Kuwait Times

For Iran, Iraq unrest is plot to undo ties

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TEHRAN: Since they erupted a week ago, deadly protests in Iraq have been tracked closely in Iran where they are seen as a plot to undermine ties between the neighbors. Tehran has close but complicate­d relations with Baghdad, holding significan­t clout among its dominant Shiite political groups. The two countries fought a devastatin­g war from 1980 to 1988 and Iran’s influence in Iraq grew after the US-led invasion

toppled longtime dictator Saddam Hussein in 2003.

Clashes that broke out in Iraq last week between protesters and security forces have claimed more than 100 lives, most of them demonstrat­ors struck by bullets. The rallies began yesterday with calls to reduce corruption and unemployme­nt but have spiralled into demands for the fall of the government and overhaul of the political system. The headquarte­rs of some proIranian political parties have been among those attacked during the violence, AFP correspond­ents in Iraq reported.

Chants of “Free Iraq, Iran out” have also been heard in social media videos said to be of the protests. A

string of Iranian officials have come out since yesterday with statements accusing their country’s arch-foes of being behind the unrest. “Enemies seek to sow discord but they’ve failed & their conspiracy won’t be effective,” supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei said, quoted on his office’s Twitter account. “Iran and #Iraq are two nations whose hearts & souls are tied together... This bond will grow stronger day by day.”

State news agency IRNA said the supreme leader was reacting to the violence in Iraq. The news agency also weighed in with its own commentary, accusing the US, Saudi Arabia and Israel of fomenting the Iraq protests in order to spoil Iran’s ties with Iraq and Syria. “Unpreceden­ted protests in Iraqi cities... show that some forces inside and outside of the region are seriously concerned about the closeness and cooperatio­n” of Baghdad, Damascus and Tehran, it said.

Iran’s government spokesman Ali Rabiei opened his weekly news conference on Monday with a statement on the Iraqi crisis. He said there “are ill-wishers who seek to sabotage any opening between us and those neighbors who’ve had difference­s of opinions in recent years”. The spokesman called on “the great people of Iraq to show more self-restraint and seek democratic and legal means to achieve their demands”. “As always, the Islamic Republic of Iran expresses its readiness to stand beside Iraqi brothers and sisters and help them,” he said. “No form of propaganda can sever the people of Iran and Iraq.”

Iran has accused its foes of deliberate­ly stirring trouble in Iraq at a time when vast numbers of pilgrims are heading there for one of the world’s largest religious events. A top military adviser to Khamenei said those behind the unrest would be unable to deter the faithful, however. “They want to scare people into not going to Arbaeen, but even if it rains arrows and stones, Hussein’s lovers will not be afraid,” Major General Yahya Rahim Safavi was quoted as saying by Tasnim news agency.

Arbaeen marks the end of the 40-day mourning period for the seventh-century killing of Imam Hussein by the forces of the caliph Yazid. Last week, Iran urged citizens who were planning to head to Iraq to delay their travel for the pilgrimage that culminates on Oct 17. IRNA said the fact that the “provocatio­ns” came ahead of Arbaeen showed Iran’s enemies were “scared”.

Judiciary chief Ebrahim Raisi said those responsibl­e for the unrest in Iraq aimed to undermine Arbaeen. “The seditionis­ts intend to undermine and sap enthusiasm for this great event,” he said, quoted by state television’s website. “The vigilant people of Iraq exposed this sedition. But everyone must be careful. The seditionis­ts are seeking new tricks at any moment to overshadow the Arbaeen ceremony and to undermine it.” The hardline Keyhan newspaper said “evidence” pointed to the Americans, Saudis and Israelis being involved. A columnist in the reformist Shargh daily also suggested the Americans, Israelis and Saudis might be the “hidden hands” behind the Iraq protests.—

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