Adnan al-Dulaimi said past experience with al-Maliki indicated the accord was a delay tactic [EPA]
Iraq's Sunni
politicians have expressed doubt that the US-backed prime minister will
deliver on goals set down in an agreement hammered out by the country's
top leaders over the weekend.
Under intense
US pressure, Nuri al-Maliki and four other senior leaders declared on
Sunday that they had reached a consensus on a number of issues.
These included
freeing detainees held without charge, easing the ban on former Saddam
Hussein supporters in government posts, regulating the oil industry and
holding provincial elections.
No details were released, and most measures require parliamentary approval.
Stalling tactic
Some key Sunni figures on Monday dismissed the agreement as a stalling tactic by al-Maliki to ease pressure from Washington.
"Our
position is that this meeting represents a new phase of procrastination
and does not honestly aim at solving the problems quickly," Khalaf
al-Ilyan, a leader of the Sunni bloc, the Iraqi Accordance Front, said.
"I think that no real or practical solution will come out of this."
Another Front leader, Adnan al-Dulaimi, said the accord included "good decisions that would serve the whole Iraqi people".
"But we doubt that
they will be implemented," he said. "All our experience with al-Maliki
indicates that this is another new set of delaying measures. They give
you a glimmer of hope, but at the end of the day you get nothing but
promises."
US pressure
Ryan Crocker, the
US ambassador to Iraq, has expressed frustration over the lack of
movement towards political reconciliation among the Shia, Sunni and
Kurdish factions, but called Sunday's accord an "important step forward
for political progress, national reconciliation and development".
He attended
Sunday's meeting with al-Maliki along with Adil Abdul-Mahdi, the Shia
vice-president, Tariq al-Hashemi, the Sunni Arab vice-president,
Massoud Barzani the head of the northern autonomous Kurdish region and
President Jalal Talabani, who is also a Kurd.
George Bush, the US president, also hailed the agreement, saying it "begins to establish new power-sharing agreements".
"These leaders ... recognise the true and meaningful reconciliation that needs to take place," Bush said on Monday.
"Yesterday's agreement reflects their commitment to work together for the benefit of all Iraqis to further the process."
Violence has persisted despite the leaders' pledge of unity [AFP]
But
the deal did not convince the main Sunni Arab political bloc to take
back the government posts they abandoned this month over differences
with al-Maliki, a Shia.
The Sunni walkout
has paralysed the government ahead of a crucial report to the US
congress by Crocker and General David Petraeus, the US commander in
Iraq.
In a step towards
implementing the deal, US and Iraqi officials announced on Monday that
US-led forces would increase the number of detainees released during
the Islamic fasting month of Ramadan, which begins in September.
They did not say how many would be freed.
Violence continues
Despite the show of unity on Sunday, violence across the country has continued.
Police and hospital officials said eight people – a family with five young children – were killed in Samarra on Sunday.
A firefight
culminating in a US jet bombing a house where fighters had apparently
taken refugee, left a dozen fighters and two soldiers dead, the
military said.
Lieutenant-Colonel
Michael Donnelly, a US military spokesman, admittetd there were reports
of civilian casualties but said there were only two.
In al-Anbar
province, a suicide bomber detonated an explosives belt among
worshippers at evening prayers in Falluja, killing a cleric and eight
other people, police said.
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