In the wake of arrest warrants being issued for former
Finance Minister Rafi Issawi’s bodyguards in December 2012, protests and an
eventual boycott of the cabinet by several ministers began. The Agricultural
Minister Izz al-Din al-Dawla left in March 2013 after demonstrators were killed
and wounded by security forces in Mosul. Industry Minister Ahmad Nasser
al-Dalli Karbuli, Technology Minister Abdul al-Karim al-Samarraie, and
Education Minister Mohammed Tamim followed suit after the Hawija incident in
April. Tamim is now returning to the council of ministers, while Dawla has also
reportedly attended at least one cabinet session. All four ministers come from
the now defunct Iraqi National Movement (INM), which was one of the prime
minister’s main opponents. The four however, all had friendly relations with
Maliki, and broke with their list several times beforehand. It is no wonder
than that they should eventually return to their jobs, and resume their work.
Education Minister Tamim recently announced that he was
returning to office after a short boycott over the Hawija incident in April
2013 (Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty)
On May 22, 2013, Industry Minister Ahmad Nasser al-Dalli
Karbuli announced that Education Minister Mohammed Tamim was returning to his position. Tamim resigned in April after the security forces attacked
protesters in the town of Hawija. Karbuli, and Technology Minister Abdul
al-Karim al-Samarraie joined him. The month before, Agricultural Minister
Izz al-Din al-Dawla gave up his office after demonstrators were killed and wounded in his hometown of Mosul. Its recently been reported that he has attended at least one cabinet session recently as well. Tamim is from
Deputy Premier Saleh al-Mutlaq’s Iraqi National Dialogue Front, Karbuli is from
the Solution Movement, Samarraie is a member of the Renewal Party, while Dawla
belongs to Speaker Nujafi’s old Iraqiyoon party that is now part of Mutahidun,
the Uniters List. All of them gained office through the Iraqi National Movement
(INM) after the 2010 parliamentary vote. Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki
immediately rejected Tamim’s resignation. That was likely due to their
close relationship beforehand. In fact, all four have consistently broken with
their list to work to stay part of the government.
In December 2011 and March 2013, the INM announced that it
was withdrawing its ministers from the cabinet to protest Maliki’s government,
but neither worked. At the beginning of March, the National Movement stopped going to the council of ministers to support the protesters. In less than a
month, Education Minister Tamim, Industry Minister Karbuli, and Deputy Premier
Mutlaq were all back at meetings, which helped lead to the end of the INM as a coherent list. Before that, at the end of 2011, the INM held another
unsuccessful boycott against the prime minister. Karbuli, Tamim, and
several other National Movement ministers never followed their party. Samarraie, Tamim, and Dawla all eventually met with the premier letting him
know that they wanted to return to their offices, which effectively put an end
to the boycott. In turn, Maliki gave them concessions, such as releasing 43
prisoners directly to Tamim’s protection in February 2012. The conventional
wisdom on Iraq is that the government and country is wracked by sectarianism,
and the divide between Sunnis and Shiites is becoming worse by the day. That’s
how the increasing violence is also explained. This overlooks the fact that
several Sunni ministers such as Karbuli, Tamim, Samarraie, and Dawla have
actually had quite friendly relations with Maliki, and have been more than
willing to work within his government, even when that directly contradicted their
list’s strategy.
Given the protest movements and occasional violence the
government has used against them it was predictable that these ministers would
again step away from the government. At the same time, it was foreseeable that
they would eventually come back to the cabinet as well. They did that the last
two times they were supposed to be boycotting, and all of them will likely do
so again on this occasion. Not only do they not have as many issues with
Premier Maliki as some of their brethren, but they also lose out on the
patronage and power that holding a ministry bestows upon them. That is another
driving force for them to go back to work. If nothing else, the power, money,
and corruption that accompanies holding office is one of the great unifiers
that exists in the country.
SOURCES
AIN, “Urgent….Karbouli: Timim to resume his work as Minister
of Education,” 5/22/13
- “Urgent….Maliki rejects
Education minister’s resignation,” 4/23/13
Ibrahim, Haidar, “Iraqiya’s controversial remarks over ministers’
boycott termination,” AK News, 1/13/12
- “Maliki to tackle absent minister issue soon, advisor
says,” AK News, 12/29/11
- “Protest-related violence kills
53 in Iraq,” Agence France Presse, 4/24/13
National Iraqi News Agency, “Iraqiya
calls on Mutlaq to review his position and not be a false witness,” 3/27/13
- “Iraqiya: Statement ascribed to Al-Ani allowing some
ministers attend cabinet session not accurate,” 1/12/12
- “Jubouri: three IS ministers return to ministries evidence
of patriotic awareness,” 2/1/12
- “MP demands Iraqiya to hold a
meeting to overcome differences,” 3/31/13
- “Nijaifi calls on Iraqiya ministers to resign,” 3/8/13
Sadah, Ali Abel, “Iraqiya List
Frays As Constituents Splinter,” Al-Monitor, 3/28/13
Schreck, Adam and Salaheddin,
Sinan, “Iraq fears rise as clashes spread to northern city,” Associated Press,
4/25/13
Sowell, Kirk, “Inside Iraqi Politics No. 31,” 1/25/12
- “Inside Iraqi Politics No. 32,” 2/9/12
- “Inside Iraqi Politics No. 33,” 2/29/12
Visser, Reidar, “How Iraq can pull back from the brink,” The
National, 5/22/13
Yacoub, Sameer, “Iraqi minister resigns after protesters
shot,” Associated Press, 3/8/13
2 comments:
Isn't the cumulative effect of this sort of thing just going to be that the people of Anbar, Saladin, and the western neighborhoods of Baghdad basically don't think that they can rely on their elected representatives to have their back against the central government?
Depends upon the politician. Deputy PM Mutlaq appears to have completely fallen off. Fmr Finance Minister Issawi maintained his popularity and was the initial cause of the on going protests. He got a much different reception than VP Hashemi for instance.
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