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IRAQ WARS
Iraq pension law draws ire over MP exemption
by Staff Writers
Baghdad (AFP) Feb 07, 2014


Iraq attacks kill nine including election candidate
Baghdad (AFP) Feb 07, 2014 - Attacks in Baghdad and north of the capital killed nine people on Friday, including a supporter of powerful Shiite cleric Moqtada al-Sadr who was standing in April's parliamentary election.

The murder of Hamza al-Shammari, the first of an election candidate, comes amid a protracted surge in bloodshed with near-daily attacks nationwide and security forces battling anti-government fighters in Anbar province.

Election candidates have been targeted in the past, with nearly 20 hopefuls killed ahead of April 2013 provincial council elections.

Shammari, a senior leader of the Shammar tribe in Baghdad, was killed by gunmen using silenced pistols in the west Baghdad neighbourhood of Ghazaliyah, two security officials said.

He had been due to stand in the April 30 election as part of the Ahrar list, which is loyal to the Sadrists.

North of Baghdad, separate bombings killed eight people, security and medical officials said.

In Tuz Khurmatu, a car bomb set off by a suicide attacker at a main intersection in the centre of the ethnically mixed town killed five people and wounded 27 others.

Another vehicle rigged with explosives was detonated near a passing army patrol in Baiji, killing three soldiers.

Violence in Iraq is at its highest level since 2008, with government data showing more than 1,000 people killed last month.

Diplomats have called for the Shiite-led government to do more to reach out to the disaffected Sunni Arab minority, but Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki has taken a hard line ahead of the election.

No one has admitted responsibility for the surge in attacks, but Sunni militant groups, including the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL), a powerful jihadist group, have been blamed.

ISIL has also been fighting security forces in Anbar, a mostly Sunni desert region bordering Syria where militants have held parts of Ramadi and all of Fallujah for weeks.

Security forces and tribal auxiliaries have made slow progress in reclaiming neighbourhoods of Ramadi, but have largely stayed out of Fallujah for fear that major incursions could spark high civilian casualties and heavy damage to property.

The city was a bastion of the Sunni insurgency following the 2003 US-led invasion, and American troops there fought some of their costliest battles since the Vietnam War.

The Anbar stand-off has prompted more than 140,000 people to flee their homes, the UN refugee agency said, calling it the worst displacement in Iraq since the peak of sectarian fighting between 2006 and 2008.

A new law passed by Iraqi MPs to raise retirement benefits for civil servants is drawing criticism amid accusations politicians will use a loophole to secure lavish benefits for themselves.

The issue of retirement benefits for top bureaucrats and politicians, which is drawing attention ahead of parliamentary elections, sparked protests last year to decry lucrative pensions for the political elite while many people still grapple with daily shortages of basic services and poor security.

The Unified Retirement Law, adopted on Monday, has been hailed by some for raising minimum public sector pensions for retired civil servants, and is a rare piece of significant legislation passed by Iraq's chronically deadlocked parliament.

Bureaucrats who retire after age 50 and who have spent more than 15 years in government service will receive at least 400,000 Iraqi dinars ($333/245 euros) a month, up from the previous minimum of 250,000 dinars.

But an article towards the end of the law exempts a vast swathe of top-level politicians and civil servants from the pay scale, and sets percentage limits that one lawmaker said could be abused.

"The law specifies standards that should apply to everyone, but excluded senior Iraqi state officials, including MPs, ministers and their deputies," Ammar Toma, an MP from Basra with the small Shiite party Fadhila, told AFP.

"This privilege takes us back to the same problem that gathered the street against us -- they demanded that we reduce the gap between normal people and officials. Leaving the gap this wide will lead to social problems, and will also lead to disorder, and make citizens lose trust in politicians."

Toma said that while Article 37 sets minimum pensions at 25 percent of the final salary of those excluded, various allowances and exceptions would easily allow them to climb close to the 80 percent maximum set out in the law.

"Everybody will get a minimum of 70 percent of their final salary thanks to a loophole in the new law," Toma said, referring to those exempted from the general pay scale.

MPs are currently paid 13 million dinars ($10,800) per month, according to Toma, and receive additional allowances for bodyguards whether or not they hire the maximum amount.

Other benefits also

They also receive other benefits ranging from diplomatic passports to allotments of land.

Ministers are paid comparable salaries, while senior civil servants and special advisers receive around 8 million dinars ($6,700).

Their retirement benefits previously amounted to a guaranteed 80 percent of their final salary, along with additional allowances for security. That sparked protests in September, when people took to the streets of most of Iraq's 18 provinces to criticise the pensions.

The new law had been targeted at paring back those benefits, but critics such as Toma say lawmakers have simply made up the difference by adding other allowances.

Another MP has said the law is unconstitutional because it discriminates against certain Iraqis by exempting a privileged few from the pension scale.

"The legal article... excludes MPs and other special grades," Samira al-Mussawi, from Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki's political coalition, said in a statement.

"Article 14 of the constitution confirms unequivocally that all Iraqis are equal... and thus voting on the article (exempting MPs) is a clear violation of the constitution."

The controversy comes ahead of parliamentary elections slated for April 30. While issues such as poor basic services, rampant corruption and high unemployment are likely to remain at the fore, benefits provided to MPs have struck a chord with voters.

"The reason MPs approved this pension law is because this parliamentary term is going to end soon, and they want to guarantee millions for them and their families for dozens of years," an activist who identified himself as Abu Ghazi al-Madhlum wrote on Facebook.

"We reject this pension that costs the state billions of dinars every year," he said.

"We will use all peaceful means possible that are guaranteed in the constitution to express our rejection."

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