Maliki refuses to take responsibility for the fall of Mosul
Wed Aug 19 2015
Condemned the former Iraqi Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki on Tuesday, a parliamentary report was blamed with others in the fall of Mosul in the hands of the organization of the Islamic state fighters and called for a referral to eliminate describing the report as of no value.
Maliki wrote on his page on Facebook in the first public comment since the publication of the report on Sunday and sent to the Attorney General on Monday, "I do not value the result that emerged from the parliamentary commission of inquiry about the fall of Mosul dominated by political differences and out of objectivity."
According to the website of the owners that he is in Iran since Friday.
By providing the reasons that led to the loss of Mosul by the Sunni majority, the report could help restore confidence in the Shiite-led government, especially among Sunnis, who marginalized divisive policy pursued by al-Maliki.
The report coincided with a campaign to Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi to reduce dependency sectarian regime in Iraq in further action can help in rebuilding the security apparatus torn corruption and mismanagement but also venturing to happen more divisions.
The Abadi has isolated a third of the cabinet on Sunday. And on Tuesday ordered the abolition of positions advisers in the ministries and limited the number of advisers is Alris and the speaker of parliament to five advisers for each of them.
And come Abadi ambitious plan for reform after protests for weeks in the streets of Baghdad and southern cities to demand better government services and after he called the Shiite cleric Ayatollah Ali al-Sistani to "strike hard" against corruption.
These measures are the biggest step yet taken by Abadi to tighten his grip despite the fact that about a third of the land fell into the hands of the Islamic state and the central government is facing a financial crisis as a result of the collapse of the price of its oil exports.
* Maliki blames Turkey and the Kurds
The parliamentary report claimed that al-Maliki had an inaccurate picture of the danger facing Mosul because he chose involved in corruption leaders and hold them accountable for failure.
And Maliki, who has in the past accused unnamed countries and leaders and political rivals of plotting the fall of the city on Tuesday blamed the leaders of Turkey and the Iraqi Kurds.
He said in a blog post again in his account on Facebook "what happened in Mosul was a conspiracy was planned in Ankara and then the plot moved to Erbil," referring to the capitals of Turkey and the territory of the semi-autonomous Kurdistan in northern Iraq, the troops played a key role in the fight against the Islamic state.
The report criticized the Turkish Consul in Nineveh and its capital Mosul because of alleged links to the Islamic state and the Kurdish peshmerga fighters who were accused of seizing weapons and ammunition abandoned by the army.
Consul were detained after the fall of Mosul, but was released after three months after negotiations.
Turkish officials denied starting from Prime Minister Ahmed Davutoglu categorically support Islamic extremist groups, including the organization of the Islamic state.
The Turkish Foreign Ministry said Maliki's comments were "unacceptable" and that it summoned the Iraqi ambassador in Ankara to protest them.
She said the Turkish Foreign Ministry "is not found in the statements of former Prime Minister Maliki, what can be taken seriously."
She added that the remarks "motivated by his feeling resulting from playing a role in the invasion of the Islamic State of one-third of Iraq and the death of tens of thousands and the displacement of millions of guilt."
Safin said photosensitizer, spokesman for the Kurdistan Regional Government to respect the results of Arbil, the commission of inquiry and accused al-Maliki to transfer the blame away from himself.
He said that the Kurdish president of Iraq's Kurdistan region, Massoud Barzani warned Baghdad that the Mosul facing a grave danger shortly before the crash but Maliki's refusal to help.
And the payment of the collapse of the army in Mosul, Baghdad government to rely on armed Shiite factions - that Iran is funding and help many of them - in the defense of the capital against the Islamic State fighters and restore the lands lost.
And the participation of the armed factions in the ongoing efforts to restore Baghdad's western Anbar province - the Sunni stronghold in Iraq - from the Islamic state could further inflame sectarian tensions there.
It was not clear whether al-Maliki will return from Iran, which helped him during most of his tenure as prime minister for eight years, but Abadi upheld last summer after the fall of Mosul, Iraq's second city in exposing the weaknesses of the system left by the US occupation of Iraq in the period from 2003 to 2011.
And he abolished the post of al-Maliki as vice president last week in the first wave of reforms carried out by al-Abadi, which reduced the number of ministers to 22 through the elimination of some positions and merging with other ministries.
