• About Us
  • Subscription
  • Contact Us
Tuesday, May 13, 2025
  • Login
Iran Times
  • Home
  • What’s the News
    • All
    • baygani
    Canada Party Boss Says Iran’s Leaders Are ‘Liars’

    Canada Party Boss Says Iran’s Leaders Are ‘Liars’

    Making Life Harder For Afghans

    Making Life Harder For Afghans

    Iran and US are Talking But About Just What?

    Iran and US are Talking But About Just What?

    New Species Of Praying Mantis Found Playing Dead in Desert

    New Species Of Praying Mantis Found Playing Dead in Desert

    Gen. Naqdi Says The End is Near

    Gen. Naqdi Says The End is Near

    Rial Passes 1 Million Mark

    Rial Passes 1 Million Mark

    Trump’s Intel Says Iran Still Not building A Bomb

    Trump’s Intel Says Iran Still Not building A Bomb

    House GOPers Seek to Put all Sanctions in Law so Dem Prez Can’t End Them

    House GOPers Seek to Put all Sanctions in Law so Dem Prez Can’t End Them

    Farah’s Museum Puts Picasso Work on Display

    Farah’s Museum Puts Picasso Work on Display

  • Diaspora
  • Economy
    Opec Pumps More Crude, Just When Its Not Needed

    Opec Pumps More Crude, Just When Its Not Needed

    Lithium Deposits Being Hyped By Some in Iran

    Lithium Deposits Being Hyped By Some in Iran

    Despite Trump, Iran Sells China More Oil

    Despite Trump, Iran Sells China More Oil

    Despite Revolutionary Goals, Iran’s Exports Still Mostly Oil-Based

    Trump Hits Iran With 10% Tariff On Next-To-No Trade

    Trump Hits Iran With 10% Tariff On Next-To-No Trade

    The Oil Patch

    The Oil Patch

    Iran Wealth Flees Country via Cryptocurrencies

    Iran Wealth Flees Country via Cryptocurrencies

    Gov’t Signs Huge Contracts to Push More Gas out of South Pars Gasfield

    Gov’t Signs Huge Contracts to Push More Gas out of South Pars Gasfield

    Rial Hits New Low of 949,000, but Stops Falling

    Rial Hits New Low of 949,000, but Stops Falling

  • Tidbits and Morsels
  • Latest

    Drone Attack That Killed 3 US Troops in Jordan Could Have Been Foiled

    Iranian-Canadians Reportedly Turned Away at US Border

    Iranian-Americans: an Account of Integration and Achievement

    Jamshid Myth

    Two Cabinet Ministers Convicted in $3.4B Case of Corruption at Tea Firm

    Two Cabinet Ministers Convicted in $3.4B Case of Corruption at Tea Firm

    Resolution in US House Would Very Quietly Endorse Mojahedin-e Khalq

    Resolution in US House Would Very Quietly Endorse Mojahedin-e Khalq

    Subsidized Currency Stays

    Crypto Crackdown Seen as Fueling Rial Collapse

    Iran no Longer Advances Clocks at Now Ruz

    Iran no Longer Advances Clocks at Now Ruz

  • About Us
  • Advertising
  • Subscription
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • What’s the News
    • All
    • baygani
    Canada Party Boss Says Iran’s Leaders Are ‘Liars’

    Canada Party Boss Says Iran’s Leaders Are ‘Liars’

    Making Life Harder For Afghans

    Making Life Harder For Afghans

    Iran and US are Talking But About Just What?

    Iran and US are Talking But About Just What?

