 |
| Italian Premier Romano Prodi, bottom right,
flanked by Defense Minister Arturo Parisi delivers his speech at the Lower
Chamber in Rome, Tuesday, June 6, 2006.
(Xinhua/AFP) |
ROME, June 6 (Xinhua) -- Italian Prime Minister
Romano Prodi said Tuesday that the Monday's attack in southern Iraq which killed
an Italian soldier would not induce the government to speed up its troop
withdrawal.
Addressing the House on the Monday evening attack
which left one Italian soldier dead and four others injured, the center-left
premier said that this will have no repercussions on the timetable for
withdrawal.
Prodi, who won the Italian April general election,
has said he will withdraw the Italian troops serving in Iraq by the end of the
year, in line with a deadline set by the previous government.
However, some allies in his nine-party coalition are
pushing for a swifter pullout, a demand which was renewed in the wake of the
Monday attack.
But Prodi indicated he would resist their pressure,
telling the House that "nothing has changed... all talk of a political plan
aimed at conditioning the timetable is groundless".
He expressed his condolences for the attack, saying
Italy was united in its mourning.
"The whole of Italy wishes to pay homage to those who
have fallen in service and in the defence of peace and international stability,
against a fanatical terrorism which spares no-one," he said.
The attack happened on Monday evening, as five
soldiers of the Sassari infantry regiment were aboard one of several Italian
vehicles escorting a British convoy on the road to Tallil near Nassiriya, the
southern Iraqi town where the Italian contingent is based.
The withdrawal of Italian troops from Iraq topped the
agenda of a meeting in Rome last Friday between Prodi and British Prime Minister
Tony Blair.
After the talks Prodi said that Italian and British
defense ministers would soon meet to arrange details of the pullout. Italian
troops in Iraq are under British command and so the withdrawal has to be closely
coordinated with London.
Last month, Prodi condemned the Iraq war as a "grave
error" which had created "new pretexts for terrorist actions".
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