Baghdad (ANTARA News/AFP) - Iraq wants Syria to participate in an Arab summit that is to be held in Baghdad if it is not barred from doing so by its suspension from the Arab League, the Iraqi premier said in an interview.

Syrian President Bashar al-Assad has been carrying out a bloody crackdown on an uprising against his rule, in which over 6,000 people have been killed since March 2011.

Member states voted in November to suspend Syria`s participation in the Arab League over the violence.

"We hope that all the Arab leaders will participate in the summit," which is to take place in late March, Nuri al-Maliki said in an interview with Al-Rashid television that was broadcast on Saturday night.

"We prefer that there will be participation (by Syria), because it opens a page of dialogue away from interference and sectarian atmospheres, and because there is no benefit to anyone if the situation in Syria gets worse," Maliki said.

But, if the Arab League suspension bars Syrian participation in the summit, Iraq will abide by that decision, Maliki said.

The last time Baghdad hosted a regular summit of the 22-member organisation dates back to November 1978, and Iraq was the venue for an extraordinary session in May 1990, just months before Saddam Hussein`s invasion of Kuwait. (*)

Editor: Kunto Wibisono
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