CAIRO,
April 4 (IslamOnline.net) - Scores of Iraqi opposition Islamists
flocked back home to join hands in defending Iraq against the
Anglo-American aggression that was unleashed on March 20, a leading
figure of the main Iraqi Sunni opposition group told IslamOnline.net
Friday, April 4.
"Many
Iraqis, including non-Islamists, went back home from Jordan, Syria and
Britain to defend the country," Iyad Al-Samara'y, the Iraqi
Islamic Party politburo chief, said in a telephone interview with
IslamOnline.net from London.
"Despite
its firm opposition to the Iraqi regime, the party declared from the
very beginning it stood against the U.S.-led aggression against our
land and people," Samra'y stressed.
He
called on all Iraqis as well as on Muslims in the world to act in
unison against "the aggressors."
"What
is happening now in Iraq is a real resistance to invading aggressors
not only by the regime, but also by all people including migrants who
decided to return to defend Iraq," Samra'y remarked.
The
Iraqi Islamic Party was formed in 1961 to be one of the oldest parties
in the country and it maintains good relations with the Islamic Shiite
parties.
Unconfirmed
reports suggested earlier that Mohammad Ahmed el-Rashid and Abdul
Karim Zidan, two of the most prominent leaders of Iraq's Muslim
Brotherhood, had returned to the country Iraq.
According
to some Islamic sources, the Jordanian Muslim Brotherhood group played
a key role to improve ties between the Iraqi regime and the Muslim
Brotherhood group in Iraq from conflict to joint struggle.
This
helped crystallizing the position of the Iraqi Shiite groups which
oppose the U.S.-led invasion and collaboration with the enemy.
Syria
and Jordan also played a pivotal role in this respect, to the anger of
the United States which thought Shiite and Sunni group would revolt
against the regime with the beginning of war.
"Gravely"
Harmful
Samara'y
expressed conviction that the Anglo-American war would gravely harm
Iraq contrary to claims touted by U.S. President George W. Bush and
British Prime Minister Tony Blair that it would create a "free
and democratic" Iraq.
"Fighting
the aggressive infidels is an individual duty on every Muslim
regardless of his opposition to the ruling regime," he asserted,
urging all Arab and Islamic regimes to politically support Iraq
against a " brutal aggression"
The
Iraqi Islamic Party had earlier quit the so-called follow-up committee
formed by the Iraqi opposition groups in the wake of their conference
in London to probe post-Saddam Iraq.
"We
asked for reviewing all of the previous positions in light of the
supreme interests of Iraq, and declined to join any activities emerged
out of the conference or of the follow-up committee" Samara'y
said.