Hoshyar Zebari gave several reasons in an interview yesterday with The Associated Press: the Shiite, Sunni and other communities "know their limits;" the violence is limited mainly to Baghdad and its suburbs; and Sunni and Shiite religious leaders have edicts against killing each other's followers.
More than 4,500 people have been killed since April in a surge of violence by insurgents aimed at undermining confidence in the Shiite-led government. The violence began to surge after government security forces staged a deadly crackdown on a Sunni protest camp in the north.
The growing unrest is marked by frequent coordinated car bombings and other attacks blamed mostly on al-Qaida's local branch targeting police, the military and often Shiite Muslim areas. The carnage is intensifying fears that Iraq is heading back toward the widespread Sunni-Shiite sectarian killing that peaked in 2006 and 2007.
Zebari said the recent increase in terrorist or sectarian violence is partly a consequence of the spillover from the conflict in neighbouring Syria.
"It is limited with these two groups, not nationwide as a community rising up," Zebari said.
At a meeting with Zebari earlier yesterday, UN spokesman Martin Nesirky said Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon "expressed concern at the political crisis and the deteriorating security situation in Iraq and called again on Iraqi leaders to engage in serious dialogue and speed up reconciliation."
Pointing to failed efforts by Shias and Sunnis in the past to finish each other off and carry out "ethnic cleansing," Zebari said: "We tried it before ... (but) it didn't succeed."
Now, he said, all communities know "how far they can push the envelope.
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