IRAQ - Aug 12 - Al-Maliki Calls Crisis Talks.
PM Nuri Al-Maliki calls on senior leaders in Iraq's bitterly
divided communities to hold crisis talks this week even as an
influential Sunni leader issued an impassioned appeal for help from Arab
countries against what he called Iranian-supported death squads and
militias. "I have invited major political leaders to a meeting to
discuss substantial matters", Maliki said in a televised speech.
"Tomorrow or the day after tomorrow could be the first meeting for
these leaders to discuss the political program and important strategic
problems", the Shi'ite premier said. Seventeen ministerial
posts in his government are empty or filled by members boycotting
Cabinet meetings amid protests by many parties at Maliki's
faltering program of national reconciliation. In the latest blow to the
government's reconciliation efforts, Adnan Al-Dulaimi, the leader
of the largest Sunni bloc in Parliament, the Iraqi Accordance Front,
warned that Baghdad was in danger of falling into the hands of the
"Persians" and "Safawis", using terms referring to
Iran. "Arabs, your brothers in the land of the two rivers and in
Baghdad in particular are exposed to an unprecedented genocide campaign
by the militias and death squads that are directed, armed and supported
by Iran", Dulaimi said in a statement. Dulaimi's words
reflected growing frustration among Sunnis with Maliki's
government, which is widely accused of having a Shi'ite bias and
has failed to stop the execution-style killings believed carried out
mainly by Shi'ite-led death squads. Maliki last week made his
second trip to Iran since taking office in what many critics claimed was
proof of Iran's influence over his government. In his speech
yesterday, the PM defended the trip and said he would continue traveling
to other countries to seek help in stemming the violence. Maliki said he
planned to discuss at the crisis talks demands for political reform made
by various factions, including the Accordance Front, which has withdrawn
its ministers from Cabinet meetings. "We will see if these demands
are legitimate or not and we will apologize if it is not possible to
implement them", he said. But Dulaimi's remarks made no
mention of reconciliation efforts. He said urgent action was needed
against what he described as an organized campaign by Shi'ite
militias to drive Sunnis from the capital. "Areas such as Azamiyah,
Sulaikh, Fadhil, Dora, Adil, Jami'a, Ghazaliyah, Amiriyah and
Yarmouk are attacked daily by Iranian-made mortars that were given to
militias to eradicate the Sunnis", the statement said, referring to
neighbourhoods in Baghdad. He also made the point during a press
conference at his house in Adil, a Sunni-dominated neighbourhood in
western Baghdad. "I call on all Arabs, Muslims, presidents and
kings and people to intervene and urge the Iraqi government to get out
from this crisis and I call on them to stand beside Iraqis against
violence and the oppression that come to us from Iran and its
agents", Dulaimi said. The political developments came as the US
military said five American soldiers were killed south of Baghdad,
including four in a single roadside bombing. The blast that killed the
four soldiers and wounded four others during combat operations south of
the capital, the military said. Another soldier was killed the same day
by small-arms fire during a foot patrol southeast of Baghdad. The deaths
raised to at least 3,690 the number of US troops killed since the Iraq
war started in March 2003, according to an Associated Press count. As
the going got tough for the US-led coalition forces, Australia's
Foreign Minister Alexander Downer said that keeping soldiers in Iraq was
a "hard sell" with a public which is losing patience with the
slow pace of progress. Downer said the government was committed to
keeping its soldiers in place but acknowledged that "the
public's patience is wearing pretty thin on this issue".
COPYRIGHT 2007 Input Solutions
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2007 Gale, Cengage Learning. All rights reserved.
|
|
Reader Opinion