Iraq: Help wanted, not interference
Turkey has offered to hold a follow-up meeting to the Baghdad conference in April.

Shortly after talks began on Saturday, two mortar bombs exploded near the conference building. Elsewhere in the capital, a suicide car bomber killed six Iraqi soldiers and wounded about 20 in yet another day of violence.
Al-Maliki said that Iraq needed the support of its neighbours and the world in stopping the sectarian violence between Shia and Sunni Muslims, which he said could spill over to other countries in the region.
“We call on all to take moral responsibility by adopting a strong and clear stance against terrorism in Iraq and co-operate in stamping out forces of terror,” al-Maliki said.
He demanded that “regional or international states refrain from interfering or influencing Iraq’s state of affairs through supporting a certain sect, ethnic group or party”.
“Confronting terrorism means halting any form of financial support and media or religious backing, as well as logistical support and the flow of arms and men who transform themselves into bombs that kill our children, women and elders, and destroy our mosques and churches.”
Security committee
The 16 nations at the long-awaited conference agreed to establish a committee to look at security co-operation, as well as two others focusing on Iraqi refugees and energy issues.
Zebari described the meeting “constructive and positive” and said Iraq and its neighbours had decided to hold another mid-level in Turkey next month.
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“What the conference achieved was exploration and preparation, explorations of the different positions of people attending this conference and preparation for the upcoming conference in Istanbul,” Jasim Azawi, the presenter of Al Jazeera’s Inside Iraq programme, said.
Zalmay Khalilzad, the US ambassador to Iraq, urged Iraq’s neighbours to do more to stop the flow of fighters, weapons and sectarian propaganda contributing to the violence, saying the future of Iraq and the Middle East was the defining issue of the moment.
“No country represented at the table would benefit from a disintegrated Iraq; indeed, all would suffer badly,” he said.
He said he hoped their presence indicated they were “ready to take concrete, constructive actions” to support Baghdad.
Iran urges US withdrawal
Iran’s envoy to to the talks rejected allegations that his country was fomenting violence in Iraq and blamed the fighting on the presence of US forces.
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16 nations were represented at the security conference in Baghdad [AFP] |
Iraq’s security problems were highlighted when mortar rounds exploded just metres away from the foreign ministry where the talks were taking place.