Iraq denies reports of coup plot

Iraq denies reports of coup plot Baghdad - The Iraqi government on Thursday denied media reports about an alleged coup plan by security officials, al-Arabiya news channel reported.

Earlier on Thursday, media reports said Iraqi security forces arrested 35 high-ranking security officials whom they said were attempting to revive the Baath Party of former president Saddam Hussein.

Iraqi Interior Ministry spokesman Abdel Kareem Khalaf confirmed the arrests, but said that "nothing will be clear until investigation ends", the Dubai-based channel quoted him as saying.

The 35 officials, who were arrested over the last three days, were accused of attempting a secret coup d'etat against the Iraqi government of Nuri al-Maliki. Iraq's security forces also confiscated a large sum of money that was allegedly being used by the officers to recruit people for the coup, the sources said.

Sources said that the officials belonged to al-Awdaa (or "the return") party who are trying to reconstitute the outlawed Baath party. The Baath party consisted mainly of Sunnis, a Muslim minority in Iraq who ruled the country for 35 years before the US-led invasion in 2003.

The ministry also denied that Ahmed Abu Rgheef, the ministry's internal affairs and security department director, was among those arrested.

"Abu Rgheef is one of the investigating officers in this case and not included in the arrest warrant," said a statement by the ministry, without revealing any names or ranks of detained officers.

"The investigation procedures with some officers go beyond the Interior Ministry to include officers from other security ministries," it noted.

Meanwhile, authorities in Iraq's northern Nineveh province have called for the postponement of its provincial elections, due to take place next month, because of fears that citizens who fled the province would not be able to vote, Nineveh's council said on Thursday.

Some 19 members voted for the postponement and seven members voting against it in the 41-member provincial legislature.

The Iraqi central government in Baghdad would need to approve the council's request for postponement. Members who demanded the postponement of elections were mostly from the Kurdistan Alliance.

Thousands of Kurds and Christians have fled the province because of sectarian strife since the US-led invasion.

"Those citizens will not be able to vote because they are not registered in the ballots," Kurdish Lawmaker, Mahdi al-Herki said.

Lawmakers from the Iraqi Islamic Party said delaying elections could further threaten the province's stability.

"The demand for postponement of the elections has political reasons behind it and any postponement is harmful for the province's security and economy," said Yehia Mahgoub, a member of the Nineveh provincial council.

Iraq's national provincial elections are scheduled to take place on January 31 2009. It will be held in 14 out of Iraq's 18 provinces, excluding the three Kurdish provinces of Dahuk, Sulimaniya, and Arbil along with the disputed multi-ethic Kirkuk. (dpa)

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