City
Epaper

Soleimani's killing divides Sunni-Shia world

By IANS | Updated: January 7, 2020 15:10 IST

As much as the troika of Turkey, Malaysia and Pakistan has been portraying itself as the champion of Islam and the Muslim world, the killing of Iran's Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) commander Qasem Soleimani has exposed the historic Shia-Sunni sectarian faultline once again.

Open in App

Though the general population among Sunnis, who constitute to around 90 per cent of the Muslim population, expressed sympathy for Iran following the killing, but except for Malaysia, no other Sunni country has come forward to stand publicly by Tehran against the US.

Iran has called the January 3 killings of Soleimani and its other military officials "state terrorism" and threatened to retaliate against the US.

While the Shia Iraq's Parliament passed a resolution, in protest against the killings, asking the US to withdraw its forces from the country, Saudi Arabia, the leader of the Sunni Islamic nations, asked for "self-restraint" and didn't hesitate to blame Iran for "terrorism" in the Middle East.

Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan, who aspires to assume the leadership that the Saudi Arabia kingdom enjoys in the Muslim world, has offered to de-escalate tensions between Washington and Tehran.

Erdogan recently attended an Islamic summit hosted by the Mahathir Mohamad government in Kuala Lumpur and criticized Saudi Arabia for arm-twisting Pakistan Prime Minister Imran Khan and holding him back from attending the conference.

Pakistan initially remained silent but has also supported the de-escalation of tensions and dialogue between the two countries after having negotiated a deal with the US itself.

In exchange of its support for the US airstrike against Iran, Pakistan secured resumption of military to military cooperation with America.

Only Malaysia, among the Sunni dominated countries, came out in support of the Shia Iran.

Prime Minister Mahathir Mohamad described the killing of Soleimani as immoral and illegal.

On Tuesday, hey urged Muslim countries to unite to "protect themselves against external threats".

During, what is probably his last term, Mahathir, 94, has been the staunchest voice of Muslim political unity.

( With inputs from IANS )

Tags: Shia IranusMahathir MohamadSaudi Arabiapakistan
Open in App

Related Stories

Cricket'India Hamare Baap The..': Pakistani Fan Abuses Men in Green After Loss to India in Asia Cup 2025 Final (Watch)

CricketIND vs PAK 2025 Live Streaming: Head-to-Head Record, When and Where to Watch India vs Pakistan Asia Cup Final

Cricket'Abhishek Sharma Bigger Talent Than Yuvraj Singh': Former Pakistan Cricketer After IND vs PAK Match in Asia Cup 2025

NationalSheikh Abdulaziz Al-Sheikh Passes Away: PM Modi Offers Condolences on Demise of Saudi Grand Mufti

Cricket'He Could Have Taken Side Angle': Former Cricket Umpire on Fakhar Zaman's Dismissal in IND vs PAK Super 4 Match of Asia Cup

International Realted Stories

InternationalF1 Singapore GP deemed 'heat hazard' amid soaring humidity

InternationalMoS Margherita pays tributes to Mahatma Gandhi in Russia, recalls message of non-violence, peace

InternationalVenezuela slams illegal incursion of US aircraft

International6 PLA aircraft, 7 PLAN vessels recorded operating around Taiwan

InternationalKremlin spokesman slams Europe for fueling Ukraine conflict, says Russia open to talks