Thursday, March 22, 2007

 

Government in talks with Sunni insurgents to lay down arms

Security, Politics, Insurgency
(AP) - The government has been indirectly talking to several Sunni insurgent groups over the past three months in a bid to persuade them to lay down their arms and join the political process, a senior government official said Thursday. Saad Yousif al-Muttalibi of the Ministry of National Dialogue and Reconciliation said the talks were initiated at the request of the insurgents and have been taking place inside and outside Iraq.
He refused to identify the groups, but said they did not include al-Qaida in Iraq or Saddam Hussein loyalists. Members of the former president's outlawed Baath party took part, he added. Speaking to The Associated Press in a telephone interview, al-Muttalibi said the negotiations were deadlocked over the insurgent groups' insistence that they would lay down their arms only when a timetable for the withdrawal of U.S.-led coalition troops in Iraq is announced.
The government's response was that such a move could only be taken when security is restored. Future rounds of negotiations are planned, he said, but did not elaborate. Al-Muttalibi's comments came one day after he expressed optimism in an interview with the British Broadcasting Corp. that Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki's government was making progress in talks with insurgent groups, predicting some factions might be close to laying down their arms. "One of the aims is to join with them in the fight against al-Qaida (in Iraq)," he told the BBC.

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