The National - News

Al Kadhimi backs calls for Syria’s return to Arab League

- Mina Aldroubi

Iraq said it supported efforts to restore Syria’s membership of the Arab League, 10 years after it was expelled for a crackdown on protesters that escalated into a civil war.

Iraqi Prime Minister Mustafa Al Kadhimi on Saturday received Arab League Secretary General Ahmed Aboul Gheit, who is on a visit to Baghdad.

They discussed Syria and other regional issues such as the war in Yemen and Lebanon’s economic crisis.

The prime minister’s office said Iraq backed “initiative­s to end the conflict in Yemen and for Lebanon to overcome its difficult circumstan­ces, as well as Syria’s return to the Arab League”.

“Iraq stands by the means of internal dialogue to resolve the war,” it said.

Iraq is one of several countries in the region that did not cut ties with Syrian President Bashar Al Assad’s government after 2011.

Syria was expelled from the Arab League that year.

At the time, Lebanon and Yemen voted against the league’s decision and Iraq abstained.

A decade after the start of the war, little hope remains for Syria’s peace process. Talks brokered by the UN, Russia and Turkey have yielded little tangible benefit.

Several Arab states have now backed calls to re-admit Syria to the league as a means for opening up a regional track to the peace process.

But critics said that could be seen as a political boost for Mr Al Assad’s isolated regime.

Mr Al Kadhimi said an effective presence of the Arab League was important for the region. Iraq, he said, was looking forward to the convening of the next Arab summit.

“The Arab League has an important role to play in promoting constructi­ve rapprochem­ent, overcoming difference­s and consolidat­ing efforts between active regional states that are historical­ly linked,” he said.

Founded in 1945, the Arab League has been criticised for ineffectiv­eness during regional disputes and crises.

“The Arab League is passing through a critical stage due to the lack of funding and the difficult conditions that some Arab countries are going through,” Mr Aboul Gheit said.

He affirmed the league’s support for Iraq and praised the government’s recent initiative­s to engage with the region.

In the past two weeks, the Iraqi prime minister has led a high-level delegation to Saudi Arabia and the UAE.

Mr Al Kadhimi is leading a campaign to increase trade and economic co-operation with neighbours in an effort to revive the Iraqi economy.

Saudi Arabia and the UAE announced a $3 billion investment each in a joint fund with Iraq to boost the private sector.

Mr Aboul Gheit also met Iraqi Foreign Minister Fuad Hussein, who said Syria’s instabilit­y harmed Iraq’s security.

“The unstable situation in Syria is affecting us,” Mr Hussain said during a joint press conference with Mr Aboul Gheit.

In recent weeks, Sheikh Abdullah bin Zayed, Minister of Foreign Affairs and Internatio­nal Co-operation, called for Syria to be readmitted to the league.

The UAE reopened its embassy in Damascus in 2018 in a sign of thawing relations between the Syrian government and the Arab world after years of diplomatic isolation.

We are passing through a critical stage due to the lack of funding and the difficult conditions that some Arab countries face AHMED ABOUL GHEIT Secretary General, the Arab League

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