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Iraq
Maliki accuses top Sunni clerics of stoking tension
2007-01-06
Iraq’s prime minister accused a leading Sunni Muslim clerics’ group yesterday of stoking tension by saying that militias were preparing attacks on Sunni neighbourhoods in Baghdad. The Association of Muslim Scholars, an umbrella grouping of religious leaders of Iraq’s Sunni Arab minority, said in a statement on Thursday that militias linked to an unnamed political group were planning attacks. “The statement from the Association of Muslim Scholars is totally baseless and raises tension, and we hold the Muslim Clerics responsible for any action that results from this,” said a statement from Prime Minister Nuri Al Maliki’s office.

The clerics’ statement did not identify the militia or say that it was Shi’ite. But the use of the word “militia” and the suggestion of links to government parties is an unmistakable indication to Iraqis that it was accusing Shi’ite groups.

Sectarian tension has been particularly high over the past week, since Maliki rushed through the hanging of former president Saddam Hussein, a Sunni, and a video circulated showing him being taunted on the gallows by supporters of the ShiÂ’ite cleric Moqtada Al Sadr. Rumours and fears of militia activity were reported by residents on Thursday but there were no reports by Friday of anything out of the ordinary in a city where dozens of bodies turn up every day, apparent victims of death squad kidnappers.

Washington has identified Sadr’s Mehdi Army militia as the greatest threat to security in Iraq. Various other groups in government are linked to militias. “We know from well-informed sources that militias affiliated to a well-known political power are intending to attack many districts in Baghdad,” the Association of Muslim Scholars said in its statement, posted on its Web site. “We also know that some officials in the current government are well aware of this criminal plan,” it said. It said Sunnis’ patience could run out and they would “respond in an appropriate way that preserves the unity of Iraq”.

The Association of Muslim Scholars is headed by Sheikh Harith al-Dari, who lives outside Iraq. The government has ordered his arrest on suspicion of aiding terrorism. Sunni Arabs blame the Mehdi Army and other militias for the operations of the death squads and Washington has urged Maliki to crack down on them. But he depends on the support of SadrÂ’s political movement in parliament and has struggled to act.
Posted by:Fred

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