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IRAQ WARS
Iraq PM names interim defence minister: aide
by Staff Writers
Baghdad (AFP) Aug 16, 2011

Iraqi Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki has named his current culture minister as interim defence minister, an aide said Tuesday, relinquishing the extra job he has held since December.

"The prime minister appointed Saadun al-Dulaimi as interim minister of defence," the premier's media advisor, Ali Mussawi, told AFP.

Dulaimi, a Sunni Muslim member of the Iraqi Unity Alliance, which is allied with former premier Iyad Allawi's Sunni-backed Iraqiya bloc. It was unclear if he would keep that post, nor who would handle the culture portfolio.

"This step comes after two weeks since the political parties asked Iraqiya to name a minister of defence," Mussawi said. "During this period, Iraqiya did not name its candidate. That is why the prime minister appointed Dulaimi."

Politicians agreed to appoint interim defence and interior ministers within two weeks this month, on the same day they authorised negotiations with the United States on a military training mission extending past December 31, when US forces are required to leave Iraq under a 2008 security accord.

Maliki had held both the defence and interior posts since December, when parliament approved his partial cabinet, after nine months of political deadlock that followed elections in March.

The premier remains interim interior minister.

Violence in Iraq has declined from its peak in 2006 and 2007, but attacks remain common -- making the defence and security posts key positions.

Attacks in more than a dozen cities killed 74 people nationwide on Monday, Iraq's bloodiest day in more than a year. The toll included 40 in twin blasts blamed on Al-Qaeda in the southern city of Kut.

A total of 259 Iraqis were killed in attacks in July, the second-highest figure for 2011.




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Iraq MPs slash top politicians' salaries
Baghdad (AFP) Aug 16, 2011 - MPs voted to slash their wages and those of ministers and top officials on Tuesday, a lawmaker said, several months after such plans were initially mooted to quell street protests across Iraq.

"Parliament voted today by a simple majority to reduce the salaries of the three presidencies, of all MPs, ministers and senior civil servants," said Ali Shlah, a member of the Islamic Dawa party of Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki.

The three presidencies refer to President Jalal Talabani, Maliki, as president of the cabinet, and parliament speaker Osama al-Nujaifi.

"The monthly salary of MPs was lowered to 10 million dinars ($8,500), and the monthly salary for a minister is now eight million dinars ($6,800)," Shlah added.

Maliki, Talabani, Nujaifi and their deputies will all receive salaries of 12 million dinars ($10,000) a month.

A parliament official said the salaries of all ministers, as well as the three so-called "presidencies," were reduced by 30 percent, while the wages of MPs were cut by 23 percent.

Senior civil servants also had their pay cut by between 23 and 30 percent.

The law was passed after nationwide rallies in February against corruption, unemployment and poor basic services.

The legislation took several months, according to Shlah, because of "disputes over the size of the cuts."





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IRAQ WARS
Outside View: Tehran's 'Butler' in Iraq
London (UPI) Aug 16, 2011
Unimaginable to say the least; recent remarks made by Ambassador Lawrence E. Butler, a top U.S. State Department official, about the status of 3,400 members of an Iranian opposition group taking refuge in Iraq has left him being labeled mockingly as "Tehran's Butler." Outrage quickly spread in political circles, with many quite rightly appalled and in fact bemused that Butler, tasked wi ... read more


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