Baghdad: Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri Al Maliki told a Syrian opposition delegation on Friday Baghdad supports the Syrian people’s wish for legitimate change, saying Iraq’s power-sharing experience after the 2003 invasion could offer them lessons.

Al Maliki’s government has said it backs neither side in the Syrian conflict. But Iraqi Shiite leaders fear that if Bashar Al Assad falls, Syria would splinter along sectarian lines and this would bring about the rise of a hardline Sunni regime likely to upset Iraq’s fragile security and Shiite-Sunni mix.

Close to Iran himself, Al Maliki has taken a more muted stance on Syria. He has not joined calls for Al Assad to quit, much less enforce sanctions against Damascus approved by the Arab League, but has called for reforms to end one-party rule in Syria.

“They [Al Maliki and the Syrian opposition group] discussed Syria’s crisis and ways to stop the bloodshed and find a solution that achieves the legitimate aspirations of the Syrian people,” the prime minister’s office said in a statement.

Al Maliki told the delegation, which included members of the Syrian National Council, to take advantage of the Iraqi experience after the demise of Sunni dictator Saddam Hussain in the US-led 2003 invasion.

Ali Al Mousawi, Al Maliki’s media adviser, said the meeting was not the first time Baghdad government leaders had met the Syrian opposition.

“We are with the demands of the Syrian people. We confirmed to the delegation that we are with them, stand with them, but we will never dictate to them and will not interfere in their affairs,” he said.

Iraq’s violence has subsided dramatically since 2006-07 when the country sank into sectarian slaughter that pitched Sunni against Shiite and dragged Iraq close to civil war.

A fragile power-sharing agreement amoung Sunni, Shiite and Kurdish factions has replaced Saddam’s one-party rule. But Iraq’s cross-sectarian government has been mired in crisis even before the last U.S. troops left in December.

Since the fall of Saddam and the rise of Shiite leaders, many Iraqi Sunnis feel they have been sidelined. Sunni politicians accuse Al Maliki of failing to fulfil US-backed deals to share power, a charge his backers dismiss.

Sunni Islamist insurgents and a local Al Qaida wing still fight the government. Bombings and attacks across Iraq killed more than 100 people last Sunday.

Syria is mainly Sunni Muslim, but also has minority Alawite, Christian and Kurdish populations.

Sunni Saudi Arabia and Qatar as well as Turkey oppose Al Assad while Shiite Iran supports him. Those splits have complicated diplomatic efforts to halt the fighting in Syria, which threatens to become a proxy battlefield for outside powers.