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(回答先: この自爆攻撃は国連のイラク介入への帰還を難しくするだろう。【BBC】 投稿者 Sちゃん 日時 2004 年 1 月 19 日 06:06:05)
同じく
この自爆攻撃は国連のイラク介入への帰還を難しくするだろう。
北ではクルド勢力も不安と不満を抱えている。
南ではシーア派勢力が委譲を迫っている。
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死亡者の大半はイラク人だし…
陰謀論的に考えるなら、分割案を推し進めるには都合が良いかな…?
BBC
http://news.bbc.co.uk/
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/middle_east/3407265.stm
Iraq attacks complicate UN role plans
by Paul Reynolds
BBC News Online world affairs correspondent
The latest bomb in Baghdad makes the attempt by the United States to bring the United Nations back into Iraq even more difficult.
It is possible that the bomb was set off on the day preceding important talks at the UN in New York precisely to deter the UN from taking up a more significant role. It reminds the world in any case that the resistance continues.
The United Nations headquarters in Baghdad was attacked in August last year, killing its special representative Sergio Vieira de Mello, and the organisation pulled out most of its staff.
On Monday in New York, the American Iraq administrator Paul Bremer and a delegation from the Iraqi Governing Council led by Adnan Pachachi, its current chairman, are meeting the UN Secretary General Kofi Annan.
Call for UN intervention
They want him to intervene in the crisis caused by the insistence of the Shia spiritual leader Grand Ayatollah Ali Sistani that elections should be held for the transitional government which is due to take power at the end of June.
A senior British official said in London recently that they would like Mr Annan to inform the ayatollah that, in the UN's view, elections are not possible in the time available and that the proposed system of countrywide meetings to choose the transitional assembly which will appoint the government is the best way.
We are hoping to once again state the importance that the American government and the coalition attach to the UN playing a vital role
Paul Bremer
They will ask the UN to send a team to Iraq to make its own assessment. A letter reportedly sent by Mr Annan to the ayatollah has had no effect.
Mr Bremer said: ""We are hoping to once again state the importance that the American government and the coalition attach to the UN playing a vital role."
Mr Pachachi, a veteran Sunni leader who was Iraqi foreign minister before the Baathists took power in 1968, hinted that Ayatollah Sistani would respond to a UN plea: "He would like to be persuaded that [elections] are not possible now," he said.
Doubt over early UN role
But the British official doubted that Mr Annan would agree to expand the current UN role: "Kofi Annan wants to talk about a role for the UN post 30 June. I am not sure of a UN role before that," he said.
Another American proposal is that the UN should consider sending its just appointed special adviser on Iraq, Lakhdar Brahimi - ex-envoy to Afghanistan and a former Algerian foreign minister - to Iraq as a new special representative there.
The bomb makes that even less likely. Security alone would be a major problem. UN morale could not stand another fatal attack.
Kurdish unrest
Another crisis for the coalition is growing in the north of Iraq. There the Kurds want the city of Kirkuk to be brought into their autonomous region.
As for a majority imposing its will on the Kurds, this cannot be tolerated
Massoud Barzani
One of the Kurdish leaders, Massoud Barzani, head of the Kurdish Democratic Party, is quoted in the Washington Post as saying that the Kurds want their region extended and that Arab Iraqis who had settled in Kirkuk under Saddam Hussein should be expelled.
The Kurds oppose the majority Shia call for elections to the transitional government and Barzani said: "As for a majority imposing its will on the Kurds, this cannot be tolerated."
The senior British official claimed that the Kurds "understand" that they will be "given room to breathe as a distinct population within Iraq with a regional government and assembly but that the Kurdish region will be geographically not ethnically based." This presumably implies a rejection of the Kurdish expansion hope.
The coalition and Iraqi Governing Council plan of 15 November 2003 does not envisage elections for a fully representative Iraqi Government until next year.