BAGHDAD, April 6, 2005

Iraq Elects Kurdish President

Jailed Saddam Hussein Watches Parliament From His Jail Cell

  • Play CBS Video Video Iraq Elects Interim President

    Although it wasn't a high-tech vote - the parliament votes were tallied on a blackboard - Iraq selected an interim President, Lee Cowan reports. The Kurdish president will select a prime minister.

  • Video Forming Iraq's Government

    Attacks are escalating in Iraq as officials are set to meet and select a new president. The leader of the Kurdish alliance is the favorite for the largely symbolic role, Lee Cowan reports.

    • Newly elected Iraqi interim President Jalal Talabani holds a press conference after the National Assembly meeting in Baghdad, Iraq Wednesday, April 6, 2005.

      Newly elected Iraqi interim President Jalal Talabani holds a press conference after the National Assembly meeting in Baghdad, Iraq Wednesday, April 6, 2005.  (AP)

    • Kurdish youngsters celebrate the election of Iraqi President Jalal Talabani in Sulaimaniyah, April 6, 2005. The Iraqi parliament's choice reached out to the nation's long-repressed Kurds.

      Kurdish youngsters celebrate the election of Iraqi President Jalal Talabani in Sulaimaniyah, April 6, 2005. The Iraqi parliament's choice reached out to the nation's long-repressed Kurds.  (AP)

    • Iraqi troops secure the area after mortar attack on hotel in Baghdad, Iraq, April 6, 2005.

      Iraqi troops secure the area after mortar attack on hotel in Baghdad, Iraq, April 6, 2005.  (AP)

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(CBS/AP) 
Saddam, captured in December 2003, has been in custody with several of his top henchmen at a U.S.-guarded detention facility, believed to be near the airport.

The so-called presidential council, made up of the president and his two deputies, will be sworn in Thursday. The three are then expected to immediately name the prime minister — likely Shiite leader Ibrahim al-Jaafari. That clears the way for a Cabinet to be chosen, and allows lawmakers to start drafting a permanent constitution, due Aug. 15.

Key issues — like whether to incorporate the oil rich city of Kirkuk into the autonomous Kurdish region, the role of Islam and who gets the Defense Ministry post — remain.

Officials said a new Cabinet might be named as early as Sunday, although they acknowledged the process could require more time.

Even as lawmakers made progress in forming a new government, there was confusion about the handover. Parliament speaker Hajim al-Hassani said members hoped that outgoing officials would act as a lame-duck government, running only the daily affairs.

Qassim Dawoud, Iraq's Minister of State for national security, explained that interim Prime Minister Ayad Allawi had already instructed the ministers to stop any long-term projects until the new government was completely formed and sworn in.

Negotiators agreed on Talabani for the president's job weeks ago, still news of his election was greeted with dancing and street celebrations in the Kurdish north.

"Today Jalal Talabani made it to the seat of power, while Saddam Hussein is sitting in jail," said Mohammed Saleh, a 42-year-old Kurd in Kirkuk. "Who would have thought!"

When the results were announced, legislators swarmed around Talabani, hugging and kissing him. Members gave him a standing ovation and tears welled up in the eyes of some Kurdish lawmakers and Talabani's relatives attending the session.

Talabani's election and the expected vote for al-Jaafari further consolidated the power shift in an Iraq, where both the Shiites and the Kurds were oppressed under Saddam.

While in power, Saddam's regime expelled Kurds from strategic areas in the north and gassed Kurdish towns, killing tens of thousands.

The mostly secular minded Kurdish leaders are close allies of the United States and were strong proponents of the war to topple Saddam.

Talabani promised to represent all Iraqis as president and reached out to the country's different ethnic and religious groups as well to Iraq's Arab and Islamic neighbors. Al-Hassani, a Sunni Arab, declared: "This is the new Iraq."

"They elected a Kurdish citizen to be its president and the former Arab president is now his deputy," he said. "What else does the world want?"

Kurds make up about 20 percent of the nation's 26 million people, and won 75 of the 275 seats in parliament.

Sunni Arabs, who make up 15 to 20 percent of the population, have only 17 seats, largely because they boycotted the elections or stayed home out of fear of attacks.

Lawmakers tried to reach out to Sunni Arabs, dominant under Saddam, by naming al-Yawer and al-Hassani to top posts.

But prominent Sunni Arab groups — whose members are believed to make up the backbone of the insurgency — distanced themselves from the new government.

"We are not related to any process in this matter of choosing candidates," Association of Muslim Scholars spokesman Muthana Harith al-Dhari told Al-Jazeera television.

World leaders congratulated Talabani on his post, including with U.N. Secretary-General Kofi Annan welcoming "the commitment of Iraq's new leadership to working toward national unity through peaceful democratic means"

U.N. with Turkish Foreign Minister Abdullah Gul told the Anatolia news agency: "I am sure that everyone's sense of being an Iraqi will be strengthened and the unity of the country will be strengthened."

Along with fellow neighbors Iran and Syria, Turkey had worried that the growing power of Iraq's Kurdish minority could inspire Iraqi Kurds to break away and embolden Kurdish minorities at home.

Speaking after his election, Talabani called on neighboring countries to help prevent foreign insurgents from crossing into the country. In an apparent bid to alienate foreign fighters, he reached out to Iraqis carrying out attacks that have left thousands dead.


©MMV CBS Broadcasting Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.
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