France’s Foreign Minister Jean-Yves Le Drian yesterday urged Iraq to push for national reconciliation with its minority communities ahead of “inclusive” elections.
On a visit to Baghdad following its December declaration of victory over the Islamic State group, he said France would play its part in Iraq’s reconstruction and called for peaceful general elections in May.
“The electoral process (must) take place under the best conditions and be based on an inclusive logic,” he said, urging respect for “the different communities of the whole of Iraq.”
“We are in a period when Iraq needs stability, reconstruction and reconciliation,” he added, saying that would pave the way to “peaceful elections and...
an inclusive government”. Le Drian, who previously visited Baghdad in August last year, also met Iraq’s Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi, President Fuad Massum and Kurdish parliament speaker Salim al-Juburi.
France has been a key member of the US-led military coalition fighting IS after the militant group seized large swathes of Iraq and neighbouring Syria in 2014.
Baghdad is looking to drum up funds at a reconstruction conference in neighbouring Kuwait from Monday to tomorrow after announcing the nationwide defeat of IS.
“We have been present in the fight against Daesh, we must be present in peace,” Le Drian said, using an Arabic acronym for IS.
“We were there to participate in the coalition. We will also be there in the reconstruction phase,” he added.
Iraq’s Foreign Minister Ibrahim al-Jaafari called for French expertise to be used in the reconstruction.
Le Drian also expressed France’s opposition to any death penalty for two French women awaiting trial in Iraq over accusations of joining IS.
They risk the death penalty under the country’s counter-terrorism law.
“As happens every time a French is potentially condemned, we act very strongly to make our position known, but for now the procedure has not started,” he said.
But he added that suspected militants should face trial in the countries where they committed their “crimes”. The United Nations urged Iraq to halt all executions after it learnt of 106 in the country last year.
Iraq is still reeling from the rise of IS and the punishing fightback it took to crush the militants, with swathes of its territory in ruins and millions of people displaced.
Authorities in the resource-rich nation say there has been a heavy toll on oil, electricity and manufacturing infrastructure, as well as basic services such as water and sanitation. Iraq needs $88.2bn to rebuild after years of war against the Islamic State group, Planning Minister Salman al-Jumaili said yesterday.
In 2017, France lent 430mn euros (more than $500mn) to oil-rich Iraq, whose coffers have suffered from the war against IS and a drop in world crude prices.
Le Drian also headed to Iraqi Kurdistan, where he met leaders of the autonomous region, which has been hit by a political and economic crisis after a September independence referendum bitterly opposed by Baghdad. “It is really very desirable that the two parties overcome their differences, and this is the message that I am conveying,” he told journalists.
The French envoy is to travel on to Kuwait to attend the Iraq reconstruction conference today and a meeting of the anti-IS coalition with his US counterpart Rex Tillerson.

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