The Federal Supreme Court of Iraq postponed the decision on the case to dissolve parliament until tomorrow, Thursday, and the United Nations called on all parties to evaluate the bloody events, and the Al-Fateh Alliance called for political silence to overcome the crisis.

Today, Wednesday, the Federal Supreme Court decided to postpone the hearing of the case for dissolving the House of Representatives until tomorrow, in its first session after the end of the curfew in the country and the return of the work of state institutions.

The Federal Court had considered the lawsuit to dissolve Parliament, after two days of bloody clashes and clashes.

The content of the lawsuit deals with accusations of failing to elect a president of the republic and violating the constitutional deadlines for forming the new government.

Calm returned to Baghdad after the coordination framework ended the sit-in of its supporters that has been going on for about 3 weeks, as well as the withdrawal of the Sadrist movement's supporters from the Green Zone in response to the call of the movement's leader Muqtada al-Sadr.

The United Nations mission in Iraq called on all parties to show solidarity with the bereaved families and assess the severity of the situation.

And the UN mission, in a tweet on Twitter, appealed to all parties in Iraq to refrain from what divides them, and to focus on what brings people together.


Calls for a solution

For his part, Iraqi Prime Minister Mustafa Al-Kazemi threatened to resign if chaos, conflict and rivalry continued.

Al-Kazemi added - in a televised speech yesterday evening, Tuesday - that the war was declared by all parties to weaken the state and its decision for electoral reasons.

And yesterday, Iraqi President Barham Salih called - in a speech to the Iraqis - to organize early elections within a national understanding, which would end political tensions and pave the way out of the crisis.

Saleh also called for the coordinating framework to communicate with the Sadrist movement, and described what Iraq witnessed recently as a deep political crisis linked to the system of governance and its impotence, as he put it.


Hadi Al-Amiri, the leader of the Al-Fateh Alliance and the leader in the coordination framework, called on all Iraqi political forces to declare political and media silence, and to stay away from the language of escalation in order to calm souls, which would help overcome the current crisis.

Al-Amiri said in a statement that this call comes with the aim of combining all efforts to calm down and restore trust and affection among the people of the same country to overcome the recent events that occurred and their painful and sad effects, as he put it.

For his part, the Secretary-General of Asa'ib Ahl al-Haq in Iraq, Qais Khazali, called for the return of parliament sessions and the formation of a new government.

Khazali said that the recent events were a "failed coup attempt" that targeted the state, except for the head of the executive authority, adding that the current situation is the worst, and everyone must move to end it.

The coordinating framework had called on the parliament and the rest of the constitutional institutions to return to the exercise of their duties and perform their duties towards the citizens.

He called on the coordination framework to expedite the formation of what he described as a national service government that undertakes reform, fights corruption and rejects quotas to prevent a recurrence of what happened.

The coordinating framework - which includes all Shiite political forces with the exception of the Sadrist movement - also expressed its regret over the occurrence of what he called blind strife and the casualties it caused.


On the other hand, Saleh al-Iraqi, who is close to the leader of the Sadrist movement, said that the coordination framework's call for holding a parliament session and forming a new government does not take into account the feelings of the families of the victims who fell in the violent incidents in the Green Zone, according to him.

The Iraqi called on Iran to intervene to curb what he described as its followers in Iraq, warning of the repercussions of what might happen.