A senior Iranian legislator took the West responsible for the ongoing disputes in Iraq, saying that the West is seeking to undermine Iraq's regional influence through rifts in the country.

The West seeks to preoccupy the Iraqi government with internal problems and prevent it from playing a role in regional developments, member of the parliament's National Security and Foreign Policy Commission Seyed Baqer Hosseini said on Friday.

He added that the West cannot tolerate a stable and united Iraq and wants to break the country into three regions.

Hosseini said dividing Iraq into Kurdish, Shiite and Sunni regions is a Western plot which is being supported by certain currents in the Arab nation.

The lawmaker warned that the agents of foreign powers are infiltrating the ranks of protesters to get them to clash with the security forces in order to worsen the situation.

Iraq said last month that several regional states, including Qatar, have paid $100 to each participant in protest rallies in al-Anbar province in support of Iraqi Finance Minister Rafia al-Issawi, whose bodyguards have been arrested on terrorism charges.

Iraq's al-Nakhil news agency quoted a security official as saying that after the arrest of Issawi's bodyguards, several groups affiliated to the regional states, specially Qatar, paid huge sums to their sympathizers in Anbar, Salaheddin and Nineveh provinces to stage rallies against the Iraqi government.

Ouraq al-Khalij newspaper also informed that Doha is staunchly supporting Issawi for taking the leadership of Sunni protestors in Iraq.

The paper said Qatari officials had contacted a large number of their agents and hirelings in Iraq in recent days to coordinate the protests, adding that even the mottoes chanted against al-Maliki government have been dictated by Doha.

Also last month, an Iraqi legislator said that a number of foreign states are funding and supporting the recent protests and unrests in Iraq's al-Anbar province.

"The goal of the recent protests in Iraq is drowning the country and this plot is orchestrated by the foreign states," Jamal al-Batikh told .

He also cautioned that certain opposition lawmakers joined the plot and entered a regional and international game against Iraq.
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News ID 184414