Iraqi protesters reject PM-designate


Baghdad: Anti-government demonstrators have rejected Iraq’s new prime minister-designate following his nomination by rival government factions, compounding the challenges he’ll have to surmount in order to resolve months of civil unrest.

Meanwhile, new divisions emerged among protesters and supporters of a maverick and often inscrutable Shiite cleric, who initially threw his weight behind the uprising but now is re-positioning himself toward the political establishment, after elites selected a candidate for prime minister that he endorsed.

On Sunday, Muqtada al-Sadr told his followers camped out among protesters in the capital and in the country’s south to unblock roads and restore normalcy, angering protesters who felt al-Sadr had betrayed them and the reformist aims of their movement for political gain. Saturday’s selection of former Communications Minister Mohammed Allawi, 66, to replace outgoing Prime Minister Adel Abdul-Mahdi was the product of months of back-room talks between rival parties, ending a political stalemate.

Hundreds of students voiced their rejection of Allawi at rallies in Baghdad’s central plazas and in southern Iraq. Protesters hung portraits of Allawi marked with an ‘X’ on bridges and tunnels around Tahrir Square, the epicenter of the four-month protest movement.

‘We don’t want Allawi because he is a party member chosen by the parties,’ said Hadi Safir, a protester in Tahrir.

‘We want an independent nominee.’

Others were more diplomatic, saying they’ll wait and see how Allawi delivers on promises to hold early elections.

Iraqi officials said it was likely Allawi would face the same political realities that bedeviled his predecessor, who was often caught between rival political blocs Sairoon, headed by al-Sadr, and Fatah, headed by Hadi al-Ameri.

‘He is not known as being tough or outspoken, so some see him as an even more pacified version of Adil Abdul-Mahdi, and will just serve the will of the parties,’ said one Iraqi official.

The officials spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to speak to reporters. But Allawi will have to cope with shifting sands of power in the Iraqi arena, with al-Sadr currently gaining the upper hand after showing his dominance over the Iraqi street. The cleric recently staged an anti-US rally that brought tens of thousands to the street. By asking his followers to return to Tahrir Square, al-Sadr gained an advantage in the negotiations for prime minister.

‘The groups we call pro-Iranian…are taking a backseat now as al-Sadr emerges as more active in shaping the new government,’ said Harith Hasan, a senior fellow at the Carnegie Middle East Centre.