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BAGHDAD (AP) — Iraq's judicial authority on Monday rejected calls for the country's most senior Supreme Court judge to resign from his post, even though it was among the demands of protesters who took to the streets last week calling for widespread government reforms.
The development comes as Iraq's Shiite-led government is mired in a war against the Islamic State group, which has captured a third of both Iraq and neighboring Syria.
The Iraqi forces and their Sunni and Shiite allies have struggled to claw back territory from the Sunni militant group despite U.S.-led coalition airstrikes targeting the extremists.
Abdul-Sattar Bayrkdar, the spokesman for the Supreme Judicial Council, said council members rejected calls for Judge Medhat Mahmoud "to retire." The council is Iraq's highest legal authority, composed of experts in civil law and Islamic law, or Sharia, and it appoints Supreme Court judges.
"The public interest and justice at this stage require him to stay in his duties," Bayrkdar's statement said.
Iraq's government has launched a far-reaching reform plan, backed by the country's highest Shiite religious authority, to target corruption and trim government spending. Calls to dissolve the parliament and stop judicial corruption were among the demands of tens of thousands of protesters who took to the streets on Friday. Some also chanted against Judge Mahmoud, claiming he was "illegitimate."
Grand Ayatollah Ali al-Sistani in his Friday sermon said that reforming the judicial system was the most important step toward true reform.
"There is no real reform process without it," al-Sistani said through spokesman Abdul-Mahdi al-Karbalaie.
Meanwhile, Iraq's parliament on Monday approved a report implicating senior officials over the fall of Mosul, Iraq's second-largest city, which the Islamic State captured in June last year.
Speaker Salim al-Jabouri said the report, prepared by parliament's security and defense committee, will be sent to Iraq's prosecutor general. Al-Jabouri added that "no one is above the law" and that those responsible will be punished.
Al-Jabouri did not name any officials that could possibly face prosecution.
However, a lawmaker told The Associated Press on Sunday that the report implicates former Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki, who led the government for eight years before he was pushed out last August, as well as more than two dozen officials, including current army chief Babikar Zebari and Atheel al-Nujaifi, the governor of Ninevah province, where Mosul is located. The lawmaker spoke on condition of anonymity because the report has not been made public.
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Associated Press writer Vivian Salama contributed to this story from Baghdad.
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