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 | | Posted by admin on Monday, April 03, 2006 - 07:43 AM |
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 |  | US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice and UK Foreign Secretary Jack
Straw have urged Iraq's leaders to speed up negotiations on a new
government.
Ms Rice was said to appear "stiff" before talks with Ibrahim Jaafari
The pair made a surprise trip to Baghdad from the UK, after Ms Rice's two-day stay there hosted by Mr Straw.
The talks with Iraqi PM Ibrahim Jaafari and President
Jalal Talabani come as Iraqi politicians are struggling to form a
government of national unity.
The two are expected to give an update on the progress of the talks shortly.
Ms Rice said the US regarded the formation of the government as a "matter of urgency".
Mr Straw added: "We need to see progress and that is in everybody's interest."
The visit comes amid continuing violence in Iraq, including:
- At least four bodies are found in the Iraqi capital, Baghdad
- Insurgents are reported to have blown up a small Shia
mosque in the village of Kibba near Baquba, north-east of Baghdad, but
there are no reports of any casualties
- Six insurgents are killed in an explosion in a house on
the southern outskirts of Baghdad. Police said they died when a bomb
they were preparing exploded prematurely
- Four other insurgents were killed in two failed attacks
against American and Iraqi forces near Balad, north of Baghdad, the US
military says
- Two pilots of a US helicopter that crashed after coming under hostile fire on Saturday are presumed dead, the US military says
- Two US soldiers were also killed by a roadside bomb while on patrol in central Baghdad late on Saturday
'Fresh messages'
There is mounting pressure on Mr Jaafari, of the majority Shia alliance, to stand down as prime minister.
He has failed to win the support of minority Kurds and Sunnis and now faces opposition within his alliance.
We're going to urge that the negotiations be wrapped up
Last week senior Shia politicians said US ambassador to
Iraq, Zalmay Khalilzad, had told them President George W Bush "doesn't
want, doesn't support, doesn't accept" the retention of Mr Jaafari.
Mr Jaafari responded by saying the comments undermined Mr Bush's commitment to democracy in Iraq.
Speaking to reporters travelling with her to Iraq, Ms
Rice said: "The fact that we're going out to have these discussions
with the Iraqi leadership is a sign of the urgency which we attach to a
need for a government of national unity."
She added it was "important to have fresh messages from time to time from Washington and from London".
Mr Straw said the US and UK would recognise and respect whoever emerged as leader.
The White House has denied the US is backing away from Mr Jaafari.
Ms Rice and Mr Straw also held talks with President Jalal Talabani
But the BBC's Mike Wooldridge in Baghdad said it might
explain the apparent stiffness when Ms Rice posed for photographs
before talking to the prime minister on Sunday.
After the president met Ms Rice and Mr Straw, Mr
Talabani's office released a statement saying they had discussed "the
efforts exerted by the representatives of the political blocs", the
Associated Press news agency reported.
Mr Talabani also briefed them on the negotiations, and
the decision to form a political council and ministerial committee for
national security, the statement said.
Ms Rice and Mr Straw also met Vice-President Adil Abdul Mahdi and other Iraqi leaders.
Sunni Arab politician Adnan al-Dulaimi told AP the talks
had been about "the Iraqi problem in general, about the government
formation and the security problem.
"We also talked about hurrying up in forming the
government because the Iraqi people have grown bored of waiting. Our
points of view matched."
Testing trip
Mr Jaafari was chosen as PM by the ruling Shia-led bloc after it won December's election.
But Kurdish and Sunni Arab parties have rejected the
nomination and have threatened to boycott a government unless he
withdraws.
The delay in forming a government is thought to be
partly responsible for fuelling the increasing sectarian violence which
has struck Iraq since last month's bombing of a key Shia shrine at
Samarra.
Ms Rice arrived in Iraq after a testing trip to the UK.
She admitted the US had made thousands of tactical errors in Iraq, but later said she was only speaking figuratively.
She also had to face a number of anti-Iraq war protests in north-west England. | |
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