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Hashemi says ball in Maliki’s court after Iraqiya bloc’s return
Iraq's Vice President Tareq al-Hashemi speaks at a news conference in in Arbil, about 350 km (220 miles) north of Baghdad, December 20, 2011. (REUTERS/Stringer)
Iraq's Vice President Tareq al-Hashemi speaks at a news conference in in Arbil, about 350 km (220 miles) north of Baghdad, December 20, 2011. (REUTERS/Stringer)

IRBIL, Iraq: The Iraqiya bloc sent a “positive signal” by ending its parliament boycott, and its eventual return to the Cabinet depends on how Iraq’s premier responds, the country’s fugitive vice president told AFP.

Tareq al-Hashemi, a Sunni, is accused of financing a death squad to target policemen, judges and officials and has been hiding out in Iraq’s Kurdistan region since December.

The accusations against Hashemi, which he has strongly denied, came amid a wider conflict between the Sunni-backed Iraqiya bloc, of which he is a member, and the Shiite-led Cabinet.

Iraqiya began a boycott of parliament and the Cabinet in December to protest what it charged was Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki’s centralization of power, and has since called for Maliki to respect a power-sharing deal or quit.

Iraqiya’s MPs returned to parliament Tuesday, somewhat easing the crisis, but the bloc has not yet decided to return its ministers to the Cabinet.

“The decision was made unanimously and I participated in that even though I am in Kurdistan,” Hashemi said of Iraqiya’s return to parliament, in an interview this week at his residence in Irbil, the capital of Kurdistan.

Asked about the end of Iraqiya’s Cabinet boycott, he said: “This depends on Maliki and State of Law (Maliki’s list),” and “how they will react to this positive signal from the Iraqiya list.”

“We are not a part of the crisis; we are a part of the solution, and we are looking to put an urgent end ... to the current crisis.”

Hashemi also discussed his defense in the case against him and his associates, but did not directly address the charges themselves. “It is my right to defend my reputation and honor and defend the innocence of my guards and employees,” he said.

Hashemi’s guards, including 16 the Interior Ministry claimed were training for assassinations with silenced rifles and pistols, and some members of his office staff, have been detained in recent weeks.

The vice president said that if he could not obtain justice from the Iraqi judiciary, “it is my right to go to the international judiciary.”

Hashemi added that he continued to enjoy support from Kurdish President Massoud Barzani and Iraqi President Jalal Talabani, also a Kurd, and dismissed as “psychological warfare” rumors he could be turned over to the central government.

“I am here in Kurdistan and I am not worried about my future,” he said. “I am among my family and my loved ones in Kurdistan, but if Kurdistan becomes closed to Tareq al-Hashemi, God’s land is vast.”

Asked about comments by Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan that drew a furious response from Baghdad, Hashemi termed the Turkish premier’s remarks “legitimate.”

Erdogan said on Jan. 24 that “Maliki should know that: if you start a conflict in Iraq in the form of sectarian clashes, it will be impossible for us to remain silent.”

“I reject foreign interference, even from neighboring countries, in Iraqi affairs,” Hashemi said. But, Erdogan’s remarks were “legitimate, because what happened in Iraq will affect sooner or later in the Turkish internal affairs.”

Separately, militants bombed an Asiacell equipment building near the Iraqi city of Mosul, damaging the mobile phone operator’s network and knocking out service in some northern areas, police and officials said Friday.

The attackers, some of whom wore military uniforms, held guns to the heads of security guards late Thursday and planted four large explosives in the building, which houses routing and switching equipment, Asiacell chief executive Diar Ahmed said.

“One of them exploded and caused severe damage to the network. The other three were dismantled,” Ahmad said. No one was hurt in the blast, he added.

Ahmad said the center, located in a normally safe area in a Mosul free-trade zone, just 60-70 meters from a police station, serves Nineveh province and parts of neighboring Dahuk. Work crews hoped to restore service later on Friday, he added. “It’s a partial outage in [Nineveh province but it’s the majority to be honest,” he said.

Asiacell is a unit of Qatar Telecom.

Abdul-Rahim al-Shimmari, head of the Nineveh provincial council’s security committee, said the Asiacell building had been hit by four attackers who threatened the guards with guns and bound them before planting explosives which damaged communications equipment and a tower.

A version of this article appeared in the print edition of The Daily Star on February 04, 2012, on page 9.
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