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IRAQ WARS
Iraq PM offers amnesty to turn tide of offensive
by Staff Writers
Baghdad (AFP) July 02, 2014


Fleeing Shiite Turkmen caught in Iraq limbo
Al-Khazar, Iraq (AFP) July 02, 2014 - Dozens of families who fled a Shiite Turkmen town in northern Iraq overrun by Sunni militants want to move south but are stuck in limbo between the authorities and insurgents.

The families initially fled Tal Afar, part of a swathe of territory across five provinces which fell to jihadist-led fighters in an offensive that began June 9, for the nearby town of Sinjar.

They then moved to camps on the outskirts of Iraq's autonomous three-province Kurdish region.

But land routes to the Shiite-dominated south, which is markedly more stable than the conflict-hit north and west, are controlled by militants led by the jihadist Islamic State group.

And Kurdish authorities have blocked those fleeing the conflict in northern Iraq from entering the autonomous region without a resident sponsor.

They have also barred them from the regional capital Arbil entirely, meaning they cannot get to the airport to fly south.

"When we arrived at the camp, they provided us with food, but we do not want to live in a camp," said Murtada Qassem, who fled Tal Afar to Sinjar, and then later to a camp bordering the Kurdish region.

"We want to go to the south, to get jobs and better housing," the father of seven said.

Kadhim Naqi, a 64-year-old with nine children, added that his family wanted to move south because "there is no war or dispute there... It is more stable."

Around 1.2 million people have been displaced within Iraq by unrest this year, including hundreds of thousands who fled their homes following the militant offensive.

Many have sought refuge in hotels in Kurdistan as tourists, thereby evading the requirement for a local sponsor, but a large number have been prevented from entering the autonomous area because they have not found a resident to support their entry.

As a result, they have been forced to stay in camps near Al-Khazar checkpoint, the main entry route from Arab areas of northern Iraq to Arbil.

"The situation is very difficult, and our policy now is to settle those refugees in the camps," said Dindar Zebari, deputy chief of the Kurdish foreign relations department.

Zebari said those in the camps were free to leave, but without safe overland routes and with air transport inaccessible, they have little option but to stay.

The International Organisation for Migration has urged the establishment of safe routes to provide aid to the needy, amid worries of a worsening humanitarian crisis.

Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki offered a general amnesty Wednesday in a rare conciliatory move to undercut support for militants whose offensive has overrun swathes of territory and threatens to tear Iraq apart.

The offer comes after a farcical opening to the new parliament, despite world leaders calling on Iraq's fractious politicians to unite urgently to help combat insurgents, as the military struggles to seize the initiative.

Maliki's surprise move, made in his weekly televised address, appeared to be a bid to split the broad alliance of jihadists, loyalists of executed dictator Saddam Hussein and anti-government tribes that has captured large chunks of five provinces, displacing hundreds of thousands of people.

"I announce the provision of amnesty for all tribes and all people who were involved in actions against the state" but who now "return to their senses," Maliki said.

But he excluded those involved in killings, and it was not immediately clear how many people might be eligible.

Analysts have said some form of political reconciliation is needed to convince Sunni Arabs angry with the Shiite-led government to turn against their co-religionists and jihadists.

The vast majority of Iraq's Sunni Arab minority do not actively support the Islamic State (IS) jihadist group spearheading the offensive, but analysts say anger over perceived mistreatment by the authorities means they are less likely to cooperate with the security forces.

- Farcical parliamentary session -

Maliki's announcement came a day after an eagerly awaited opening to the Council of Representatives descended into chaos and ended in disarray without a speaker being elected.

Washington quickly warned that "time is not on Iraq's side," with State Department spokeswoman Marie Harf calling for "extreme urgency."

UN special envoy Nickolay Mladenov said Iraqi politicians "need to realise that it is no longer business as usual."

Under a de facto agreement, the premier is a Shiite Arab, the speaker Sunni Arab and the president a Kurd.

Presiding MP Mahdi Hafez said the legislature would reconvene on July 8 if leaders were able to agree on senior posts.

In another sign of political discord, Maliki rejected Wednesday an assertion by the autonomous Kurdish region that its control of disputed territory is here to stay.

Kurdish leader Massud Barzani has even said a referendum will be held in the coming months on independence for the oil-rich region.

On the ground, Iraqi forces were struggling to break a stalemate with militants after initially wilting before the onslaught. They have since performed better, albeit with limited offensive success.

