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IRAQ WARS
Violence threatens Iraqi diversity: UN
by Staff Writers
Baghdad (AFP) July 16, 2014


Iraq Sunnis play down Islamic State role in 'popular revolt'
Amman (AFP) July 16, 2014 - Iraqi Sunni leaders in exile said Wednesday that last month's flare-up of violence was the result of a "popular revolt" against the Shiite-dominated government of Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki.

Several of around 300 Sunni clerics, tribal leaders, insurgent commanders and businessmen who attended a meeting in Amman insisted that the Islamic State (IS), which in June declared a caliphate straddling Iraq and Syria, was only a marginal player in their country.

"What is happening in Iraq now is a revolt of the oppressed," said Abdelmalek al-Saadi, a senior Sunni cleric.

"This revolt was carried out by the tribes to support oppressed Iraqis. IS is a small part of this revolt."

IS fighters spearheaded an offensive which overran large swathes of five northern and western provinces, sparking a huge population displacement, much of it along sectarian lines.

Many Sunni rebel outfits insist their alliance with IS is only temporary and that the jihadist group is not representative enough to administer its self-declared caliphate.

However, analysts say IS has bullied its allies into irrelevance and is calling the shots on the ground.

"We call on Arab countries to support the rebels in Iraq," Ahmad Dabash, a commander of the Islamic Army of Iraq, a group which emerged after the 2003 US-led invasion and remains active, mainly in Salaheddin and Diyala provinces.

"The world should help Iraqis in their legitimate revolt that seeks to save Iraq and the entire region from the unknown," Dabash told reporters after the closed-door meeting.

Sheikh Mohammed Bashar al-Faidi, spokesman for the influential Association of Muslim Scholars, said the Amman meeting wanted the world "to understand the ... rebels' aims.

"We hold the international community responsible for the killing of civilians. We want Iraq to remain united."

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.

The flare-up of sectarian violence that saw jihadist-led militants conquer large swathes of Iraq over the past month has displaced 600,000 people and threatens the country's diversity, the UN warned Wednesday.

The head of the UN's refugee agency, Antonio Guterres said that ongoing population movements were alarming.

"The most worrying situation for us is when we see movement of population that tends to destroy the diversity that existed," he told reporters in Baghdad.

A coalition of Sunni militants led by the Islamic State -- a jihadist group whose views and methods are even more extreme than Al Qaeda's -- overran swathes of five Iraqi provinces in an onslaught launched on June 9.

Shiite populations have fled en masse from the area's new rulers and many see little hope of ever returning to their homes.

Simultaneously, many Sunnis in traditionally mixed areas have regrouped, fearing a backlash from militias supporting the Shiite-dominated government.

That process of sectarian separation into religiously homogenous towns and neighbourhoods has been going on, at varying pace, for years but the latest crisis has caused displacement on a huge scale.

Guterres also said such a trend would leave Iraq's minorities -- such as the Turkmen, Christian, Yazidi and Shabak communities -- in a difficult situation.

"I think that one of the risks we have with the present displacement is in the homogenisation of the territory, in which Shiite and Sunni live separately and the minorities have different conditions," he said.

"The preservation of the diversity is an extremely important tool for peace and the future and the reconstruction of the country," Guterres added.

He estimated that 600,000 people had been forced to flee their homes since militants swept into Mosul, Iraq's second city with a population of two million.

Around half a million had been displaced by violence earlier this year in the flashpoint western province of Anbar.

Added to the million people who had fled during previous phases of unrest in Iraq's troubled history, the country's displaced population now tops two million.

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