Grand
Ayatollah Ali al-Sistani, the spiritual leader of Iraqi Shias, warned on Thursday that Iraq
could face “partition” and other dire consequences if real reform is not
carried out.
“Today,
if true reform is not realized by fighting corruption without mercy and
realizing social justice on different levels, it is expected that circumstances
will become worst that before, Sistani said in a written statement. “(Iraq)
could be dragged to… partition and the like, God forbid.” (AFP, 20 August)
Without
rampant corruption, especially in the security forces, and misuse of power by
top officials, “the Daesh terrorist organization would not have been able to
control a large part of the territory of Iraq,” Sistani added, using an Arabic
acronym for ISIL.
Many
Iraqi politicians, Sistani said, “did not take the overall interests of the
Iraqi people into consideration, and were instead concerned with their personal
interests, and factional, sectarian and ethnic concerns.” (AFP, 20 August)
Even with
popular support and Grand Ayatollah Sistani’s backing, the entrenched nature of
corruption and the fact parties across the political spectrum benefit from it
make changes recently proposed by Prime Minister Abadi extremely difficult, AFP
said.
File
photo: Grand Ayatollah Ali al-Sistani, the spiritual leader of Iraqi Shias
(AFP)
From Tehran, ISCI President Hakim praised Sistani's fatwa and the creation of PMF which he states was helped by Iran, specifically identifying IRGC-QF Commander Soleimani for his role in "Iraq's recovery."
ReplyDeletehttp://fa.abna24.com/service/sixth-conference/archive/2015/08/18/691707/story.html
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I would point out that many of Abadi's reforms, while praiseworthy for what they seek to achieve, are in method extralegal. This presents constitutional problems or obstacles, on their own. Here's a good rundown:
"Legality and Constitutionality Questions in Iraq’s Reform Push" by Reidar Visser
https://gulfanalysis.wordpress.com/2015/08/18/the-legality-and-constitutionality-of-iraqs-reform-push/