Anti-American Shi'ite cleric Moqtada al-Sadr has called for a mass protest against negotiations between Washington and Baghdad on keeping US troops in the country beyond 2008.
"We invite Iraqis to join us for a mass demonstration after Friday prayers unless the government cancels this agreement," Sadr said in a statement issued by his office in the holy Shi'ite city of Najaf on Tuesday.
He said the protests would continue nationwide until the government agreed to hold a referendum on the continued US presence. Sadr pulled his bloc out of Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki's government last year in protest at his refusal to negotiate a timetable for a US troop withdrawal.
Sadr called for a million-strong march against the US presence in April but later called it off for security reasons.
The United States is negotiating with Iraq on a Status of Forces Agreement aimed at giving a legal basis to US troops after Dec. 31, when their United Nations mandate expires.
The United States, which invaded in 2003 to topple Saddam Hussein, now has 155,000 troops in Iraq.
Maliki met his top officials on Tuesday to discuss the negotiations.
Democrat lawmakers in the United States fear the new agreement will commit the US military to a long-term presence in Iraq, while Iraqis such as Sadr's followers see it as a surrender of Iraq's sovereignty to an occupying force.
"We will collect a petition with signatures of the Iraqi people, who are against this deal," Sadr said.
In Najaf, Sadr's spokesman, Salah al-Ubaidi, said:
"History will not look well upon this government if it signs this agreement without consulting the people. It will put Iraq in crisis."
Sadr's protest call is likely to raise tensions with the Iraqi government, whose forces battled militants loyal to the cleric in the capital for weeks before a truce was agreed on May 10. The fighting was sparked by a government offensive against his Mehdi Army militia in the southern city of Basra in March.
Sadr is popular among Iraq's Shi'ite poor and his militia is estimated to number tens of thousands. But it has kept a low profile since Iraqi troops poured into Sadr City last week, taking control of Sadr's main Baghdad stronghold.
Reuters