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        Iraqi MP killed, no government announced
        (Agencies)
        Updated: 2005-04-27 21:27

        BAGHDAD - Gunmen shot an Iraqi woman member of parliament Wednesday in a fresh shock to politicians whose failure to form a government three months after elections has allowed violence to thrive unchecked.

        Iraqi police said Lame'a Abed Khadawi, a member of caretaker Prime Minister Iyad Allawi's political party, was shot outside her house in eastern Baghdad. She is believed to be the first person in the 275-seat National Assembly to be killed.

        Allawi himself survived an assassination attempt this month when his convoy was attacked by a car bomber. Khadawi was one of around 90 women elected to the assembly on January 30. By law, a third of the candidates on party lists had to be women.

        Pressure has mounted on Iraq's politicians to end months of post-election bickering. America's top U.S. general urged them Tuesday to form a new government quickly to combat an insurgency he said was as strong as it had been a year ago.

        Prime minister-designate Ibrahim al-Jaafari was expected to hand his proposed list of cabinet ministers to the three-man presidential council for approval. If passed, the candidates still need a majority vote from the National Assembly.

        Parliament met for several hours to discuss its rules and regulations and other issues, but it was not clear whether any vote on a cabinet list would take place Wednesday.

        Hopes of announcing a government have repeatedly been dashed during three months of squabbling over the distribution of ministries to rival sects. Politicians had hoped the election would lead Iraq to stability and economic recovery.

        Air Force General Richard Myers, chairman of the U.S. Joint Chiefs of Staff, said speeding up the political process would be the best way to weaken a relentless insurgency.

        "The political process must go forward," he told a Pentagon briefing. "We must have a cabinet appointed here very quickly. The ministries must continue to work. People must focus on two things: developing a constitution and developing their ministries into functioning ministries that continue to help."

        Despite nearly 140,000 U.S. troops and a similar number of Iraqi forces, guerrillas have the same capability to attack as they did a year ago, staging 50 or 60 attacks a day, Myers said.

        Myers and Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld noted a recent rise in violence that has coincided with the political impasse over naming a new government.

        Iraq's al Qaeda wing said it had killed two Interior Ministry officials in an ambush on their car in west Baghdad on Wednesday, according to an Internet statement.

        The group said it had shot and killed Lieutenant Jihad La'eebee, his son who was also an Interior Ministry official, and three of their bodyguards as they were driving their car.

        The statement could not be immediately authenticated.

        Iraq's newly powerful Shi'ites and Kurds have been promising to form a government that will also give Sunnis, who lost their grip on power with the overthrow of President Saddam Hussein, an important role in running the country. But Sunni leaders said on Tuesday they were unhappy with their allotment of ministries.

        REBELS EXPLOIT INDECISION

        Iraqi officials fear insurgents have benefited from the political impasse. Wrangling has focused on key ministries such as defense, interior and oil, each of which is coveted by Shi'ite, Kurdish and Sunni leaders.

        Rebel violence has surged in recent weeks. Two twin car bombings killed 22 people Sunday, and more than 300 Iraqi security personnel have died in the last six weeks.

        The delays in naming a cabinet have deepened frustrations among millions of Iraqis who braved suicide bombings to vote.

        Twenty five months after the invasion that toppled Saddam Hussein, the United States still has 138,000 troops in Iraq battling rebels and training Iraqi security forces.

        The captors of three Romanian journalists have threatened to kill them Wednesday unless Bucharest withdraws its troops.

        Romania, a staunch U.S. ally, asked the kidnappers to extend the deadline, but did not say if it planned to pull out its 800 soldiers. The government has faced increasing pressure from the public and opposition parties as a result of the hostage crisis.

        "Romanian authorities ask for the extension of the deadline set by the group holding the three Romanian citizens," the Romanian presidency said in a statement.

        Prima TV reporter Marie Jeanne Ion, 32, cameraman Sorin Miscoci, 30, and Romania Libera daily journalist Ovidiu Ohanesian, 37, were snatched in Baghdad on March 28.

        In the latest Al Jazeera video tape aired Tuesday, they were shown handcuffed, sitting on the floor and guarded by armed masked men. They appeared haggard and distressed. Al-Jazeera said the journalists made a "final appeal" to Romanian President Traian Basescu, adding that the kidnappers had set 2 p.m. GMT Wednesday as the deadline for killing them.

        In a separate tape it showed their translator, Mohamad Munaf, who has U.S., Romanian and Iraqi citizenship, asking President Bush to help save his life



         
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