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Iraq
Pro-US Sunni sheik pays a visit to Sadr City
2007-05-23
A pro-US Sunni tribal leader made a rare visit to the Iraqi capital's Shiite bastion of Sadr City on Tuesday in a bid for national reconciliation. Sheikh Hamid al-Hayis, the armed wing chief of an alliance of Sunni tribes fighting Al-Qaeda alongside US forces in Anbar province of western Iraq, visited supporters of hard-line Shiite cleric Moqtada al-Sadr. "This meeting is a message to Iraqi politicians to get rid of their differences and to seek real reconciliation," Hayis said. "We are trying to pressure [the government] to make political changes for the sake of the Iraqi people who are drowning in the blood of their sons," he added.

The Anbar tribes are hoping to turn their alliance into a national political movement and are fierce rivals to the main Sunni political party, the Iraqi Islamic Party. Sadr's movement, meanwhile, has withdrawn from the government.

Sadr, who has been hiding behind Dinnerjacket's petticoats not been seen in months, was represented by three MPs from his 30-strong parliamentary bloc, a senior leader in his political office, and the heads of major families living in the neighborhood. "This visit shows that Iraqi tribes are standing side by side and they are the nail in the coffin of the abhorrent sectarianism which has split our country," said Shiite Sheikh Malik Sewadi al-Mohammadawi.

The head of one of Sadr City's most influential tribes, Mohammadawi blamed the country's sectarian strife on "occupation forces and foreign [Sunni religious extremists]." Sunni insurgents, once supported by the Anbar tribes, continue to stage dramatic bombing attacks against Shiite civilians while militias, including Sadr's Mehdi Army, exact their revenge on Sunnis. In recent weeks, however, Sadr's movement has made moves to reach out to the Sunni community and build on its nationalist, rather than just Shiite, credentials.

Participants at Tuesday's meeting called for improved national security services, for holding internationally monitored provincial council elections, and for "calling any killer of Iraqis a terrorist who has to be fought."

The participants said they hoped to arrange future meetings involving Sadr himself.

"Abu Risha said he would visit Sadr soon," said Abdel-Mehdi al-Muteiri of Sadr's office, referring to Abdel-Sattar Baziyya of the Abu Risha tribe, the leader of the Anbar Awakening coalition. "There will be a meeting soon in the holy city of Najaf. The Sayyed [Sadr] liked and welcomed the idea of the visit," he added.
This sounds promising but I'd like to see just how many dumptrucks full of dollars changed hands...
Posted by:Seafarious

#2  I son't think you're harsh, I think you're right. Watching the Sunnis swank around Sadr City...just doesn't seem right.
Posted by: Seafarious   2007-05-23 11:40  

#1  I know I'm sort of harsh about the whole thing but I still prefer Sunni submission to Sunni cooperation. Real nifty and leverage-y now, nearly certain to result in more serious sectarian nonsense the instant the foreigners are routed. And to punk on the article a bit, Mookie has made ostentatious if dubious appeals across sectarian lines (anti-Coalition in tone) for a long long time, at least as far back as First Fallujah (spring '04).
Posted by: Verlaine   2007-05-23 01:58  

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