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Published: September 25, 2008
BAGHDAD - Under intense U.S. pressure, Iraq's parliament approved a law Wednesday that paves the way for the first provincial elections in four years after months of deadlock that U.S. commanders warned could jeopardize the dramatic decline in violence.
The breakthrough came after lawmakers decided to postpone a decision on how to resolve a power-sharing dispute over the oil-rich city of Kirkuk.
The Kirkuk controversy has stoked ethnic tensions in northern Iraq and stalled approval of the election bill.
U.S. officials hope the elections, which must be held by Jan. 31 according to the new legislation, will give greater representation to minority Sunni Arabs.
Many Sunnis and some Shiites boycotted the last provincial elections, in January 2005, enabling Shiite religious parties and the Kurds to win a disproportionate share of the seats.
Empowering Sunnis through new elections may reduce support for the waning insurgency - though not among extremist groups.
In the latest bloodshed, suspected al-Qaida in Iraq militants ambushed and killed at least 22 Iraqi police commandos and U.S.-allied Sunni fighters in a village northeast of Baghdad on Wednesday.
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