Prime Minister Abdul Mahdi has submitted his resignation to parliament,Iraqi Parliament will decide PM’s fate amid ongoing anti-government protests.
Iraqi Prime Minister Adel Abdul Mahdi has submitted his resignation to parliament amid ongoing anti-government protests in the capital Baghdad and in southern Iraq.
The prime minister had announced on Friday he would hand in his resignation amid mounting pressure a day after more than 40 demonstrators were killed by security forces.
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The formal resignation came after an emergency cabinet session on Saturday in which ministers approved the document and the resignation of key staffers, including Abdul Mahdi’s chief of staff.
Iraqi parliament is scheduled to meet on Sunday where lawmakers will vote on whether to accept Abdul Mahdi’s resignation or not.
The announcement also came after Iraq’s top Shia religious leader withdrew his support for the government in a weekly sermon on Friday.
In a pre-recorded speech, Abdul Mahdi said if the parliament accepted his resignation, the cabinet would be demoted to caretaker status, unable to pass new laws and make key decisions.
Existing laws do not provide clear procedures for members of parliament to recognise Abdul Mahdi’s resignation, Iraqi officials and experts said.
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Cabinet bylaws allow the prime minister to tender his resignation to the president, but there is no specific law that dictates the course of action should this be tasked to parliament.
While Abdul Mahdi has sent his resignation letter to the parliament, it remains unclear whether in the upcoming parliamentary session lawmakers would vote on the resignation or hold a vote of no confidence.
The only constitutional mechanism by which they could be voting on his resignation, which requires an absolute majority.
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Protestors reportedly burned tyres and surrounded a police station in the southern Iraqi city of Nassiriya on Saturday.
25 people were wounded during clashes in Nassiriya near the police headquarters and Zaytouna bridge.
Citing security and medical officials,News agency reported that three anti-government protesters were shot dead and at least 58 others wounded on Saturday.
More than 400 people have been killed since the uprising shook Iraq on October 1, with thousands of Iraqis taking to the streets in Baghdad and the predominantly Shia south, decrying corruption, poor services, lack of jobs and calling for an end to the post-2003 political system.
Security forces have used live fire, tear gas and sound bombs to disperse crowds leading to heavy casualties.
Prime Minister Abdul Mahdi has submitted his resignation to Parliament.