August 2007 file photo shows Iraqi President Jalal Talabani talking to reporters in Baghdad
CBS NEWS
Iraqi President Jalal Talabani has had a stroke and his medical team
in Baghdad is still trying to stabilize his condition, a spokesman for
the prime minister said Tuesday.
The Reuters news agency
quotes three government sources as saying Talabani is in critical but
stable condition. Reuters also cites a statement from his office as
saying Talabani is in stable condition and being treated for hardening
of the arteries.
Talabani, a rare unifying figure who is
seen to rise above the country's ethnic and sectarian fault lines, has
been actively involved in trying to mediate an ongoing crisis between
Iraq's central government and the country's Kurdish minority.
The
spokesman, Ali al-Moussawi, told The Associated Press on Tuesday that
Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki is at the hospital where the president is
being treated.
Doctors have not decided whether Talabani
will continue to be treated in Baghdad or will be flown to another
country for treatment, he said. He was unable to provide further
details.
Talabani's office earlier said the Iraqi
president had been rushed to the hospital after showing signs of fatigue
on Monday evening, and that he was being treated for an unspecified
health problem.
Talabani's spokesman could not immediately be reached for comment.
An
Iraqi Cabinet official said Talabani fainted Monday and remains
unconscious. The official agreed to speak only on condition of anonymity
because he was not authorized to release details about the president's
health.
The Iraqi presidency is seen as a largely
ceremonial post, though it does retain some powers under Iraq's
constitution. The president must sign off on laws approved by parliament
and has the power to block executions.
Talabani, a
member of Iraq's Kurdish minority, has frequently used the post to
mediate disputes within the government and among Iraq's various sects
and ethnic groups.
He has recently been working to
resolve a standoff between the central government and the Kurds, who
have their own fighting force.
The two sides last month
moved additional troops into disputed areas along the Kurds' self-rule
northern region, prompting fears that fighting could break out.
Talabani
last week brokered a deal that calls on both sides to eventually
withdraw troops from the contested areas, though there is no timetable
for how soon the drawdown might take place.
Talabani met
with al-Maliki earlier Monday. They agreed that al-Maliki would invite a
delegation from the Kurdish regional government to Baghdad to continue
the talks, according to the prime minister's office.