Despite
the refusal of the head of the U.S. administration in Iraq, retired
general Jay Garner, to recognize Zubeidi, he said he would remain in
power because he had been elected, according to Agence France Presse
(AFP).
"I
will continue the management of Baghdad affairs. We represent the
administration of our city and it is the people of Iraq who elected
us," Zubeidi told Al-Jazeera television. "We are not a
government... but a civil administration," he added.
The
new U.S. administration of post-war Iraq led by Jay Garner Monday
dismissed the claims of the two men who have appointed themselves as the
new leaders in the Iraqi capital.
"There
are a lot of de facto leaders. I don't know who they are but our goal is
to start a process whereby the Iraqi people elect their own
leaders," said Garner, who arrived early Monday in Baghdad.
"We
think the playing field is level. We haven't appointed anyone or
recognized anyone," he told reporters.
Mohammed
Mohsen Zubeidi, a long-time opponent in exile of ousted president Saddam
Hussein, last week announced he was the new "governor" of
Baghdad, with Jawdat al-Obeidi as his deputy.
"American
President George W. Bush said himself several times that it is up to the
Iraqi people themselves to choose their representatives," Zubeidi
said.
Zubeidi
last week announced he was elected the new governor of Baghdad by tribal
and religious officials and with U.S. consent.
However,
the U.S. Marine Corps said the following day that no appointments of
Iraqis had been made or sanctioned to lead this country's civil
administration in the aftermath of the occupation.
Zubeidi
has since announced the formation of 22 committees to run the capital
with defense and foreign affairs among their responsibilities.
He
had earlier claimed he was the head of the new Baghdad government and
that Obeidi was now mayor of the Iraqi capital.
Asked
about Zubeidi, Barbara Bodine - the new coordinator for central Iraq -
said: "We don't really know much about him except that he's
declared himself mayor. We don't recognize him.
"There
hasn't been a process of selection. Once there's a process, then
whomever," she said.
Zubeidi
said last week that he was holding daily meetings with U.S. military
officials at the Marines headquarters in the Palestine Hotel.
Bodine
also said that Obeidi would not represent Iraq at this week's meeting of
the OPEC oil cartel.
"He
can't. I don't think OPEC would take him. We wouldn't prevent him but I
would find it odd that OPEC would accept him as a representative."