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Iraqi draft law would reinstate most ex-Baathists
07 Nov 2006 11:21:59 GMT
Source: Reuters

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BAGHDAD, Nov 7 (Reuters) - Thousands of former members of Saddam Hussein's Baath party, purged after the U.S. invasion of Iraq, could return to public life under proposals being presented to parliament, a senior official said on Tuesday.

The move comes after Saddam was sentenced on Sunday to hang for crimes against humanity.

Ali Faysal al-Lami, executive director of the De-Baathification Committee set up by the United States after Saddam's 2003 overthrow, said the committee will recommend allowing most former Baath party officals to return to work.

The proposals to be put to parliament will reduce the number of senior ex-Baathists excluded from public life from 30,000 to just 1,500 senior officials, he said. "We are going to deliver these proposals to parliament in a few days," Lami told Reuters.

The move addresses long-standing demands of Saddam's fellow minority Sunni Arabs.

Concerned at Sunni Arab marginalisation, Washington has been pressing Iraq's Shi'ite-led government to reform the De-Baathification Committee and transform it into what U.S. officials call "an accountability and reconciliation programme".

However U.S. pressure on such issues has fuelled suspicions among leaders of the once-oppressed Shi'ite majority that the United States, wary of undue influence on Iraq from Shi'ite Iran, is shifting its favour toward the rebellious Sunnis.

The committee was set up under U.S. military rule in 2003 to purge officials from Saddam's Baath party, which numbered more than a million by some estimates in a country of 25 million.

Critics complained too many people were affected, including vital bureaucrats and many who joined the party from necessity rather than conviction.

Ahmed al-Alwani, a Sunni member of parliament from the Accordance List, said the original de-Baathification law had been used selectively, targeting Sunni Arabs far more than Shi'ites who had also been members of the Baath Party.

"I'm sure with this law, if it is implemented in a good way, avoiding the mistakes that happened before ... Iraq will witness a new era of stability," Alwani said.

"We are not against de-Baathification but we are against any misuse of this law, especially double standards," he said.

Disenchantment among Sunni Arabs has fuelled the insurgency against U.S.-forces and the Shi'ite- and Kurdish-dominated government of Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki, threatening to pitch Iraq into civil war.

Lami said that if parliament approved the draft amendment, all but the 1,500 most senior former Baath Party officials would be allowed either to return to their jobs or to take retirement.

Reform of the de-Baathification Committee is among a series of "benchmarks" for progress in Iraq that the U.S. Ambassador Zalmay Khalilzad said last month Washington was hoping to see.
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Makereta Cagi holds a photograph of her late husband as she speaks about him in her house in Fiji's capital Suva November 7, 2006. Iosefo Cagi was killed while driving a supply truck in Iraq on April 18, 2006, where he earned around US$2,500 a month, compared to just FJ$600 (US$350) when he was in the Fijian army. Many Fijians are seeking work overseas in an effort to support their families as the cost of living in the South Pacific nation of just 900,000 people continues to increase at a rapid rate. Picture taken November 7, 2006.