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Wed Aug 19 2015
Condemned the former Iraqi Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki on Tuesday, a parliamentary report was blamed with others in the fall of Mosul in the hands of the organization of the Islamic state fighters and called for a referral to eliminate describing the report as of no value.
Maliki wrote on his page on Facebook in the first public comment since the publication of the report on Sunday and sent to the Attorney General on Monday, "I do not value the result that emerged from the parliamentary commission of inquiry about the fall of Mosul dominated by political differences and out of objectivity."
According to the website of the owners that he is in Iran since Friday.
By providing the reasons that led to the loss of Mosul by the Sunni majority, the report could help restore confidence in the Shiite-led government, especially among Sunnis, who marginalized divisive policy pursued by al-Maliki.
The report coincided with a campaign to Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi to reduce dependency sectarian regime in Iraq in further action can help in rebuilding the security apparatus torn corruption and mismanagement but also venturing to happen more divisions.
The Abadi has isolated a third of the cabinet on Sunday. And on Tuesday ordered the abolition of positions advisers in the ministries and limited the number of advisers is Alris and the speaker of parliament to five advisers for each of them.
And come Abadi ambitious plan for reform after protests for weeks in the streets of Baghdad and southern cities to demand better government services and after he called the Shiite cleric Ayatollah Ali al-Sistani to "strike hard" against corruption.
These measures are the biggest step yet taken by Abadi to tighten his grip despite the fact that about a third of the land fell into the hands of the Islamic state and the central government is facing a financial crisis as a result of the collapse of the price of its oil exports.
* Maliki blames Turkey and the Kurds
The parliamentary report claimed that al-Maliki had an inaccurate picture of the danger facing Mosul because he chose involved in corruption leaders and hold them accountable for failure.
And Maliki, who has in the past accused unnamed countries and leaders and political rivals of plotting the fall of the city on Tuesday blamed the leaders of Turkey and the Iraqi Kurds.
He said in a blog post again in his account on Facebook "what happened in Mosul was a conspiracy was planned in Ankara and then the plot moved to Erbil," referring to the capitals of Turkey and the territory of the semi-autonomous Kurdistan in northern Iraq, the troops played a key role in the fight against the Islamic state.
The report criticized the Turkish Consul in Nineveh and its capital Mosul because of alleged links to the Islamic state and the Kurdish peshmerga fighters who were accused of seizing weapons and ammunition abandoned by the army.
Consul were detained after the fall of Mosul, but was released after three months after negotiations.
Turkish officials denied starting from Prime Minister Ahmed Davutoglu categorically support Islamic extremist groups, including the organization of the Islamic state.
The Turkish Foreign Ministry said Maliki's comments were "unacceptable" and that it summoned the Iraqi ambassador in Ankara to protest them.
She said the Turkish Foreign Ministry "is not found in the statements of former Prime Minister Maliki, what can be taken seriously."
She added that the remarks "motivated by his feeling resulting from playing a role in the invasion of the Islamic State of one-third of Iraq and the death of tens of thousands and the displacement of millions of guilt."
Safin said photosensitizer, spokesman for the Kurdistan Regional Government to respect the results of Arbil, the commission of inquiry and accused al-Maliki to transfer the blame away from himself.
He said that the Kurdish president of Iraq's Kurdistan region, Massoud Barzani warned Baghdad that the Mosul facing a grave danger shortly before the crash but Maliki's refusal to help.
And the payment of the collapse of the army in Mosul, Baghdad government to rely on armed Shiite factions - that Iran is funding and help many of them - in the defense of the capital against the Islamic State fighters and restore the lands lost.
And the participation of the armed factions in the ongoing efforts to restore Baghdad's western Anbar province - the Sunni stronghold in Iraq - from the Islamic state could further inflame sectarian tensions there.
It was not clear whether al-Maliki will return from Iran, which helped him during most of his tenure as prime minister for eight years, but Abadi upheld last summer after the fall of Mosul, Iraq's second city in exposing the weaknesses of the system left by the US occupation of Iraq in the period from 2003 to 2011.
And he abolished the post of al-Maliki as vice president last week in the first wave of reforms carried out by al-Abadi, which reduced the number of ministers to 22 through the elimination of some positions and merging with other ministries.
[You must be registered and logged in to see this link.]
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