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Baghdad (AFP) Nov 25, 2010 Nuri al-Maliki, Iraq's tough-talking but uncharismatic prime minister and former rebel, on Thursday held on to the premiership eight months after inconclusive elections. President Jalal Talabani, himself recently re-elected, named Maliki to a second term in the top job in a ceremony at Baghdad's presidential palace, two weeks after a power-sharing deal was reached between Iraq's divided factions. Sentenced to death by Saddam Hussein, former guerrilla Maliki, who spent decades in exile, emerged from the shadows in 2006 to take the reins of Iraq's first permanent post-Saddam government. In October, Iraq's main Shiite parliamentary bloc, the National Alliance, chose Maliki as its candidate for the premiership in a move aimed at breaking the deadlock over forming a government that followed the March polls. The deal was finally sealed November 11 after three days of high-pressure talks. Maliki's State of Law Alliance came second in the election, two seats behind the Iraqiya bloc of fellow Shiite and former premier Iyad Allawi, but neither had the 163 seats needed for a majority to form a government on its own. After the election, Maliki joined forces with the Iraqi National Alliance, a coalition of Shiite religious groups, to form the National Alliance (NA). A dour-looking politician who is rarely seen smiling in public, Maliki has forged a reputation as a strong leader who imposed a semblance of stability on war-ravaged Iraq. Sectarian violence has been the toughest and most brutal challenge to Maliki's grip on power since he took over the helm of Iraq's first permanent post-invasion government in May 2006. "I consider myself a friend of the United States, but I'm not America's man in Iraq," he declared at the time. Blunt and uncharismatic, he faced down accusations of sectarianism for not tackling Shiite militias in 2007 in defiance of crumbling support at home and abroad. Former US president George W. Bush has described Maliki as "a good guy, a good man with a difficult job." Maliki was born in 1950 in the predominantly Shiite central province of Babil. He joined the Shiite Islamic Dawa Party -- the oldest Iraqi movement opposed to Saddam -- while at university where he gained an MA in Arabic literature. Maliki fled Iraq in 1979 after Saddam banned the party, and Dawa says he was later sentenced to death in absentia. From 1980 onwards, he lived in Iran and then Syria where he edited Dawa's newspaper. It was then that he also assumed the nom-de-guerre Jawad and began coordinating cross-border raids from Iran into Iraq. Maliki returned to Iraq after the US-led invasion of 2003 and became a member of the de-Baathification commission that removed Saddam supporters from public office. In 2006, the owlish, suit-wearing and bespectacled Maliki was named premier after his predecessor Ibrahim al-Jaafari met stiff opposition from Sunnis and Kurds who regarded him as being too sectarian. At the time, violence was raging throughout Iraq, with thousands of people dying in intercommunal bloodshed on a monthly basis. In 2008, Maliki pursued an offensive against the Mahdi Army militia of radical Shiite cleric Moqtada al-Sadr, winning plaudits for his apparent willingness to set aside communal interests for a nationalist agenda. While violence has dropped dramatically since its peak in 2006 and 2007, something Maliki has been quick to take credit for, analysts note much of the decline had to do with a strengthened US troop presence and the co-opting of Sunni tribal groups to fight Al-Qaeda. Under his tenure, the American military withdrew from urban centres in June 2009 and concluded combat operations in Iraq at the end of August, keeping about 50,000 troops in the country to advise and assist Iraqi forces. However, last month Maliki came under renewed pressure as US military documents revealed by WikiLeaks included allegations of state-sanctioned torture under Maliki and alleged links to "death squads."
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