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Calls for Kurdish Self-Determination in Iraq Sparks Ire

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  • Calls for Kurdish Self-Determination in Iraq Sparks Ire

    Calls for Kurdish Self-Determination in Iraq Sparks Ire

    Monday, December 13th, 2010
    by Asbarez


    BAGHDAD (AFP)-Iraqi Kurdish leader Massoud Barzani's recent call for
    self-determination for his people has drawn the ire of the country's
    Sunni and Shiite Arab leaders, who say such arguments presage a
    break-up of Iraq.

    `The right of self-determination is something that concerns people
    living under occupation, but this is not the case for Kurdistan, which
    has a special status in Iraq,' said Alia Nusayaf, a member of
    parliament aligned with the Sunni-backed Iraqiya bloc. `It makes me
    wonder if the Kurds asked for federalism [in Iraq's constitution] to
    first form a region and then to separate from Iraq.'

    Barzani said Saturday at the opening of a week-long congress of his
    Kurdistan Democratic Party that self-determination was `a right.' He
    said it would be presented at the meeting `to be studied and
    discussed.'

    The Iraqi Kurdish leader's comments mark the first time Barzani has
    officially presented the issue to the KDP's congress, with the
    proposal set to be voted on during the meeting. His comments come at a
    time when Iraqi Prime Minister-designate Nouri al-Maliki is forming
    his cabinet. Barzani's party is expected to be awarded several
    ministerial posts and Kurdish authorities are mired in a dispute with
    Baghdad over land and oil.

    The six-day congress in Arbil is hosting a number of foreign
    representatives, including members of Turkey's ruling Justice and
    Development Party (AKP), and main opposition Republican People's Party
    (CHP). The congress has drawn more than 1,000 delegates who are set to
    elect 50 new members to the KDP's top leadership committee. The
    gathering is the first time the party has come together in 13 years.

    Among those at the meeting in the northern Iraqi city were al-Maliki,
    Parliament Speaker Osama al-Nujaifi and Ayad Allawi, the leader of
    Iraqiya. `It's shameful that with all the politicians present, not one
    of them spoke up [regarding Barzani's remarks],' Nusayaf said.

    There is also consternation among politicians loyal to radical Shiite
    cleric Moqtada al-Sadr, whose backing for al-Maliki largely ensured
    the incumbent would remain prime minister. `These declarations [of
    Barzani's] are not in the best interests of Iraq, and they only serve
    to raise tensions,' said Jawad al-Hasnawi, a Sadrist lawmaker.

    `I think an Iraq that extends from Zakho to Basra is much better than
    an Iraq that is divided,' al-Hasnawi added, referring to the country's
    northern and southernmost cities.

    Al-Hasnawi noted, however, that politicians at the Arbil meeting
    probably declined to respond to Barzani's remarks to avoid `inflaming
    the situation.' Barzani's KDP is a key member of al-Maliki's governing
    coalition, and the Kurdish leader played a major role in bringing
    Iraq's divided political factions together to agree to a power-sharing
    deal.

    The party, part of a joint slate with Talabani's Patriotic Union of
    Kurdistan, controls a substantial majority of seats in the parliament
    of the Kurdish regional administration in northern Iraq and in
    combination with the PUK holds 43 seats in Baghdad's assembly.

    Iraq's Kurdish north, made up of three provinces, exercises control
    over all policy-making, except that relevant to national defense and
    foreign affairs. On Sunday, Kurdish regional Prime Minister Barham
    Salih, a PUK leader, pressed the issue again. `There is a consensus
    among Kurds over the fact that it is legal and legitimate to have the
    right to self-determination,' he told a press conference. `When we
    pushed for a federal Iraq we said that it was a form of expression of
    self-determination, and we have never abandoned this right.'

    The northern Iraqi administration won greater freedom after the 1991
    Gulf War and its autonomy was enshrined in Iraq's constitution
    following the United States-led invasion to oust Saddam Hussein in
    2003.

    According to Khalid al-Assadi, a member of parliament with Maliki's
    State of Law coalition, it is unlikely the Kurds want to go much
    further. Barzani's comments were `for domestic consumption,' al-Assadi
    said. `Self-determination is a Kurdish ambition, and they bring it up
    from time to time, but I think the Kurds are wise enough not to leave
    Iraq.




    From: A. Papazian
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