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Iraq PM reduces Cabinet by one-third in reform push

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AP Baghdad
Iraq's Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi today ordered his Cabinet reduced from 33 members to just 22, consolidating the body as part of a major reform push in response to mass protests against corruption and poor governance.

The decision, announced by his office, would eliminate four ministries, including those of human rights and women's affairs, and consolidate others.

The move follows a far-reaching reform plan approved by parliament last week that eliminated the country's three vice presidencies and three deputy prime ministers, as well as reducing the budget for the personal bodyguards of senior officials and transferring it to the interior and defense ministries.
 

Iraqis have held massive protests in recent weeks against corruption and poor government services, focusing in particular on power outages that have made a recent heat wave even more unbearable.

Iraq's top Shiite cleric, Grand Ayatollah Ali al-Sistani, has lent his support to demands for reform, and parliament unanimously approved the wider reform plan last week in a dramatic show of unity for a country riven with sectarian and political rivalries.

Those reforms dismantled much of the top-heavy government erected in the years after the 2003 U.S.-led invasion that toppled Saddam Hussein. The three vice presidencies were intended to give equal representation to the country's Shiite majority and Sunni and Kurdish minorities.

Iraq is struggling to roll back the Islamic State group, which swept across the border from Syria last summer and seized around a third of the country, including Iraq's second largest city, Mosul.

IS militants attacked Iraqi troops Sunday outside the militant-held city of Fallujah, killing at least 17 troops, officials said.

Four suicide attackers drove explosives-laden military vehicles into government barricades outside Fallujah, west of Baghdad, setting off heavy clashes, a police officer and an army officer said. The officials said 15 other troops were wounded.

Both officers spoke on condition of anonymity as they were not authorized to release information.

The IS group captured Fallujah in January 2014, months before its main blitz across Iraq. This past May the extremist group captured the nearby city of Ramadi, the provincial capital of the Anbar province, where U.S. Troops fought some of their deadliest battles of the eight-year Iraq intervention. Tens of thousands of civilians have fled the province amid continued fighting.

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First Published: Aug 17 2015 | 12:28 AM IST

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