Iraq PM contacted by armed groups on peace
Posted on: Wednesday, 28 June 2006, 11:04 CDT
By Hiba Moussa and Mussab Al-Khairalla
BAGHDAD (Reuters) - Iraq's prime minister said on Wednesday that armed groups had contacted him on peace efforts but stressed that those with blood on their hands would be excluded from any amnesty under his reconciliation drive.
"I am optimistic and I confirm that a lot of those who were involved in acts under the name of resistance ... have directly contacted us," Nuri al-Maliki told Iraqiya state television.
"And some of them have contacted other parts of the government and they are willing to join the political process and lay down their weapons and we welcome that."
Aides have previously named six of seven insurgent groups which contacted him recently. The Shi'ite Islamist unveiled a national reconciliation initiative on Sunday aimed at defusing the Sunni Arab insurgency and easing sectarian bloodshed.
Maliki has been under pressure from all sides over his plan, which is short on details on how he plans to avert a civil war.
U.S. politicians have called angrily for there to be no amnesty for the killers of American soldiers. But some senior Sunni leaders call attacks against U.S. troops "legitimate resistance" against foreign occupiers.
Since few of those fighting the U.S.-led occupying forces and the U.S.-backed government have been convicted, or seem likely to be, the amnesty appears largely a gesture toward the Sunni community, where the rebellion has been concentrated.
"Those involved in killing Iraqis, crimes, military attacks and bombings will not be released, even those who targeted foreigners, whether multinational forces or journalists," said Maliki. "They caused horror and are not included in the amnesty."
Maliki's reconciliation plan does not make clear how he intends to tackle hardcore elements of the insurgency, such as al Qaeda and Saddam Hussein loyalists leading the campaign.
SHRINE SUSPECTS
Iraq on Wednesday accused al Qaeda militants, including four Saudis, of carrying out the February 22 bombing of a revered Shi'ite shrine that triggered a major upsurge in sectarian violence.
National Security Adviser Mowaffaq al-Rubaie said fugitive Iraqi Haitham al-Badri, identified as the al Qaeda leader in Salahaddin province, masterminded the attack in Samarra.
Badri was in a charge of an al Qaeda unit of two Iraqis, four Saudis and a Tunisian, Rubaie said.
The Tunisian, Abu Qudama, was wounded several days ago in clashes with U.S. and Iraqi forces in which 15 other foreign militants were killed and later confessed to the shrine bombing, he said.
It was not clear under what circumstances the confession was obtained. Al Qaeda in Iraq denied accusations at the time that it was behind the bloodless attack, in which security guards were tied up but left alive to face accusations of complicity.
Some Sunnis accused Shi'ite Iranian agents of staging the bombing to justify a wave of militia attacks on Sunnis. Iran blamed U.S. and Israeli forces for destroying the shrine.
Rubaie said several months ago that al Qaeda's days were numbered in Iraq but the group has kept up attacks.
The February 22 bombing of the al-Askari shrine that destroyed its famous golden dome set off reprisals and pushed Iraq closer than ever to the brink of an open communal conflict.
Iraqi officials say the death of al Qaeda in Iraq leader Abu Musab al-Zarqawi in a U.S. air strike on June 7 dealt a blow to the militant group, but they don't expect it to end the carnage.
Source: REUTERS
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