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Iraq
Iraq to shut MKO camp in two months
2009-01-24
Iraq will close within two months a camp where opposition Iranian rebels have been living in exile for two decades, a senior Iraqi security official said on Friday.

"Over 3,000 inhabitants of Camp Ashraf have to leave Iraq and the camp will be part of history within two months," Iraqi National Security Adviser Muwaffaq Al Rubaie told a news conference with Saeed Jalili, secretary-general of Iran's National Security Council.

"Iran's security cannot be threatened by any factor inside Iraq. Iran's security is our own security."

Iraq has said in the past it plans to close the camp eventually, but the two month deadline appears to be new and would leave little time to find a place for its inhabitants.
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Iraq
Ayatollah Ali Al Sistani behind Iraqi demand for withdrawal timetable
2008-07-12
A strong political debate is being waged in Baghdad on the role the Shiite supreme religious authority in Najaf, Grand Ayatollah Ali Al Sistani, played in negotiations between Iraq and the US on a memorandum of security.

Al Sistani insisted on including a timetable for the withdrawal of American forces.

This intervention by Al Sistani has brought to the fore the differences between the major political parties in the Iraqi government.

The Supreme Islamic Iraqi Council led by Abdul Aziz Al Hakim has accepted Al Sistani's demand for a definite timetable for the withdrawal of US forces in Iraq. But the position of the mainly Sunni Iraqi Accord Front and the Kurdish bloc was that the subject of withdrawals was not to be raised in the current negotiations, Kurdish political sources told Gulf News.

Mahmoud Othman, leader of the Democratic Patriotic Alliance of Kurdistan, told Gulf News: "The Political Council for National Security, which includes the major political blocs in the country, had agreed not to press for a timetable for the withdrawal of US forces, but it seems the call by Al Sistani is the crucial one to determine the progress of the negotiations with the Americans."

In some Shiite neighbourhoods in Baghdad people have written slogans on walls reading: "Sistani is the national independence hero".

Resentment

Al Sistani's intervention has caused resentment among some political parties and the Kurds. They feel vital political decisions need to be made by political parties and not clergy.

Al Sistani's position was totally opposed to that of the Kurds who support the long-term presence of the American military.

A spokesman for Al Sistani said, however, he did not interfere with the details of the agreement such as a specific timetable. All he did was to call on the Iraqi Government to commit itself to the principle of sovereignty and national independence in any agreement with the Americans, the leader of the Shiite Islamic Council, Hamid Muala Al Saedi, told Gulf News.

Sources in Najaf told Gulf News Al Sistani told national security advisor Muwaffaq Al Rubaie when the latter visited him days ago that Prime Minister Nouri Al Maliki must remember that the national independence of Iraq should be non-negotiable in Iraqi-US talks.

But Iraqi political parties opposed to Iranian influence in Iraq were angered at Al Sistani's attempt to influence the Government. They accused Iran of interfering in the Iraqi-US talks through Al Sistani.

Political researcher Amjad Hussain told Gulf News Iran has a "dangerous" denominational influence on Shiite religious authorities in Iraq.

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Iraq
17 al-Qaeda Leaders Busted In One Week, 1 Killed
2006-08-13
Iraq has captured 17 Al Qaida leaders over the past week. Officials said the Iraq Army and security forces have arrested 17 senior Al Qaida operatives in central Iraq. They said another Al Qaida commander was killed in a U.S.-Iraqi operation.

"My message to the terrorists and death squads is 'Your ally is failure,'" Iraqi National Security Adviser Muwaffaq Al Rubaie said.

On Thursday, Al Rubaie told a news conference that many of the Al Qaida operatives were captured in an operation to foil insurgency cells in Baghdad. He said 35,000 Iraqi troops have been deployed in the Iraqi capital, Middle East Newsline reported.

Five of the Al Qaida operatives were arrested in Baghdad, Al Rubaie said. The official identified one of the operatives as Dr. Saad, said to have been killed in an operation south of Baghdad. Al Rubaie identified the other Al Qaida operatives as Amir Al Karoghly, deemed a spiritual guide in the Baghdad province. Another operative was identified as Mohammed Ali Al Obeidi, accused of planning dozens of car bombings in which hundreds of Iraqis have been killed.

The operation has been comprised of 22,000 local police and 13,000 members of the national police. Officials said more than 30,000 patrols were conducted. "I would like to kiss every policeman on his forehead and tell him thank you for all what you sacrificed," Al Rubaie said.

