Tag: Tariq al-Hashemi

  • Turkey should respect Tariq al-Hashemi ruling

    Turkey should respect Tariq al-Hashemi ruling

    Iraq’s recent conviction of fugitive vice president Tariq al-Hashemi and the subsequent political ramifications of the ruling warrant a careful analysis, especially one which takes the Iraqi Constitution into consideration.

    Tariq al Hashemi 008

    Hashemi is a Sunni Arab who was selected for the post based on the guidelines of the Iraqi Constitution. He was charged with numerous crimes during his time in office, including plotting against Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki. He fled the country after charges of running a terrorist network were leveled against him in December 2011, and he is currently living in Turkey. Hashemi was always regarded as a politician who mostly viewed issues through a sectarian prism rather than taking a national approach to politics.

    Turkey’s decision to allow Hashemi to stay in the country and the policies adopted by Ankara toward Iraq’s internal issues have raised many questions about Turkey’s role in the case. And recent developments in the region paved the way for a new alliance between Turkey and anti-democratic regimes like Saudi Arabia and Qatar. This has led to a situation in which Turkey has totally ignored the democratic system of Iraq and has begun to support one religious minority in the country.

    Iraq and Turkey used to enjoy extensive cooperation on security, but Ankara’s undemocratic approach to Iraq’s internal issues has created a chasm between the two countries.

    The semi-autonomous Kurdistan Regional Government in Iraq and KRG President Massoud Barzani should also play a more effective role in the issue, although Barzani seems to have adopted a conservative approach.

    Meanwhile, Turkish Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu’s surprise and uncoordinated visit to Kirkuk and the sporadic military attacks on Iraq’s Kurdish regions have irritated Baghdad and increased tension between the two countries.

    Turkey is expected to respect the Hashemi ruling since it was issued by the judicial branch of Iraq’s democratic system of governance. Otherwise, Ankara’s insistence on supporting Iraqi dissidents and fugitives will certainly worsen relations between the two influential countries.

    Seyyed Asadollah Athari is a senior research fellow at the Institute for Middle East Strategic Studies in Tehran and an expert on Turkey.

    MS/HG

    END

    MNA

    via Turkey should respect Tariq al-Hashemi ruling – Tehran Times.

  • Ankara says Iraqi vice president can come any time to Turkey: report

    Ankara says Iraqi vice president can come any time to Turkey: report

    Ankara says Iraqi vice president can come any time to Turkey: report

    Friday, 23 December 2011

    Baghdad police operations’ issued an arrest warrant against Tariq al-Hashemi, the Iraqi vice president, for his alleged role over the November bombing of parliament. (File Photo)

    Baghdad police operations’ issued an arrest warrant against Tariq al-Hashemi, the Iraqi vice president, for his alleged role over the November bombing of parliament. (File Photo)

    Turkish diplomats said that the Iraqi Vice President Tariq al-Hashemi can come any time to Turkey, a newspaper reported on Thursday.

    The diplomats who wanted to remain anonymous told the Turkey-based newspaper, Today’s Zaman, that “Hashemi, in his capacity as Iraqi vice president, could come to Turkey any time he desires.”

    Officials in Turkey expressed concern over the latest development in Iraq, fearing that the country could descend into chaos as was seein in 2003 after the ouster of Saddam Hussein by the United States.

    Hashemi who has been accused of the November bombing of the Iraqi parliament, and has had an arrest warrant issued against him, is currently in the country’s autonomous region of Kurdistan, and under the protection of the Kurdish leaders.

    Iraqi President, Jalal al-Talabani, who is a Kurd, said that the arrest warrant spoiled Iraqis’ celebration of U.S. troops leaving the country.

    Meanwhile, on Tuesday, Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki threatened to resign if the parliament did not give a vote of no-confidence against Iraq’s deputy prime minister, Saleh al-Mutlak, and urged the semi-autonomous region of Kurdistan to turn over Hashemi to the government.

    Mutlak, who described the country’s prime minster as a “dictator,” said his secular, Sunni-backed political block is being increasingly marginalized by Maliki, in an interview with Al Arabiya TV.

    On Thursday, a series of coordinated bombings rocked the Iraqi capital, killing at least 67 people and injuring as many as 185 others in the worst violence in Iraq for months and shortly after the U.S. troops’ withdrawal from the conflict-ridden country.

    via Ankara says Iraqi vice president can come any time to Turkey: report.