Iraq Official: Female Prisoners to Be Released

Five female prisoners will be among a large group of detainees who will be released Thursday, an Iraqi government official said Wednesday.

The kidnappers of American journalist Jill Carroll, who was seized Jan. 7, have threatened to kill her unless U.S. forces release all women in their custody.

The U.S. military has reviewed the cases of several female Iraqi detainees and a batch of Iraqis in military custody will soon be freed, said Lt. Col. Guy Rudisill, spokesman for American detainee operations. He didn't say whether the group to be released included women.

A senior official at the Iraqi ministry of justice said all five women being held at the Abu Ghraib prison will be among a group of 400 prisoners set to be freed Thursday.

Meanwhile, Shiite leaders have launched talks with Sunni and Kurdish politicians on a national unity government, proposing four candidates to be the next prime minister, a Shiite official said Wednesday, nearly six weeks after Iraq's parliamentary elections.

The talks came amid a spate of sectarian violence, including the killing of a prominent Sunni Arab cleric, that threatens to disrupt the forming of the new government.

A U.S. Marine also was killed by small-arms fire Tuesday in Karmah, 50 miles west of Baghdad, the military said.

The United Iraqi Alliance, the Shiite bloc that won the most seats in the Dec. 15 vote, started the talks on the new government Tuesday with the Iraqi Accordance Front, a group of prominent Sunni Arab parties, said Shiite lawmaker Baha al-Aaraji.

The alliance suggested four nominees to be the next prime minister in the government to be announced at the end of the negotiations, which could take weeks, said al-Aaraji, a supporter of radical Shiite cleric Muqtada al-Sadr and a member of a seven-man committee forming Shiite political policy.

The four include the current Prime Minister Ibrahim al-Jaafari, Adil Abdul-Mahdi of the Supreme Council of the Islamic Revolution in Iraq, nuclear physicist Hussein al-Shahrastani and Nadim al-Jabiri of the Fadhila party, a religious group whose spiritual leader is al-Sadr's late father, Grand Ayatollah Mohammed Sadiq al-Sadr.

Ali al-Adeeb, a senior official from al-Jaafari's Dawa Party, warned against choosing a prime minister who will not listen to the views of other government members.

"We don't want a prime ministerial candidate who decides policies on his own but rather sticks to the alliance's declared policies," al-Adeeb said.

Nasir al-Ani, a Sunni member of the Accordance Front, said his bloc will leave the choice of prime minister to the Shiites and instead work to build a new government despite the attacks against the minority community.

"The terrorist operations against Sunnis everywhere in Iraq will have an influence on our talks, but we will participate in forming the government," al-Ani said. "There will be obstacles, but if certain blocs make some concessions, these obstacles can be avoided."

A prominent Sunni Arab cleric, Karim Jassim Mohammed, 39, was shot to death Wednesday by police at a checkpoint heading into the northern city of Samarra, said police Capt. Laith Mohammed. A policeman also was gunned down in Baghdad's Sadr City, police said.

An Iraqi television journalist, Mahmoud Zaal, was killed Tuesday while filming intense fighting between U.S. forces and insurgents near the volatile western city of Ramadi, said Thaer Ahmed, deputy director of the Baghdad television station where Zaal worked. The circumstances surrounding his death were not clear.

The U.S. military said it had no details on the journalist's death, but it said seven insurgents were killed in two separate clashes in Ramadi's city center.

Elsewhere, a well-known Iraqi TV presenter described how she jumped off her second-floor balcony Tuesday in southeastern Baghdad to escape five masked gunmen trying to kidnap her and her husband. Nagham Abdul-Zahra spoke from her hospital bed where she is recovering from multiple fractures.

Shiite leaders said the talks with the Sunnis have not yet delved into key concerns of the disaffected minority, such as provisions in the new constitution to transform Iraq into a federal state and ban key Baathists from government jobs.

Iraq's most powerful Shiite politician, Abdul Aziz al-Hakim, has said the Shiites, who comprise 60 percent of Iraq's 27 million people, would oppose major concessions on some key Sunni demands.

But Abbas al-Bayati, a Shiite Turkoman member of the Shiite alliance, said his bloc would listen to the Sunni concerns. "We suspect there are demands behind all the criticism," al-Bayati said.

The government negotiations follow heightened tensions in northern Baghdad, particularly the mainly Sunni Arab neighborhood of Toubji, where dozens of armed men dressed in Interior Ministry police uniforms killed three Sunni males and abducted more than 20 on Monday.

Sunni religious and political leaders have blamed Shiite-backed security services for the violence, demanding government action and urging Sunnis to defend themselves against future attacks.