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Iraq PM calls for national dialogue over US troops

Iraq PM says complicity behind prison mutiny
Baghdad (AFP) May 11, 2011 - Iraqi Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki blamed collusion and unspecified violations on Wednesday for a prison mutiny over the weekend at a Baghdad jail in which six policemen and 11 inmates died.

The incident began, a security spokesman said, when an accused Al-Qaeda leader grabbed a guard's weapon, killed him and released several of his comrades who then attempted to escape from the facility.

"We will have a complete picture of what happened in the prison in Rusafa (east Baghdad) only when the investigation is finished," Maliki told a news conference in Baghdad.

"It is not easy to speak about matters of security, but it was also not as simple as what was initially reported -- that a terrorist took a weapon from one of the guards and took control of the prison."

He continued: "There was complicity and violations, and it will require further investigation. Weapons were brought into the prison, as well as grenades.

"How did these weapons enter the prison? Who brought them in? There are other things about which I cannot speak."

Maliki said further details would be divulged when the investigation had been completed, but did not specify when that would be.

Sunday's prison mutiny came amid fears of reprisals after Osama bin Laden's killing in a US raid in Pakistan on May 2, and days after 24 policemen died in a car bombing south of Baghdad.

The mutiny was triggered by Huthaifa al-Batawi, suspected of masterminding an October 31 Al-Qaeda raid on a Baghdad church that left 44 worshippers, two priests and seven members of the security forces dead.

by Staff Writers
Baghdad (AFP) May 11, 2011
Iraqi Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki called for a dialogue on Wednesday with rival blocs to gauge whether or not US troops currently in Iraq should stay beyond a year-end deadline for their withdrawal.

Maliki's remarks come as US officials press Baghdad to decide within weeks if it wants a longer-term American military presence, with radical Shiite cleric warning any extension would lead his feared Mahdi Army to return to the streets.

"The decision about the US withdrawal is a huge national task, so I will call all the blocs' leaders to have a dialogue to say whether they want to keep the forces or not," Maliki told a news conference in Baghdad.

"After that, the government will decide on keeping them, or making them leave."

Maliki said on April 26 that he would make such a call after returning from a planned trip to South Korea, which he completed this month.

He has previously alluded to the domestic political difficulties he would have in securing parliamentary approval for an extension for US forces, crucially from Sadr and his supporters.

In a statement read to loyalists in Baghdad on April 9, Sadr warned, "If the Americans don't leave Iraq on time, we will increase the resistance and restart the activities of the Mahdi Army."

Maliki, however, dismissed those comments, noting that Sadr's movement had only 40 seats in the 325-member parliament, and would have to respect any decision taken by a majority of political leaders.

"The entire poiltical world will be bound by the decision (of the government) and Moqtada al-Sadr is part of this world," he said.

"If 80 or 90 percent of Iraqis say (they want US forces to stay), the remaining 10 percent must accept this decision, or walk away from the political process ... and become law-breakers."

Around 45,000 American troops are currently stationed in Iraq, with all US forces required to leave the country by the end of the year, according to a bilateral security pact.

Maliki himself warned last month that Iraq was lacking when it comes to protecting its borders, but insisted that none of its neighbours would invade.

And although Iraqi officials insist their own forces are capable of maintaining domestic security, attacks still hit. Last week, a suicide car bomb at a police station south of Baghdad killed 24 people and wounded 72 others.

While violence is down from its peak in 2006 and 2007, official figures showed 211 people still died in attacks last month.



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