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Tabourian Boycotts Iraq Visit | Tabourian Boycotts Iraq Visit |
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| Written by Editor | |
| Wednesday, 20 August 2008 | |
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Energy Minister Alain Tabourian has decided to boycott a visit to Iraq in protest against the way he was treated when he was in the company of Prime Minister Fouad Saniora on his trip to Alexandria, Egypt recently. Saniora sources said Tabourian had been invited to Baghdad, but that he apologized and said he had other commitments elsewhere. The daily As Safir on Wednesday said Tabourian refused to go into details about why he was not going to Iraq, expressing, however, deep anger over the "campaign" launched against him in light of comments he made on the Egypt trip. Saniora arrived in Baghdad on Wednesday for trade talks, becoming the first Lebanese leader to visit Iraq since the fall of Saddam Hussein, officials said on Monday. It follows a trip to Iraq on August 11 by Jordan's King Abdullah II, the first by an Arab head of state since the 2003 U.S.-led invasion which toppled Saddam. After the king's visit, Amman said it has appointed an ambassador to Baghdad where its embassy has been run by a charge d'affaires since it came under deadly attack in 2003. Iraq has an embassy in Beirut, while Jawad al-Haeri was in 2006 named Lebanon's first ambassador in post-Saddam Baghdad. He died on July 12 and has not yet been replaced. "The discussions with Iraqi leaders will be on bilateral relations and particularly trade and oil," Saniora's spokesman had said. Baghdad is working to rebuild relations with its neighbors in the wake of five years of bloodshed that continues despite violence having now dipped to a four-year low. Washington has been pushing its Sunni Arab allies, notably regional heavyweight Saudi Arabia, to send ambassadors and high-level officials to Baghdad to help shore up support for the country's Shiite leadership. The United States also hopes that these countries will offer financial support to Iraq and counterbalance the influence of Iran, which U.S. President George Bush has accused of negative interference in Iraqi affairs. Prior to 2003, Lebanon and Iraq had had a strong trading relationship, mainly in food products.(Naharnet-AFP) |
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