http://www.tehrantimes.com/NCms/2007.asp?code=211559

Thursday, January 7, 2010 
Talabani urges Riyadh to halt anti-Shia rhetoric




Baghdad has called on Riyadh to prevent insult to Iraq's Shia clergy as 
protests escalate over offensive remarks hurled by a Wahhabi imam against Grand 
Ayatollah Ali al-Sistani. 


"Saudi Arabia is a land of divine revelation and prophets, a land which hosts 
the House of God, who prohibits us from dissension...You call on Muslims to put 
aside differences but from time to time voices scatter seeds of discord among 
Muslims," Iraqi President Jalal Talabani said in a letter to Saudi King 
Abdullah bin Abdul Aziz Al Saud. 

Talabani censured Saudi Sunni figures' abusive tone against Shia Muslims in 
Iraq and elsewhere across the globe and warned that its "bitter" consequences 
"favored the enemy's policy of forging discord and animosity" in the Muslim 
world. 

The letter, published on Tuesday, came after leading Wahhabi cleric Mohammad 
al-UreifiIn in his Friday sermon in Riyadh called Grand Ayatollah al-Sistani an 
"atheist and debauched." In his tirade, he also attacked Iraqi Shias, accusing 
them of conspiring with Yemen's Houthis against Saudi Arabia with Iran's 
support. 

The Iraqi President described the remarks against Ayatollah Sistani as "painful 
and bitter," noting that the prominent cleric is a towering figure in the Shia 
world who symbolizes "tolerance, unity and brotherhood." 

Recalling Ayatollah Sistani's "remarkable role in foiling the enemy's plot 
aimed at spreading sectarian violence in Iraq," Talabani stressed that any 
offense to the Iraqi cleric equaled insulting the whole Iraqi nation. 

He further asked the Saudi king to warn religious leaders in and outside Saudi 
Arabia against reinvigorating discord and divergence, and to call for decrees 
and sermons that encourage peace, unity and coexistence in the Muslim world. 

Iraqi Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki earlier strongly criticized the Saudi 
religious institutes for their tendency to launch attacks on Shia clerics and 
holding a hostile attitude towards Shia Muslims. 

Iraq's parliament also condemned the remarks by calling on the Saudi government 
to take a transparent position on the issue. 

The lawmakers also called on the Arab League, the Organization of Islamic 
Conference, the Association of Asian Parliaments and Iraqi President Jalal 
Talabani to condemn the remarks. 

(Source: Press TV) 



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