Iraq and the United States have launched the second phase of the Baghdad security plan. Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri Al Maliki said forces by the Defense Ministry and Interior Ministry have been participating in the operation.
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Iraq
Senior Qaeda leaders arrested, 35,000 policemen lead Baghdad's security plan
2006-08-11
(KUNA) -- National Security Adviser Muwaffaq Al-Rubaie announced Thursday that Iraqi security forces arrested 17 Qaeda leaders and killed another one in the past few days and said 35,000 Iraqi policemen were successfully involved in the implementation of Baghdad's security plan. In a press conference held here, Al-Rubaie said security forces arrested 17 Qaeda leaders, including five who were detained in Baghdad, and killed another.

“Al-Qaeda member Muhammad Ali Al-Obaidi is accused of killing hundreds of Iraqis in tens of car explosions.”
He showed photographs of the detainees which included a photo of "Dr. Saad" who was killed a few days ago in a raid south of Baghdad, and the photo of Ameer Al-Qaroghly, the Al-Qaeda's religious leader in Al-Yousefiya, Al-Mahmoudiya, Al-Karma, and Al-Doura. He also demonstrated the photo of Al-Qaeda member Muhammad Ali Al-Obaidi who is accused of killing hundreds of Iraqis in tens of car explosions. Al-Rubaie said among the arrested are Wisam Al-Douri, a senior Qaeda member accused of terrorist attacks, and Dhia Abd Olaiwi Al-Rakabi, the first deputy of Qaeda leader Abdullah.

According to Al-Rubaie more than 30,000 patrols were spread since the beginning of Baghdad's security plan, in which 22,000 local police members and 13,000 national police members are participating. He stressed that the government is supporting the Iraqi police forces, saying "I would like to kiss every policeman on his forehead and tell him thank you for all what you sacrificed". "My message to the terrorists and death squads is 'failure is your ally'", he emphasized.
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Iraq
Iraqi Army Rounds Up 70 Suspects
2006-07-09
The Iraqi Army said yesterday it had detained 70 suspected insurgents and freed 10 hostages in an operation launched five days ago in Muqadiyah in Diyala province, northeast of Baghdad. “Iraqi soldiers, supported by multinational forces, have succeeded over the past five days in capturing 70 wanted individuals,” Gen. Rahman Al-Janabi of the Iraq Army’s 5th division told reporters. “The objective is to clean up the area of insurgents.” He also said that 10 hostages held by militants were freed and that “extremist literature inciting sectarian violence” was found in their place of detention.

Diyala province, considered part of Iraq’s agricultural heartland and with an explosive mix of Sunnis and Shiites, is one of the main fault lines in the country’s ongoing sectarian violence. It was also here that Jordanian-born militant Abu Musab Al-Zarqawi was killed in a US airstrike on June 7.

On Friday, the commander of the 5th division, Maj. Gen. Ahmed Al-Awad, said he believed that a former high-level member of the ousted regime, Rasheed Taan, accused of commanding the insurgency in Diyala was hiding in the Muqdadiyah area. Taan, a former chairman of the ruling Baath party’s command in the western Al-Anbar province, is number six on a list of the 41-most wanted former regime loyalists and Islamist militants released by Iraq’s national security adviser Muwaffaq Al-Rubaie on Sunday. He carried a one-million-dollar bounty.

At least 368 prisoners held without charge in US-run detention centers were freed yesterday in the latest such releases under Iraqi Prime Minister Nuri Al-Maliki’s national reconciliation plan. The detainees were released at a bus station in central Baghdad, an AFP correspondent witnessed. Since June 6, when the prime minister first floated his peace plan, nearly 3,000 detainees have been freed from coalition or Iraqi government custody. “Today, 368 prisoners will be released from various detention centers,” a Justice Ministry spokeswoman had told AFP earlier.
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Iraq-Jordan
Chained Saddam Hussein to be handed over to Iraqi police
2004-06-28
A handcuffed and chained Saddam Hussein will be hauled in front of an Iraqi judge within days to hear his arrest warrant, Iraq's national security adviser Muwaffaq Al-Rubaie told CBS television yesterday. "We're going to have control of Saddam Hussein. We're going to have two American military MPs to hand him over to four Iraqi policemen. They will put a chain (on him) and take him to the waiting room," Rubaie told CBS anchorman Dan Rather. "The judge will call his name, Saddam Hussein Majid. And they will bring him in ... open his chain, handcuff and take him to the judge and the judge is going to give him his rights and his defense and he's going to issue an arrest warrant against Saddam Hussein. "They're going to put the handcuffs on him. Take him ... controlled by Iraqi policemen."
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