Al-Sadr said that Maliki must bear full responsibility for the unrest in Iraq. Maliki has made a number of moves to centralise power. His actions have enraged many Sunnis and also officials in the Kurdish autonomous area in northern Iraq.
Iraq's vice president, Tariq al-Hashimi, a prominent Sunni politician
was charged with various offenses including running death squads,
convicted of murder in September, and sentenced to death in absentia.
Al-Hashimi took refuge in Turkey. Sunnis say that Maliki is constantly
sidelining them. During the rule of Saddam Hussein, Sunnis were dominant
in the government.
More recently Maliki raided the office and home of the Iraqi finance
minister, Rafie al-Issawi, another prominent Sunni politician. Issawi
claims that 150 of his guards and employees were arrested in the raids.
These actions have sparked huge protests by Sunnis in which they have
blocked off main routes to Jordan and Syria from Baghdad.
No doubt al-Sadr's move has been in part calculated to improve
prospects for his party and himself in upcoming elections. Al-Sadr spoke
in Najaf, one of the holiest cities of the Shiite sect. In spite of
many of his own followers being persecuted by Sunnis during Hussein's
reign and his close connections with Iran, Al-Sadr is an Iraqi
nationalist who fears the expanding conflict between Sunnis and Shia
sects. Maliki's actions fuel this division. While Al-Sadr has always
been fiercely anti-American, at the same time, he has always tried to
foster unity among Iraqis. Al-Sadr tried to set the Sunni protests in a wider context saying:
Violence has increased in Iraq in 2012 and Al Qaeda appears to be
making a come-back. Iraq Body Count put the civilian death toll in 2012
at 4,471 and this does not include the final two weeks of the year. Last
year the toll was 4,136.
“The Iraqi spring is coming. We are with the demonstrators, and Parliament must be with them, not against them,” he said. “The legitimate demands of the demonstrators, by which people know what they want, should be met.”Al Sadr even expressed his willingness to go to Anbar, the Sunni-dominated province, to join in demonstrations. Maliki warned protesters that he might lose patience with the demonstrations:
"I say to those who follow these agendas: Don't think it's difficult for the government to take measures against you or to re-open the road and put an end to this matter. We have been very patient with you, but don't expect this issue to be open-ended."
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