
The UN\'s special envoy to Baghdad voiced worry over rising levels of violence and worsening sectarianism in Iraq, warning in particular of a deterioration in security. Martin Kobler told AFP that much was still to be done, with little progress in the past two years on several key political issues, including laws regulating the energy sector and the dispersal of oil income and a long-running dispute over a swathe of territory in north Iraq. He pointed to improving bilateral ties with Kuwait and well-run elections as positive developments over his two years in Iraq, but called for economic reforms and greater political and financial federalism. \"I am very concerned at the end of my two years, because sectarianism increases, violence increases,\" Kobler told AFP from his residence in Baghdad\'s heavily-fortified Green Zone ahead of his departure from Iraq to take up a new post as UN special envoy to the Democratic Republic of Congo. The former German ambassador to Baghdad noted that May was the deadliest month in Iraq since 2008, adding, \"here, we really see a deterioration\". Analysts often tie the increase in violence to a high-level political dispute between Sunni Arab groups and the Shiite-led authorities, with months of angry protests by the Sunni minority against alleged targeting providing militant groups with recruitment fodder and room to manoeuvre. Kobler said the \"Sunni-Shiite conflict ... is paralysing, so to say, everything in the country\". \"A dialogue is not taking place in a structured way,\" he continued. \"Not to talk to each other is a receipt for disaster.\" \"We should not get used to a high level of violence. ... I am very concerned that once you are at a higher level, everybody accepts, in a way, this high level of violence.\" He added that a political standoff between the government and Sunni demonstrators had to be resolved. \"If the stalemate between the demonstrators and the government continues, this is not the right way.\" Though the authorities insist they have taken measures to address protesters\' demands, analysts say underlying causes of frustration in the Sunni community have not been addressed.
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