 |
|
If
Sistani formally rejected the U.S. plan, Iraqis would never
support it, his aide said (AFP)
|
KARBALA,
Iraq, January 16 (IslamOnline.net & News Agencies) – In what
could be a major challenge to the U.S. Authority in Iraq, the most
influential Shiite scholar, Grand Ayatollah Ali al-Sistani, threatened
Friday, January 16, protests and a strike if the U.S.-led occupation
authority did not back down from its plan to form an Iraqi government
without direct elections.
"In
the coming days, we are going to see protests and strikes and perhaps
a confrontation with the occupying force if it insists on its colonial
plans and designing the country's politics for its own
interests," said Sheikh Abdel Mahdi al-Karbalai, Sistani's
representative in the Shiite holy city of Karbala, according to Agence
France-Presse (AFP).
"We
tell you to support the Marja's call for general elections. The Marja
will do all in its power to stop those who would throw away the rights
of the Iraqi people and will not give up its cause," he told a
crowd of hundreds.
Karbalai
used the term Marja to refer to the elite group of scholars, headed by
Sistani, to whom Iraq's strong Shiites – so far not adopting
confrontational stance against the occupation - look to for spiritual
guidance.
Karbalai,
like other top aides to Sistani, often delivers the scholar’s
teaching in sermons Friday, the Islamic world's traditional day of
rest.
His
words had added significance as they were delivered at the Shrine of
Hussein, one of Shiite Islam's holiest sites, 110 kilometers (68
miles) south of Baghdad, the burial site of the Muslim prophet
Mohammed's grandson, Hussein.
Sistani
has demanded general elections before Washington returns sovereignty
in less than six months time.
In
the south, in Basra, thousands of Shiites showed their solidarity with
73-year-old Sistani Thursday, demonstrating against the U.S. plans for
erecting a national government without conducting polls.
Bremer
has said there is not enough time to hold elections before a handover
of sovereignty due to lack of electoral registers and polling laws.
On
Thursday, an aide to Sistani told Reuters in Kuwait that if the
scholar formally rejected the U.S. plan, Iraqis would never support
it.
"If
(Sistani) issues a fatwa (edict) all the Iraqi people will go out in
protest marches and demonstrations against the coalition forces,"
Ayatollah Mohammad Baqer al-Mohri said.
Tens
of thousands of Iraqis took
to the streets of the southern city of Basra, in support of
Sistani's demand on Thursday.
And
another top Shiite leader wrote to the U.S. President and British
Prime Minister Tony Blair questioning their sincerity over the
transfer of power to the Iraqis.
Hojat
Al-Islam Ali Abdulhakim Alsafi said the transition plan had more to do
with U.S. elections than Iraqi interests.
Sunni
imams joined forces with Shiites in the speeches of Friday prayers in
Baghdad and other Iraqi areas.
With
the announcement in November of the occupation’s decision to
establish an independent Iraq by July 1 without holding elections,
Sistani has dug in his heels.
Last
Sunday, he appeared to slam the door shut on compromise, telling a
delegation from the handpicked U.S.-led Governing Council that there
was no good reason not to hold polls to choose the nation's next
leaders.
He
insisted elections could be held in the coming months.
Since
then, Bremer's team and the Council have looked at ways to expand
their proposed regional caucus system - under a November 15 agreement
- for selecting the transitional government.
But
the two sides' relations have never been more tense.
U.N.
Mission
Sistani’s
threat came as an Iraqi official delegation headed to the United
Nations Friday for talks on the country's future.
The
delegation includes president of U.S.-appointed Iraqi Governing
Council (IGC) Adnan Pachachi and Foreign Minister Hoshiar Zibari.
U.N.
Secretary General Kofi Annan will meet with Pachachi and U.S. civil
administrator Paul Bremer Monday, January 19, for talks on the U.N.'s
return to the country, Zibari was quoted by Agence France-Presse (AFP)
as saying.
"We
are going to hear what the United Nations has to say more than
anything else because the invitation is coming from them," Zebari
said, shortly before departure from a U.S. military facility at
Baghdad's international airport.
“The
starting point in my opinion is the return of the United Nations to
Iraq and the reopening of its office," he said.
Annan
pulled non-Iraqi U.N. staff out of the country after attacks on aid
agencies, including a bombing which killed the senior U.N. official in
Iraq, Sergio Vieira de Mello, and 21 others at the world body's
Baghdad headquarters in August.
Washington,
which went to invade Iraq without the backing of most of the Security
Council, has for months resisted a wider U.N. role in post-invasion
Iraq.
But
it is now trying to persuade the United Nations to return to Iraq to
in the hope that this will persuade Iraqis to back a widely-rejected
power transferred plan.
More
Deaths
The
situation on the ground is also dented with tension, as three
people were killed and two others wounded late Thursday when a
university bus carrying students struck an explosive device near
Tikrit.
The
U.S. military said Friday that three Iraqi civilians were injured when
resistance fighters fired rocket-propelled grenades at a U.S. troops
in the flashpoint town of Fallujah earlier this week.
Police
in the northern town of Mosul said two officer were injured Thursday
in the latest attacks on law enforcers in the city.
A
plane carrying Georgia's Defense Minister David Tevzadze was shot at
as it took off from Baghdad's airport to return to the Caucasus
country overnight, but no one was hurt in the attack, officials said
Friday.
“The
plane made a maneuver and coalition helicopters opened return
fire," Koba Kobaladze, Georgia's national guard chief traveling
with the minister, told reporters upon returning to Tbilisi.
Tevzadze
flew to Iraq for one day to inspect Georgian soldiers who are serving
as part of the US-led peacekeeping force there.
Georgia
sent 70 elite troops, doctors and mine-clearing experts to Iraq in
August. They are due to return in February, to be replaced by 200
troops who will include special forces.
Anti-American
sentiments are rising among ordinary Iraqis, as may call for an end to
occupation and return of the situation to normal in the oil-rich
country.
Hundreds
of people took
to the streets of the southern city of Amara on January 11, a day
after six Iraqis were killed when British troops and Iraqi police
opened fire on a job rally.