanwhile, Iraq's outgoing Prime Minister Ibrahim
al-Jaafarialso expected the government to be formed within a month but under
conditions.
"I believe a month is enough to form a government, if
we stick to the constitution," Jaafari said on the state-run Iraqiya television.
However, several other politicians were skeptical,
saying that a month is too rosy to expect new government within a month as there
are still other issues to be solved.
"I don't expect to see a new government before May,"
Hassan al-Shemmary, a Shiite politician told reporters after the meeting.
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