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EDITOR IN CHIEF- ABDULLAH BIN SALIM AL SHUEILI

Iraq’s top cleric hints at renewed opposition to Maliki’s return

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BAGHDAD: Iraq’s powerful cleric suggested on Friday that he had not abandoned his opposition to ex-prime minister Nuri al Maliki, who is bidding to return to power in elections on May 12.


Making a rare intervention in politics, Grand Ayatollah Ali al Sistani used his weekly sermon to tell Iraqis they should “avoid falling into the trap of those... who are corrupt and those who have failed, whether they have been tried or not”.


Sistani, whose opinion is sacrosanct for millions in Iraq’s majority and beyond, said he was keeping an “equal distance” from all candidates and did not identify any of them by name in his sermon, read by one of his envoys, Sheikh Abdulmehdi al Karbalai, and broadcast on television.


But the reference to Maliki was clear from his mention of the collapse of security forces in the face of IS militants in 2014, when Maliki was in power.


Sistani successfully blocked Maliki from taking the premiership after winning the 2014 election, paving the way for the appointment of the current prime minister, Haider al Abadi.


“Past electoral experiments were marked by failures, many of those who were elected or appointed to high positions in the government abused their power and took part in spreading corruption and squandering public money,” Sistani also said.


Abadi successfully led the campaign to defeat IS, last year recapturing the city of Mosul, their main stronghold in northern Iraq, with the backing of a US-led coalition.


The May 12 election is shaping up as a three-way contest between Abadi, Maliki and Hadi al Amiri, a former transportation minister who bolstered his clout during the war on IS as the commander of paramilitary forces aligned with Abadi’s government.


Abadi was quick to welcome Sistani’s sermon, tweeting his “total support for the instructions given by the Supreme Religious Reference at Friday prayers.”


In a veiled reference to Maliki, Abadi added: “We note in particular (Sistani’s) call for the widest participation in the election and making the correct choice after reviewing the past record of candidates, mainly those who held official positions.” — Reuters


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