    New Species Of Praying Mantis Found Playing Dead in Desert

    New Species Of Praying Mantis Found Playing Dead in Desert

    Gen. Naqdi Says The End is Near

    Gen. Naqdi Says The End is Near

    Rial Passes 1 Million Mark

    Rial Passes 1 Million Mark

    Trump’s Intel Says Iran Still Not building A Bomb

    Trump’s Intel Says Iran Still Not building A Bomb

    House GOPers Seek to Put all Sanctions in Law so Dem Prez Can’t End Them

    House GOPers Seek to Put all Sanctions in Law so Dem Prez Can’t End Them

    Farah’s Museum Puts Picasso Work on Display

    Farah’s Museum Puts Picasso Work on Display

  • Diaspora
  • Economy
    Opec Pumps More Crude, Just When Its Not Needed

    Opec Pumps More Crude, Just When Its Not Needed

    Lithium Deposits Being Hyped By Some in Iran

    Lithium Deposits Being Hyped By Some in Iran

    Despite Trump, Iran Sells China More Oil

    Despite Trump, Iran Sells China More Oil

    Despite Revolutionary Goals, Iran’s Exports Still Mostly Oil-Based

    Trump Hits Iran With 10% Tariff On Next-To-No Trade

    Trump Hits Iran With 10% Tariff On Next-To-No Trade

    The Oil Patch

    The Oil Patch

    Iran Wealth Flees Country via Cryptocurrencies

    Iran Wealth Flees Country via Cryptocurrencies

    Gov’t Signs Huge Contracts to Push More Gas out of South Pars Gasfield

    Gov’t Signs Huge Contracts to Push More Gas out of South Pars Gasfield

    Rial Hits New Low of 949,000, but Stops Falling

    Rial Hits New Low of 949,000, but Stops Falling

  • Tidbits and Morsels
  • Latest

    Drone Attack That Killed 3 US Troops in Jordan Could Have Been Foiled

    Iranian-Canadians Reportedly Turned Away at US Border

    Iranian-Americans: an Account of Integration and Achievement

    Jamshid Myth

    Two Cabinet Ministers Convicted in $3.4B Case of Corruption at Tea Firm

    Two Cabinet Ministers Convicted in $3.4B Case of Corruption at Tea Firm

    Resolution in US House Would Very Quietly Endorse Mojahedin-e Khalq

    Resolution in US House Would Very Quietly Endorse Mojahedin-e Khalq

    Subsidized Currency Stays

    Crypto Crackdown Seen as Fueling Rial Collapse

    Iran no Longer Advances Clocks at Now Ruz

    Iran no Longer Advances Clocks at Now Ruz

  • About Us
  • Advertising
  • Subscription
No Result
View All Result
Iran Times
No Result
View All Result

Zarif says Sunni-Shia strife world’s biggest threat

November 15-2013

ZARIF. . . the big problem
ZARIF. . . the big problem

Foreign Minister Mohammad-Javad Zarif says sectarian tensions between Shia and Sunni Muslims is probably the most serious threat to world security.  But, where the regime for years previously blamed the United States for fanning sectarian passions, Zarif blame unnamed Sunni countries.

Speaking to the BBC, Zarif said some Sunni countries are guilty of “fear-mongering.”  “Some people have fanned the animosity for short-sighted political interests,” he said.

The Wahhabi sect that prevails in Saudi Arabia has always been the harshest branch of Sunnism in condemning Shiism as straying from the path of Islam.

But in recent years, Syria, Iraq, Bahrain, Afghanistan and Pakistan have all suffered from sectarian violence.  And Malaysia, Egypt and Morocco, none of which has many Shias, have all seen religious figures leading campaigns against Shiism in just the last year.

Zarif said conflict between Sunnis and Shias was “the most serious security threat not only to the region, but to the world at large.”  He didn’t explain how Sunni-Shia frictions impacted the world beyond Islam.

Sectarian conflict has been a fact of life in the Islamic world since shortly after the faith was founded almost 1,400 years ago.  But upheaval in the Middle East since the US-led invasion of Iraq in 2003 has made it much worse.

The Syrian war did not start as a sectarian conflict but it has become one.  And it was in the context of the Syrian civil war that Zarif spoke out. Zarif said all sides should forget their differences over Syria to oppose sectarianism.  “I think all of us,… regardless of our differences on Syria, we need to work together on the sectarian issue,” he told the BBC.

Without naming any country directly, he accused Sunni Arab leaders of “fanning the flames” of sectarian violence.  “This business of fear-mongering has been a prevalent business,” he said.  “Nobody should try to fan the flames of sectarian violence. We should reign it in, bring it to a close, try to avoid a conflict that would be detrimental to everybody’s security.”

In many cases, anti-Shia campaigners link their religious concerns to Iran, asserting that Iran uses Shias throughout the world to promote Iranian influence and project Iranian power throughout the Islamic world.  

That theory came to the fore in Pakistan shortly after the Iranian revolution.  A Pakistani militant groups constantly kills Pakistani Shias, accusing them of being a fifth column for Iran.

In Egypt, the government recently suspended tourist flights from Iran under pressure from Sunni fanatics who have claimed the tourists aren’t interested in Egyptian history but are proselytizing for Shiism.  The Egyptian government doesn’t support that line, but feels the pressure of the fanatics.

King Abdullah of Jordan has spoken of his fears of the formation of a Shiite crescent linking Lebanese Shias, Syrian Alawites and Iraqis Shia with Iran.

In Bahrain, where a Sunni monarchy rules a country with a Shiite majority, the regime has accused Iran of fomenting the disorders that have plagued he country for 2 1/2 years.  US officials say Iran had nothing to do with starting the Shia uprising there, but has tried to fan the flames since the uprising erupted.             

Previous Post

Drunk Saudi diplomat is finally allowed to leave

Next Post

Clergy split on marriage to adoptees

Related Posts

Faith

Religious repression growing in Iran

London overwhelmingly elects a Muslim mayor
Faith

London overwhelmingly elects a Muslim mayor

She’s a well-covered Olympia
Faith

She’s a well-covered Olympia

Next Post

Clergy split on marriage to adoptees

If Iran gets bomb, Saudis expect to get  their own from Pakistan

If Iran gets bomb, Saudis expect to get their own from Pakistan

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

  • About Us
  • Contact Us
  • Advertising
  • Subscription
  • Culture
  • Economy
Call us: +1 (202)-659-9868

© 1970-2025 Iran Times - ‬An‭ ‬Independent‭ ‬Newspaper

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • What’s the News
  • Diaspora
  • Economy
  • Tidbits and Morsels
  • Latest
  • About Us
  • Advertising
  • Subscription

© 1970-2025 Iran Times - ‬An‭ ‬Independent‭ ‬Newspaper

Are you sure want to unlock this post?
Unlock left : 0
Are you sure want to cancel subscription?
Go to mobile version