INSUBCONTINENT EXCLUSIVE:
Shafaq News/ The Sadrist movement will make a move after the Supreme Federal Court's decision on the appeal filed to dissolve the Iraqi
parliament, a leading figure close to the powerful Shiite cleric Muqtada al-Sadr said on Sunday.The figure, who preferred to remain
anonymous, told Shafaq News Agency, "the attitude of the Justice Chief [Faiq Zeidan] toward dissolving the parliament is not unknown
He siad publicly, and on many occasions, that dissolving the parliament is not within the Council's powers.""We are waiting for the Supreme
Federal Court's decision on this issue, not the Supreme Judicial Council
We have filed a complaint and the court will look into it by the end of this week.""The movement might decide to escalate on the streets if
the court dismisses the complaint," the source said.Earlier today, Iraq's Supreme Judicial Council dismissed a public request made by
al-Sadr to dissolve the parliament but said it agrees with his view of the poor prognosis of the current political situation in the
country.The council convened on Sunday morning under the chairmanship of Chief Justice, Judge Faiq Zeidan, who presides over the federal
court of cassation, to ponder al-Sadr's request
A press release issued after the meeting said that the council "agrees with al-Sadr regarding the negative diagnosis of the political
situation in the country and the continuing violation of the constitution.""The chair of the council has shed light on those issues on many
occasions and suggested amending some of the relevant provisions of the constitution to avoid repeating them," the press release added
The council said that civil organizations, politicians, scholars, and media persons filed a similar request to dissolve the parliament
before the Council back in March 2022
"The answer was that the Supreme Judicial Council does not have the powers to dissolve the Council of Representatives," the press release
"The duties of the Council are specified in Article 3 of the Supreme Judicial Council's law no
It is related in general to running the judiciary," the press release said, "it does not include any article that allows the council to
intervene in the affairs of the legislative or executive authorities pursuant to the principle of separation of powers stipulated by Article
47 of the 2005 constitution of Iraq."The Council urged "the political forces to refrain from involving the judiciary in the political
The Council stands at a midpoint between all the parties."Powerful Iraqi Shiite Muslim cleric Muqtada al-Sadr on Wednesday called on the
country's judiciary to dissolve parliament by the end of next week, threatening unspecific consequences if it does not do what he says.The
populist leader has helped inflame tensions in Iraq over the last two weeks by commanding thousands of followers to storm and occupy
parliament, preventing the formation of a government nearly ten months after elections.His political opponents in the Coordination
Framework, mostly fellow Shiites backed by Iran, have refused to accede to al-Sadr's demands, raising fears of fresh unrest and violence in