auction ads

Search Results

Sunday, September 30, 2007

Iraqi PM criticizes US proposal

raq's Prime Minister said that a US Senate proposal to split the country into regions according to religious or ethnic divisions would be a ''catastrophe.''

The Kurds in three northern Iraqi provinces are running a virtually independent country within Iraq, while nominally maintaining relations with Baghdad.

They support a formal division. But both Sunni and Shiite Muslims have reacted with extreme opposition to the US Senate proposal.

The majority Shiites, who would retain control of major oil revenues under a division of the country, oppose the measure because it would diminish the territorial integrity of Iraq, which they now control.

Sunnis would control an area with few if any oil resources. Kurds have major oil reserves in their territory.

The non-binding Senate resolution calls for Iraq to be divided into federal regions under control of the three communities in a power-sharing agreement similar to the one that ended the 1990s war in Bosnia.

Democratic US presidential hopeful Senator Joseph Biden was a prime sponsor of the measure.

''It is an Iraqi affair dealing with Iraqis,'' Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki said on Friday on a return flight to Baghdad from New York, where he appeared at the UN General Assembly.

''Iraqis are eager for Iraq's unity. Dividing Iraq is a problem, and a decision like that would be a catastrophe.''

Autonomous powers

The comments were al-Maliki's first since the measure passed the Senate on Wednesday.

Iraq's constitution lays down a federal system, allowing Shiites in the south, Kurds in the north and Sunnis in the center and west of the country to set up regions with considerable autonomous powers.

Nevertheless, ethnic and sectarian turmoil have snarled hopes of negotiating such measures, especially given deep divisions on sharing the country's vast oil resources.

Oil reserves and existing fields would fall mainly into the hands of Kurds and Shiites if such a division were to occur.

So far there has been no agreement on a broader sharing of those revenues, one of the several US-mandated benchmarks the government has failed to push through parliament.

On Thursday, Iraqi Vice President Adel Abdul-Mahdi, a Shiite, said decisions about Iraq must remain in the hands of its citizens. And a spokesperson for radical Shiite cleric Muqtada al-Sadr demanded the al-Maliki government reject the proposal.

''We demand the Iraqi government to stand against such a project and to condemn it officially,'' said Liwa Semeism, the al-Sadr spokesperson.

''Such a decision does not represent the aspirations of all Iraqi people and it is considered an interference in Iraq's internal affairs.''

A spokesman for Grand Ayatollah Ali al-Sistani, the Shiite spiritual leader, dismissed the proposal during a Friday sermon in Karbala.

''The division plan is against Iraq's interests and against peace in a united Iraq,'' Sheik Abdul Mahdi al-Karbalaei told worshippers. ''Any neighboring country supporting this project will pay the price of instability in the region.''

Biden argues that the US has focused too much on trying to prop up a strong, central unified government in Baghdad.

But it is unlikely the Bush administration will alter its policies on Iraq as a result of the resolution.

US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice said on Tuesday that the administration supports a federal Iraq, but it is a ''sensitive issue best left to the Iraqis to address at their own pace.''

Meanwhile, Iraqi police and witnesses said US troops backed by helicopter gunships raided an apartment building at 2 am on Friday in a primarily Sunni neighborhood in southern Baghdad, killing 10 civilians and wounding 12.

The US military said it was checking into the report.

Several people detained

An unknown number of people also were detained after the clashes between US helicopters and gunmen in the Dora neighborhood's Sihha district, said a police officer who spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to release the information.

Shaheed Abdul-Al, a 42-year-old metal worker who lives in the area, said his family was awakened by the sound of helicopters, heavy gunfire and bombing.

''We saw a big flash of light with the sounds of bombing from the direction of the (targeted) building,'' he said. ''We were horrified and still awake at sunrise.''

Ahmed Salim, a 16-year-old student who lives near the targeted complex, said he saw US military vehicles through his window.

''When the Americans left, I and others rushed to the site where people were rescuing survivors,'' he said. ''I saw wounded and dead bodies.''

In violence north of Baghdad, at least six people were killed when four gunmen with full beards and wearing military uniforms barged into a busy cafe late on Thursday as people were playing a popular game to celebrate the end of the dawn-to-dusk fast during the Islamic holy month of Ramadan.

The men arrived in a Russian-made military vehicle used by the Saddam Hussein-era army and opened fire, shouting, ''God is great,'' according to a provincial police officer who asked that his name not be used for fear of reprisals.

The six killed included three off-duty police officers. Eight others were wounded, the officer said. The attack occurred in Sadiyah, a town in volatile Diyala province.

Also on Friday US Spc. Jorge G Sandoval, 22, was acquitted on charges he killed two unarmed Iraqis.

Planting evidence

He was convicted of a lesser charge of planting evidence on one of the bodies to cover up the crime. He was to be sentenced on Saturday.

The US military announced that American-led forces on Tuesday killed one of the most important leaders of al-Qaida in Iraq, a Tunisian named Abu Osama al-Tunisi who was believed connected to the kidnapping and killings last summer of American soldiers.

In Syria, Mohammed Gul Aghassi, a Sunni Muslim cleric who in the past has been suspected of recruiting militants to fight in Iraq, was shot dead as he left a mosque after Friday prayers in the northern city of Aleppo, aides said.
source:http://www.ndtv.com/convergence/ndtv/story.aspx?id=NEWEN20070027689

No comments:

About Me