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IRAQ WARS
Iraq PM seeks Sunni tribal help in battling insurgency
by Staff Writers
Baghdad (AFP) July 22, 2014


Baghdad suicide car bomb kills 23: police
Baghdad (AFP) July 22, 2014 - A suicide car bomb explosion ripped through a police checkpoint in Baghdad Tuesday, killing 23 people and wounding more than 40, police and medical sources said.

The suicide bomber detonated an explosives-laden vehicle at an entrance to the northwestern neighbourhood of Kadhimiyah, a police colonel and an interior ministry official said.

At least five of the those killed were policemen, as were eight of those wounded, said police and medical sources, who both gave figures higher than 40 for the number of wounded.

The predominantly Shiite neighbourhood of Kadhimiyah lies across the Tigris river from the mainly Sunni district of Adhamiyah and is frequently targeted when sectarian tension in the country is high.

The neighbourhood, which is home to one of the holiest Shiite shrines, is named after Musa Kadhim, the seventh of 12 revered imams in that branch of Islam.

Iraq says Jordan's hosting of Sunni critics 'unacceptable'
Baghdad (AFP) July 22, 2014 - Baghdad on Tuesday said Jordan's hosting of a meeting of Sunni Iraqis opposed to the Shiite-led government was "unacceptable".

On Friday Iraq recalled its envoy to Amman without giving a reason, but the move came days after a meeting of some 300 Sunni clerics, tribal leaders, insurgent commanders and businessmen in the Jordanian capital.

Delegates described a Sunni Islamist insurgency that has taken hold of swathes of Iraq in recent weeks as a "popular revolt".

Islamic State jihadists are spearheading the campaign, which began in the Iraqi city of Mosul on June 9 and has since swept large parts of the country's northern and western provinces.

The Iraqi government described those attending the meeting as "enemies of the political system and social fabric of Iraq".

"The cabinet considers the hosting of these conferences an unacceptable hostility towards the Iraqi people by a friendly, sister country," the cabinet said, and asked that the foreign ministry follow up on the issue.

Iraq's Shiite Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki has decried what he describes as foreign meddling in his country, and has accused countries in the region of arming and funding militants.

Iraq was almost torn apart in 2006-2007 when the bombing of a revered Shiite shrine in Samarra, north of Baghdad, triggered a wave of sectarian slaughter between Shiite militias and Al-Qaeda-allied Sunni militants.

Iraqi Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki met several Sunni tribal leaders on Tuesday in a renewed bid to gain their support in battling a raging jihadist-led Sunni insurgency.

Maliki, a Shiite, has had a troubled relationship with Iraq's Sunni tribes, who in 2006 began helping the government fight Al-Qaeda-linked Sunni militants, but who now accuse him of sectarian discrimination.

The Iraqi premier's fresh overtures to tribal chiefs comes amid an onslaught spearheaded by Islamic State Sunni militants that has taken swathes of the country in recent weeks.

"He stressed that the tribe was and still is the foundation for protecting the security of areas against the dangers that threaten them, particularly terrorists," a statement from Maliki's office said.

"Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki added that the government would provide the tribes with everything they need to defend their areas."

From late 2006, when Iraq's bloody sectarian war was around its peak, some Sunni tribes began siding with US forces against the often brutal tactics of their Al-Qaeda-linked coreligionists.

The American military started paying the militiamen regular salaries, and called them the "Sons of Iraq". In Arabic, they were referred to as the Sahwa, or "Awakening", forces, and numbered around 100,000 at their peak.

The move was seen as crucial to the decline of violence in Iraq from 2008 onwards and helped provide jobs for the country's Sunni minority, dampening resentment against the Shiite-led government.

But since US forces handed over responsibility for the Sahwa to Iraqi authorities, the militiamen have alleged poor treatment, delayed payment and a failure of the Shiite-led government to follow through on a promise to incorporate them into the civil service and conventional security forces.

Maliki's office said he had met tribal chiefs from Sunni strongholds in the Anbar, Salaheddin, Nineveh and Kirkuk provinces, and that they had asked for a "bigger role in countering the terrorists, and for help with weapons and training."

Maliki agreed to form committees to meet their requests, his office said.

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