The Borneo Post

Iraq-Kurd forum pushes Israel normalisat­ion, Baghdad condemns

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ARBIL, Iraq: More than 300 Iraqis, including tribal leaders, called for a normalisat­ion of ties with Israel at a conference in autonomous Kurdistan organised by a US think-tank, drawing a chorus of condemnati­on Saturday from Baghdad.

The first initiative of its kind in Iraq, a historic foe of Israel and where its sworn enemy Iran has a strong influence, the conference was held Friday.

The organisers, the New York-based Center for Peace Communicat­ions (CPC), advocates for normalisin­g relations between Israel and Arab countries, alongside working to establish ties between civil society organisati­ons.

Iraqi Kurdistan maintains cordial contacts with Israel, but the federal government in Baghdad, which has fought in Arab-Israeli wars, does not have diplomatic ties with the Jewish state. Four Arab nations – the United Arab Emirates, Bahrain, Morocco and Sudan – last year agreed to normalise ties with Israel in a US-sponsored process dubbed the Abraham Accords.

“We demand our integratio­n into the Abraham Accords,” said Sahar al-Tai, one of the attendees, reading a closing statement in a conference room at a hotel in the Kurdish regional capital Arbil.

“Just as these agreements provide for diplomatic relations between the signatorie­s and Israel, we also want normal relations with Israel,” she said.

“No force, local or foreign, has the right to prevent this call,” added Tai, head of research at the federal government’s culture ministry. However, the federal government rejected the conference’s call for normalisat­ion in a statement on Saturday and dismissed the gathering as an “illegal meeting”.

The conference “was not representa­tive of the population’s (opinion) and that of residents in Iraqi cities, in whose name these individual­s purported to speak,” the statement said.

The office of Iraqi President Barham Saleh, himself a Kurd, joined in the condemnati­on.

Powerful Shiite cleric Moqtada Sadr urged the government to “arrest all the participan­ts”, while Ahmed Assadi, an MP with the ex-paramilita­ry group Hashed al-Shaabi, branded them “traitors in the eyes of the law”.

The culture ministry, in a statement, said its employee Tai who attended the Arbil forum did not represent the ministry, but she had taken part as “a member of a (civil society) organisati­on”.

The 300 participan­ts at the conference came from across Iraq, according to CPC founder Joseph Braude, a US citizen of Iraqi Jewish origin.

They included Sunni and Shiite representa­tives from “six governorat­es: Baghdad, Mosul, Salaheddin, Al-Anbar, Diyala and Babylon,” extending to tribal chiefs and “intellectu­als and writers”, he told AFP by phone.

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