But the cost has been high. Nearly 900 security personnel were among 2,400 people killed in June, the highest figure in years, according to the United Nations.

Thousands of troops, backed by tanks, artillery and aerial cover, have made limited progress in retaking Tikrit, which fell on June 11, as a highly publicised operation appears to have hit difficulties.

- 'Advancing slowly' -

"They are advancing slowly because all of the houses and burned vehicles (en route to the city) have been rigged with explosives, and militants have deployed lots of roadside bombs and car bombs," said Ahmed Abdullah Juburi, governor of Salaheddin province of which Tikrit is the capital.

Juburi said it would be days before security forces could make a concerted push into the city.

Maliki's security spokesman also told reporters that loyalists had clashed with militants south of Baghdad.

In an effort to break the stand-off, the government has bought more than a dozen Sukhoi warplanes from Russia.

It said it aimed to begin using them in combat Wednesday, but it was unclear if that has happened.

The London-based International Institute for Strategic Studies has said three Sukhoi ground attack jets shown landing in Iraq in a video released by the defence ministry are likely from Iran, which has pledged to aid Iraq against the militants.

Loyalists are battling militants led by the IS, which Sunday declared a "caliphate," an Islamic form of government last seen under the Ottoman Empire, and ordered Muslims worldwide to pledge allegiance to their chief.

US reaches out to Saudi Arabia, Sunni, Kurd leaders in Iraq
Washington (AFP) July 02, 2014 - Top US officials Wednesday upped pressure on key Iraqi leaders as political chaos in Baghdad clouded American hopes for a unity government to tackle the country's sectarian breakdown.

President Barack Obama, meanwhile widened the US effort to convince key regional powers to prevail on Iraqi factions for a political settlement, calling Saudi Arabia's King Abdullah.

Vice President Joe Biden, who frequently burns up the phone lines to Baghdad, talked to the speaker of Iraq's previous parliament, Osama al-Nujaifi, a prominent Sunni leader.

Secretary of State John Kerry meanwhile met a Kurdish delegation in Washington and also spoke to Iraqi Kurdish leader Massud Barzani by phone.

The White House said Biden and Nujaifi agreed on the importance of Iraqis "moving expeditiously to form a new government capable of uniting the country."

Kerry stressed the important role that the Kurds would play in a new multi-sect government in Baghdad, which Washington says is vital to meeting the challenge of Sunni Islamic State (IS) jihadists who have seized vast tracts of Iraqi territory in recent months.

Barzani last week warned that there was no going back on Kurdish rule in the oil-rich northern city of Kirkuk and other towns now defended by Kurdish fighters against Sunni militants.

He also pledged, in an interview with the BBC, to hold an independence referendum within months, raising the specter of the break-up of Iraq.

State Department spokeswoman Jen Psaki said Kerry emphasized with Barzani the urgency of Kurdish "participation in the government formation process (and) the important role the Kurds (are) playing moving forward."

The first session of Iraq's new parliament, dedicated to choosing a new government, broke up in chaos on Tuesday, with lawmakers walking out and making threats, despite the gravity of the political and security situation.

Many Sunni and Kurdish deputies walked out, causing a quorum to be lost, so a speaker could not be elected, and the session ended in disarray.

Washington has made no secret of the fact that it does not believe Shiite Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki is the man to lead the new government, blaming him for pursuing sectarian policies in the past -- which the US government believes helped prepare the ground for the IS advance.

But no consensus has emerged on who should succeed Maliki and the prime minister seems determined to cling to power.

Under a de facto agreement, in Iraq, the premier of the government is a Shiite Arab, the speaker Sunni Arab and the president a Kurd.

Obama and Abdullah agreed on the need for separate Iraqi factions to unite to form a politically viable government, the White House said.

"The President thanked the King for Saudi Arabia's pledge of $500 million dollars to help alleviate the suffering of all Iraqis who have been displaced by the violence," said a White House statement.

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IRAQ WARS
Iraq parliament opens with PM re-election in doubt
Baghdad (AFP) July 01, 2014
Iraq's newly-elected parliament convened Tuesday to begin choosing a government, with premier Nuri al-Maliki's bid for a third term battered by a Sunni militant offensive threatening to tear Iraq apart. World leaders and senior clerics have urged Iraq's fractious politicians to unite in the face of the militant onslaught, which has killed more than 2,000 people, displaced hundreds of thousan ... read more


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