Monday, April 25, 2005

Iraqi President Rules Out Islamic Regime in Iraq

Zeenews.com:
An Islamic regime will not be allowed in Iraq but the country's predominantly Muslim identity will be respected, Iraqi President Jalal Talabani said in an interview published today by a Turkish newspaper.

"We the Kurds will never accept the establishment of an Islamic regime in Iraq," Talabani, a senior politician from Iraq's Kurdish minority, told the daily 'Sabah'.

Asked whether he would advocate secularism, Talabani said, "Yes, I will, but we do not use the term 'secularism'. What we say is: a democratic, federal, parliamentarian, united and independent Iraq, which respects the Islamic identity of the Iraqi people. READ MORE

"This is an indication that there will be no Islamic regime or Islamic government" in Iraq, he said.

Talabani added, however, that the country's legislators would not make laws that would contradict the principles of Islam.

After 84 years of secular rule, the triumph of the religious-flavoured Shiite alliance in Iraq's January 30 elections has sealed Islam's return to public life in the country.

The Shiite nominee for Prime Minister, Ibrahim Jaafari, is in favour of implementing the Sharia, or Islamic law.

His Dawa Party and the other major Shiite powerhouse, the Supreme Council for the Islamic Revolution in Iraq (SCIRI), both with long sojourns in Iran, have not hidden their desire for an Islamic state.