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August 15, 2014

Maliki

Maliki gives up Iraq PM job to rival

Nouri al-Maliki ends bid to hold on to power and endorses Haider al-Abadi's appointment as his successor.

Nouri al-Maliki has finally bowed to pressure within Iraq and beyond and stepped down as prime minister, paving the way for a new coalition that world and regional powers hope can quash the Islamic State group.

"I announce before you today, to ease the movement of the political process and the formation of the new government, the withdrawal of my candidacy in favour of brother Dr Haider al-Abadi," Maliki said in his Thursday address, adding that he had made the decision to preserve the country's unity.

The announcement came days after he refused to stand down and threatened to challenge the Iraqialjazeera/aal president's decision to appoint Abadi as his successor.

"Maliki will withdraw the complaint against the president and will back the prime minister designate," Ali Mussawi, Maliki's spokesman, told the AFP news agency, referring to a lawsuit the outgoing prime minister had vowed to file.

Al Jazeera's Jane Arraf, reporting from Erbil, said Maliki's move was influenced by the statement of Iraq's most senior Shia religious leader, Ayatollah Ali al-Sistani.

"When all the odds were stacked against him, when the US and Iran as well as European countries and almost every political faction in Iraq was telling him that he had to go, he still persisted on hanging on," Arraf said.

"The thing that really clinched it though was that the statements by Iraq's top Shia religious authority, the Marjaya, specifically the Ayatollah Ali al-Sistani - absolutely revered by Iraqi Shias - who indicated in a very rare statement that he thought it would be better for the country if Maliki did indeed step aside."

Maliki's decision was likely to please Iraq's Sunni minority, which dominated Iraq under Saddam Hussein's iron rule but was sidelined by Maliki, a relative unknown when he came to power in 2006 with US backing.

Maliki had resisted months of pressure to step down from Sunnis, Kurds, some fellow Shia, Shia regional power Iran and the United States. He had insisted on his right to form a new government based on the results of a parliamentary election in late April.

Tehran and Washington, the two main foreign power brokers in Iraq, came out in support of Abadi, and he was dealt another major blow when the office of Iraq's top Shia religious leader released a letter in which he called for Maliki to go.

"Today, Iraqis took another major step forward in uniting their country," US national security adviser Susan Rice said in a statement praising Maliki after his announcement.

"We commend Prime Minister Maliki for his decision to support Prime Minister-designate Haider al-Abadi in his efforts to form a new government in line with the Iraqi constitution."

Rice said the US government, which had long lost patience with Maliki, had heard from a number of leaders in Iraq who had pledged their support to Abadi. She noted expressions of support from other countries as well.

"These are encouraging developments that we hope can set Iraq on a new path and unite its people against the threat presented by the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant," Rice said. "The United States remains committed to a strong partnership with Iraq and the Iraqi people." 

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