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Iraqi parties
denounce splitting country
Middle East Desk Report
BAGHDAD—Representatives of Iraq’s major political parties on Sunday
denounced a U.S. Senate proposal calling for a limited centralized Iraqi
government with the bulk of the power given to the country’s ethnically
divided regions.
The groups, which represented both Shiites and Sunnis, said the plan
would hamper Iraq’s stability, and they suggested an Iraqi law
permanently banning the country’s split along sectarian or ethnic lines.
“This proposal was based on the incorrrect reading and unrealistic
estimations of Iraq’s past, present and future,” according to the
statement read by Izzat al-Shahbandar, a representative of the Iraqi
National List, a secular political party.
The nonbinding Senate resolution calls for Iraq to be divided into
federal regions under control of Kurds, Shiites and Sunnis in a
power-sharing agreement similar to the one that ended the 1990s war in
Bosnia. Sen. Joseph Biden, D-Del., was a prime sponsor of the measure.
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 denounced the 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.
Al-Shahbandar said at a news conference the proposal “opposes all laws
of the international community and its legitimate institutions which
protect all the rights of people in self-decision, building their future
and defending their unity and sovereignty.”
He added that the international community should denounce the proposal
and “support Iraq in its crisis and its efforts to restore security and
stability in all its areas.” On Friday, Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki
told The Associated Press that “dividing Iraq is a problem, and a
decision like that would be a catastrophe.”
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.
Also Sunday, a judge delayed court proceedings for a second U.S. Army
sniper accused in the deaths of two unarmed Iraqi civilians a day after
a military panel sentenced a 22-year-old specialist to five months in
prison for his role in the crimes.
Jorge G. Sandoval was convicted Thursday of planting evidence on one of
the unidentified Iraqis who died last spring. He was acquitted of two
murder charges.
Sandoval had faced five charges in the deaths of the two unidentified
Iraqi men. In dramatic testimony during the four-day court-martial, his
colleague, Sgt. Evan Vela, testified he had pulled the trigger and
killed one of the men Sandoval was accused of murdering.
Vela said the sniper team was following orders when it shot the men
during two separate incidents near Iskandariyah, a Sunni-dominated area
south of Baghdad, on April 27 and May 11.
Vela, 23, was expected to undergo a pretrial hearing Sunday until a
military judge decided to postpone those proceedings for at least a
month. Vela’s civilian defense lawyer had asked that the hearing be
closed to the media because of classified information expected to be
discussed.
The U.S. military also announced the death of an American soldier killed
Saturday in a roadside bombing and gunfire attack in eastern Baghdad.
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