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Iraq VP Tariq al-Hashemi rejects guilty verdict | Iraq VP Tariq al-Hashemi rejects guilty verdict |
(35 minutes later) | |
Fugitive Iraqi Vice-President Tariq al-Hashemi has rejected a guilty verdict and death sentence passed on him in absentia as "politically motivated". | Fugitive Iraqi Vice-President Tariq al-Hashemi has rejected a guilty verdict and death sentence passed on him in absentia as "politically motivated". |
In remarks at a press conference in neighbouring Turkey, he launched a stinging attack on the government of Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki. | In remarks at a press conference in neighbouring Turkey, he launched a stinging attack on the government of Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki. |
On Sunday, an Iraqi court found Hashemi guilty of running death squads. | |
Hashemi was the most senior Sunni Muslim politician in Iraq and his case has sparked a political crisis. | |
Hashemi insisted he was innocent of the charges and said he would continue to serve his country. | |
He described the verdict as a "medal on my chest". | He described the verdict as a "medal on my chest". |
He went on to accuse Mr Maliki's predominantly Shia-led government of "pushing for" increased sectarian strife and urged his supporters to show a "high standard of self-discipline". | He went on to accuse Mr Maliki's predominantly Shia-led government of "pushing for" increased sectarian strife and urged his supporters to show a "high standard of self-discipline". |
The political crisis around Hashemi's case has coincided with a sharp upswing in violence in Iraq. | |
In a thinly veiled reference to Iran, he also complained of the "growing influence of neighbouring countries in our internal affairs". | In a thinly veiled reference to Iran, he also complained of the "growing influence of neighbouring countries in our internal affairs". |
Many Iraqi Sunnis believe they are being marginalised and targeted by Shias, who have grown in influence since the US invasion. | |
Sunnis have accused Mr Maliki of taking an authoritarian approach to government. | |
Terror attacks | |
Hashemi is a member of the secular, mainly Sunni Iraqiyya political bloc and has been Vice President since 2006. | |
However, on 19 December 2011, the day after the last US troops left the country the Iraqi government issued a warrant for Hashemi's arrest. | |
It accused him of orchestrating terror attacks on officials and security forces. | |
Hashemi fled first to the largely autonomous Kurdish north of the country, and from there to Qatar and on to Turkey. | |
Prosecutors said Hashemi was involved in 150 killings. During his trial in absentia in Baghdad, some of his former bodyguards said Mr Hashemi had ordered murders. | |
The court also found Mr Hashemi's son-in-law guilty of two murders and sentenced him to death by hanging. The judge dismissed a third charge for lack of evidence. |