Damascus, Aug. 21 Iraq's Prime Minister made his first official visit to Syria
today to discuss security and border issues, especially the flow of deadly
weapons and fighters into Iraq and the flood of Iraqi refugees the other way
into Syria.
If the border is made safe, Baghdad pledged to reopen a crude oil pipeline that
passes through Syria, officials said at the start of the Prime Minister Nouri
al-Maliki's three-day sojourn to the neighbouring country.
The United States and Iraq have repeatedly accused Syria of failing to reign in
the flow of militants, foreign fighters and arms across the porous boundary into
Iraq.
But Syria denies the allegations that it is fuelling the anti-American
insurgency in Iraq, saying it is impossible to control the long desert border.
Damascus said earlier this month it had taken measures on its eastern border to
increase security including stationing fixed check points and border patrols.
Syrian officials said they also tightened measures on the crossing of people who
are under the age of 30 and arrested a large number of infiltrators.
"This visit is to implement the government's policy that depends on the basis of
security, economic and political relations with the neighbouring countries and
ways to enhance these relations," said al-Maliki, who lived in Syria in the
1990s as a refugee from Saddam Hussein's rule in Iraq.
"We will discuss the serious security file and its challenges, which concern not
only Iraq but the whole region," he told reporters. "We will discuss the Iraqi
community and immigrants in Syria and the ways to provide them with services."
(AP)