(Reuters) — Iraq’s new government was sworn in on Monday (September 8) night in Baghdad in a bid to rescue Iraq from collapse, with sectarianism and Arab-Kurdish tensions on the rise.
The parliament approved the new government to be headed by Haider al-Abadi as prime minister.
Abadi is a Shi’ite Islamist. He included members of Iraq’s Shi’ite majority and its Kurdish and Sunni minorities in his cabinet.
The swearing in of the government marks the start of Abadi’s uphill task to unify the country after this summer’s devastating loss of territory across northern Iraq to Islamic State fighters.
Before the swearing in Abadi, addressing parliament, vowed to “allow all people in Iraq to participate in liberating the cities and provinces which have been taken over by terrorist groups.. and to bring back security and stability.”
The prime minister warned: “Any armed formation outside the authority of the state is banned.”
However, Abadi was careful in referencing the sensibilities of his Shi’ite majority sect, which feels it is fighting for its life against Islamic State.
Abadi saluted the network of Shi’ite militias and ordinary citizens, called volunteers, who mobilized this summer to stop Islamic State fighters from marching on Baghdad. The groups have become controversial, with Sunni political figures and tribal leaders accusing them of killing ordinary Sunni citizens.
Looking to the future, Abadi proposed that volunteers should be incorporated into “a national guardorganization”.
He vowed to rebuild the Iraqi army, which nearly collapsed this summer in the face of Islamic State’s march across northern Iraq. And he promised to work to improve Baghdad’s thorny relationship with Iraqi Kurdistan. He also said he would push a programme of decentralization.
”We pledge to develop the experience of the popular mobilization of forces and giving it a national dimension by making it serve the national reconciliation process and it is done by forming anational guard force made up of the sons of each province in parallel with the army and the police with a certain role and level of readiness and with the aim of establishing it as a backbone of the security operation in the provinces. In addition to supplying the Peshmerga forces with all the necessary capabilities within the framework of the national guard in order to protect the province and the Iraqi provinces.”
Adel Abdel Mehdi from the Islamic Supreme Council of Iraq was named oil minister while Ibrahim Jafaari, a former premier, was named foreign minister. Rowsch Shaways, a Kurd, was named finance minister. No interior or defence minister was named but Abadi pledged to do so within a week, bringing the cabinet to 37 posts.
Abadi’s deputy prime ministers are Hoshiyar Zebari, a Kurd and Iraq’s only post-Saddam Hussein foreign minister, Saleh Mutlaq, a secular Sunni Muslim who served in the same position in the last government, and Baha Arraji, a Shi’ite Islamist and former lawmaker.
The parliament approved for the ceremonial posts of vice presidents the last prime minister Nuri al-Maliki, like Abadi from the Shi’ite Islamist Dawa party; former premier Iyad Allawi, a secular Shi’ite; and the last parliament speaker Usama al-Nujaifi. The three have been seen as political rivals.
Abadi looked ahead to unifying the country and defeating Islamic State, whose offensive this summer across northern Iraq has threatened to tear his nation apart along sectarian lines.
Until the last moment, it was not clear whether Iraq’s Kurdish bloc would participate. Its senior leadership retreated to the Kurdish region for a final decision. The main sticking point was theKurdistan Regional Government’s (KRG) budget.
This year, Baghdad stopped paying for the KRG’s civil servants’ salaries in protest against the Kurds exporting oil to Turkey independently. The Kurdish delegation arrived late to the parliament session on Monday but decided to give the new government three months to sort their disputes with Baghdad.