Powerful cleric backs Iraq constitution (AP) Updated: 2005-09-23 08:43
Iraq's most powerful Shiite cleric endorsed the draft constitution
Thursday, rejecting opposition voiced by two popular leaders of the country's
majority sect and underlining a rift also on display in anti-British violence in
the southern city of Basra.
Two officials in the Shiite Muslim hierarchy in Najaf said Grand Ayatollah
Ali al-Sistani called senior aides together and told them to promote a "yes"
vote among the faithful during the Oct. 15 national referendum on the
constitution.
The officials refused to be identified because they are not authorized to
speak for al-Sistani, who only issues statements through his office and makes no
public appearances.
Iraq's minority Sunni Arabs, who lost power and privilege with the fall of
Saddam Hussein in the U.S.-led invasion, are deeply opposed to the constitution.
They form the bulk of the country's violent insurgency and have stepped up
attacks on Shiites in advance of the vote.
In Amman, Jordan, about 150 Iraqi Sunni clerics and tribal leaders called for
the rejection of the constituion, warning the charter would lead to the
fragmentation of Iraq. The local leaders from Iraq's insurgency-torn Anbar
province, the country's Sunni heartland, met for a a three-day conference in the
Jordanian capital for security reasons.
"We urge all the Iraqi people to go to the polls and say no to the
constitution," Sheik Abdul-Latif Himayem, a prominent cleric from the Anbar
capital, Ramadi, told The Associated Press.
Some officials saw a Shiite split in play during the violence this week in
the predominantly Shiite city of Basra, where British troops clashed with mobs
and smashed into a jail while rescuing two soldiers.
Anthony Cordesman of the Washington-based Center for Strategic and
International Affairs, said the escalation of tension in the Basra underscored
the simmering rift among Shiite factions ahead of the referendum and
parliamentary elections in December.
"In large part, this is a reaction to a struggle between hard-liners and more
moderate religious elements," he said.
 Iraqi demonstrators hold banners in support of
the draft constitution and pictures of Iraq's highest religious authority,
the Grand Ayatollah Ali al-Sistani, in Kut, southeast of Baghdad, August
29, 2005. [Reuters/file] | Cordesman said the more moderate stance of the largest Shiite political
party, the Supreme Council for the Islamic Revolution in Iraq, was not accepted
in southern Iraq, where "a relatively hard-line religious takeover in Basra, one
linked closer to Iran," has created animosity toward the British presence.
Rioting broke out in Basra on Monday after British armored vehicles and
troops encircled a jail where two British soldiers were taken after their arrest
by Iraqi police. Rioters threw fire bombs and stones at British forces, and TV
cameras caught images of soldiers, some with their clothes on fire, jumping from
burning vehicles and running from mobs. Five Iraqis reportedly died in the
violence, but British soldiers suffered only minor injuries.
Later that night, British armored vehicles broke through exterior walls of
the jail compound, smashed cars and demolished buildings in a rescue operation
that freed the two soldiers who the British said were then in the hands of
Shiite militiamen at a nearby house.
Basra authorities accused the British of violating Iraqi sovereignty, and the
provincial governor ordered all Iraqis to stop cooperating with the British.
On Thursday, Gov. Mohammed al-Waili said violators would face unspecified
punishment. But later in the day, he said he was in negotiations with the
British and the dispute was "about to be solved and the crisis ended." He did
not elaborate.
Iraqi security forces in the south have largely fallen under the authority of
militias — the military wings of Iraq's various Shiite factions.
Iraqi and British officials have sought to play down the difficulties between
local authorities in Basra and the 8,500-soldier British force.
"I do not think that this will be an obstacle that cannot be overcome," Iraqi
Prime Minister Ibrahim al-Jaafari said Thursday, a day after meeting with
British officials in London.
Iraqi Foreign Minister Hoshyar Zebari, in an interview with The Associated
Press at the United Nations in New York, said that "what happened in Basra was a
local flare-up." He said the incident was not instigated by Iran, as some have
speculated.
"The people in the southern provinces have no interest whatsoever to see
British forces leave because they're providing security, stability, structure,
and relations have always been good ... really between the British forces and
the local Iraqis in this area," Zebari said.
British Consul-General Stuart Innes said in Basra that the two soldiers whose
arrest prompted the conflict had been on a reconnaissance mission aimed at
"maintaining security and to put an end to terrorism in Basra."
Basra, Iraq's second-largest city, is 340 miles south of Baghdad. It has
largely escaped the violence that has torn the Sunni heartland and taken the
lives of 1,907 U.S. military personnel since the war started in March 2003.
Gunmen killed at least 11 Iraqis in five attacks Thursday, police said.
Roadside bombers targeted U.S. troops Wednesday night, killing one soldier and
wounding six in Baghdad, the military reported.
Meanwhile, Saudi Arabia's foreign minister questioned whether the Bush
administration's efforts in Iraq will yield a stable, unified nation.
Prince Saud al-Faisal told the AP in a Washington interview that he hopes the
proposed Iraqi constitution and coming elections will unify the country, but
indicated he was worried that divisions among Kurds, Shiites and Sunni factions
are too great.
"We have not seen a move inside Iraq that would satisfy us that the national
unity of Iraq, and therefore the territorial unity of Iraq, will be assured,"
Saud said.
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