Iran calls Pope's Iraq visit 'good' and 'constructive'

Iran calls Pope's Iraq visit 'good' and 'constructive'
Iran's foreign ministry praised the pope's visit to Iraq, especially in regards to his meeting with Grand Ayatollah Ali Sistani, the country's top Shia official
2 min read
Pope Francis met Grand Ayatollah Ali Sistani in the Iraqi city of Najaf [GETTY]

Editor's note: This article is part of our special coverage of Pope Francis' visit to Iraq. The rest of our coverage can be accessed on this regularly updated portal.

Iran's foreign ministry Monday called Pope Francis' trip to neighbouring Iraq "very good" and "constructive", and described his meeting with the country's top Shiite official as conveying inter-religious peace.

Pope Francis met Grand Ayatollah Ali Sistani - the authority for most Shiite Muslims around the world - in the Iraqi city of Najaf during the first-ever visit to the country by a pontiff.

"The pope's visit to Iraq was a very good and important visit," ministry spokesman Saeed Khatibzadeh told reporters at a press conference.

The "constructive" trip was made possible thanks to a "calm and secure Iraq", he said.

Khatibzadeh's comments represent the first reaction to the visit by an official in Iran, a Shiite-majority nation like Iraq.

"Iraq, with the braveries of the Iraqi people, the wisdom of the (religious) authority, and the pure blood that was shed in the face of extremism and foreign conspiracies, has now reached a state of security," he added.

Tehran, with its allies within Baghdad's state-sponsored Hashed al-Shaabi paramilitary force, helped Iraqi troops fight the Sunni jihadist Islamic State (IS).

Iraq proclaimed victory over IS in late 2017.

"The meeting with Iraq's high (religious) authority, Ayatollah Sistani, on its own showed interreligious dialogue and closeness between religions," Khatibzadeh said.

He noted that it conveyed "no other message than dialogue, peace and friendship between religions and cooperation between civilisations, in contrast to those who seek violence and bloodshed".

Sistani, while an Iranian national, is considered a critic of the 'Wiliyat-i-Faqih' (Guardianship of Islamic Jurists) doctrine in power in Iran, and is seen to prefer a separation of religion and state.

In Baghdad on Friday, the pope called for an end to violence and extremism and urged officials in Iraq to do more to fight corruption.

The Pope's visit to Iraq has also been received positively by much of Iran's press.

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