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  • Shi'I, Christian Clerics Say People United, No Sectarian Sedition In

    SHI'I, CHRISTIAN CLERICS SAY PEOPLE UNITED, NO SECTARIAN SEDITION IN IRAQ

    Al-Arabiya TV
    July 17 2008
    United Arab Emirates

    Dubai Al-Arabiya Television in Arabic at 0618 gmt on 17 July carries
    a video report by Faris al-Mahdawi on the "diminishing" sectarian
    violence in Iraq. The report displays the Iraqi people as being
    "unified in their stance to quell violence and sectarianism," even
    after the large number of bombings that killed and wounded several
    people as well as causing damage to religious sites all over Iraq,
    as the report says.

    Al-Mahdawi reports that the violence began after the bombing of
    the tombs of Shi'i Al-Askari Imams in Samara in 2006. Al-Fadilah
    Party member Sabah al-Sa'di comments on the repercussions of the
    attack, which fomented sectarian violence in Iraq, praising the
    role of religious leaders in quelling the violence. Al-Sa'di says:
    "The positions of the great religious authorities and the political
    authorities, who took it upon themselves to contain the situation,
    were able to contain this situation." Deputy Khayrallah al-Basri
    comments on the violence saying: "There is no hostility among the
    Iraqi people. Hostility among Iraqis is an illusion that was made
    by politicians, and sanctioned by some extremist religious men from
    both sides."

    Al-Mahdawi notes that the violence began to spread outside the
    sphere of Muslims to include other religions, the fact that forced
    these people to flee Iraq even before the US invasion in fear of
    abduction or death. Archbishop Emanuel Dabaghyan, head of the Armenian
    Catholic church in Iraq, comments on the current situation, saying:
    "We shunned each other, but we were always brothers, we are brothers,
    and we must remain brothers because this land is ours, and we lived
    in this land for centuries. How can anyone forget these years of
    peaceful coexistence?"

    Al-Mahdawi concludes by saying that the Iraqis have proven the "depth
    of their unity after calls by politicians and religious men to curb
    the sectarian sedition." Al-Mahdawi believes that the incidents in
    Samara were "a failed attempt at inciting civil war plotted for by
    the architects of struggle among religions."

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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