Iraqi MPs on Friday postponed a meeting to elect a speaker and kick off the process of forming a government, as civil society groups seek to recover 40 million dollars from deputies left idle over the past eight months.
The house had said it would convene on Monday to elect a speaker and two deputies, the first step toward forming a new administration. But on Friday it postponed the session by three more days.
"We announce the postponement of Monday's session to Thursday," a parliament source told AFP, without giving any reason for the delay.
Meanwhile, civil society groups said they would launch a legal battle for the MPs, left idle since an inconclusive March 7 poll, to return 40 million dollars received in salaries and allowances over the past eight months.
"The Iraqi Civil Initiative to Protect the Constitution has decided to appeal to the supreme court for the return of remunerations received by parliament members since the election," a coalition of 12 groups said.
In Friday's statement the groups said they would organise a demonstration on Saturday in central Baghdad's Tahrir Square "to protest against the repeated violations of the constitution despite a supreme court decision."
The general election ended in deadlock after none of the main parties won enough of the 325 seats in parliament to form a majority government. Iraq has since been left without a new administration.
Parliament itself has remained in hiatus, except for a 20-minute oath-taking ceremony and another brief meeting at which acting speaker Fuad Massum declared an indefinite "open" session.
Since the election results were certified in June, every deputy has been receiving a salary and allowance for 30 security guards of 22.5 million dinars (19,070 dollars) per month.
In addition, about 200 deputies living outside Baghdad's heavily fortified Green Zone, where parliament and government institutions are housed, receive another allowance of three million dinars (2,550 dollars) a month.
Moreover, all MPs are entitled to a 90-million-dinar (76,000-dollar) allowance for a car, which by law must be ratified once parliament convenes, costing the state a total of about 25 million dollars.
The parliament is a huge financial burden on the state because all ex-MPs since 2003 are entitled to 80 percent of their salaries and a monthly allowance of 6,350 dollars for 10 security guards for the rest of their lives.
"All of the oil income is going into the parliament," one MP joked.
On October 24, Iraq's supreme court ordered parliament to resume work, after the same alliance of civil society groups launched a legal case against Massum, accusing him of violating the constitution by leaving the session open.
"Any delay is anti-constitutional," the court said.
The constitution stipulates that a speaker, president and prime minister must be elected in that order.
The Sunni-backed Iraqiya bloc of former premier Iyad Allawi narrowly won the election with 91 seats, closely followed by the State of Law Alliance of a fellow Shiite, Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki, with 89.
Neither has been able to muster a majority, despite back-door negotiations with various Shiite, Sunni and Kurdish blocs which also picked up seats.
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