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US Secretary General Ban Ki-moon (L) meets with Iraqi Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki in Baghdad on July 24, 2014. The formation of a truly inclusive government is required to overcome the threat of Iraq's breakup along ethnic and sectarian lines, Ban said today. Image Credit: AFP

Baghdad: Veteran Iraqi politician Fuad Masum was almost guaranteed to become Iraq’s next president after the main Kurdish blocs in parliament agreed on his candidacy on Thursday.

According to an unofficial power-sharing agreement, the position of federal president goes to a Kurd and Masum edged his rival Barham Saleh during a vote Kurdish MPs held behind closed doors in a Baghdad hotel, officials said.

“Fuad Masum is the only candidate of the Kurdish blocs for the position of president,” a senior Kurdish official who witnessed the vote said.

Other officials confirmed that Fuad Masum, who was born in 1938 and became the first prime minister of autonomous Iraqi Kurdistan in 1992, had received more votes than Saleh.

UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon said in Baghdad Thursday that the formation of a truly inclusive government is required to overcome the threat of Iraq’s breakup along ethnic and sectarian lines, .

“Iraq is facing an existential threat but it can be overcome by the formation of a thoroughly inclusive government,” he said at a joint press conference with Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki.

“It must be a government in which all Iraqis feel represented,” said Ban, who has been touring the region mainly in a bid to quell the bloodshed in Gaza and whose Baghdad stop was not initially scheduled.

Masum is from the Patriotic Union of Kurdistan (PUK) party of Jalal Talabani, the man he is now almost certain to succeed as head of state when parliament holds a vote.

The chamber is due to convene later on Thursday after lawmakers failed to even broach the subject during a Wednesday session, in a sign that Kurdish politicians had not yet reached a deal on their candidate.

The Kurds’ endorsement of Masum came a few days after the ailing Talabani, 80, returned from 18 months of medical treatment in Germany to serve out the last days of his tenure.

Some commentators have said that the powerful Talabani family deeply objected to Saleh, who is also a PUK member and former prime minister, and therefore pushed for Masum.

— With inputs from AFP and AP