RIYADH: Iraqi Shiite Muslims are fighting in Syria alongside troops of President Bashar al-Assad, Iraqi Foreign Minister Hoshyar Zebari said on Friday, while insisting this was not the policy of the Baghdad government.
"I do not deny that Iraqi fighters are participating in combat in Syria, just as fighters from the Gulf are doing in that country," he said in remarks published by pan-Arab daily Al-Hayat.
"But that does not come under government policy," added Zebari, himself a Kurd and a Sunni Muslim.
At a Friday news conference in Stockholm, he said he had "no first hand figures" on the number of Iraqi fighters in Syria, but that there were "not several thousand maybe several hundred".
Fighters from Lebanon's Hezbollah movement have also intervened in Syria alongside troops loyal to Assad.
Their presence has been roundly denounced by rebels fighting to overthrow Assad, most of whom come from Syria's majority, and by influential Egyptian-born cleric Sheikh Yusef Qaradawi.
While "Hezbollah militia are engaged in combat in Syria, there are also fatwas, such as the one by Qaradawi calling for jihad in Syria," Zebari said.
"The Syrian conflict has become more dangerous, because the sectarian confrontation has been brought to the fore. This is very dangerous and I think all countries should be aware not to push things in this direction," Zebari said in Stockholm.
The uprising that broke out more than two years ago is increasingly becoming a sectarian battle between supported by Gulf and supported by Iran.
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