266370954

266370954



Revue de Presse-Press Review-Berhevoka ęape-Rivista Stampa-Dentro de la Prensa-Basin Ozeti

In lraq, Showdown Looms Over Self-Rule for Kurds Regional Leaders

Say They Will Not Give up Quasi-lndependence

By Edward Cody Washington Post July 11,2004

IRB1L, Iraq -- Karzan Kanabi, whose clothing shop attracts young men with its cheap bell-bottom pants, never went to Baghdad, never leamed Arabie and never felt the desire to go anywhere he would have to mix with lraq’s Arab population.

"We want Kurdistan to be an independent country," said Kanabi, 18, who had his Washington-brand jeans trucked in from Turkey, just to the north. He does no business with the rest of Iraq. "We only need Kurdistan."

The nationalist sentiments voiced by Kanabi and many others in this prosperous Kurdish city 200 miles north of Baghdad have become the leading edge of a storm looming over Iraq. After 13 years of quasi-independence - the only regime Kanabi and his peers have known -- the 4 million Kurds living under their own govemment here in the grassy plains and jagged mountains of historical Kurdistan have resolved never to relinquish the self-rule bestowed on them by the United States after the Persian Gulf War in 1991.

"Iraq is madę up of two nationalities, Kurds and Arabs," Massoud Barzani, one of the region's two legendary leaders, said in an inter-view Thursday in nearby Salahuddin. "Kurds have no less a place than Arabs in Iraq."

Kurdish determination, however, has run up against a resolve wide-ly shared by lraq's new leadership and its backers, including the United States, to preserve a unified countiy even without the iron fist of former president Saddam Husseins Baath Party. Iraq, they have pledged, is to be organized as a majority-rule democracy, which would redistribute power among its 25 million inhabitants --roughly 60 percent Shiite Arabs, 20 percent Sunni Arabs and 20 per-cent Kurds.

So far, with a bloody anti-U.S. insurgency their primary concem, the new leaders in Baghdad and their sponsors in the Bush administra-tion have postponed the showdown over the Kurdish issue, hoping a crisis can be avoided. But with elections scheduled for January, Kurds here said, the time has drawn near to deal with some of the most explosive issues, particularly the status of the city of Kirkuk. In addition, plans to write a permanent new constitution after the January elections, Kurdish leaders wamed, are likely to bring the country face to face with the question of Kurdistaris long-term legał relationship with the central govemment in Baghdad. "We have been patient for over a year," said Falah Mustafa Bakir, Barzani s foreign relations adviser. "Now is the time to address it."

Kirkuk, about 150 miles north of Baghdad, lies just outside the Kurdish region as defined over the last decade. The Kurdish leadership, dting historical ties, has demanded that the city and its sur-rounding oil fields be incorporated into the autonomous Kurdish zonę and its special rule. The demand is opposed by leaders of the

Arab majority and has been under discussion ever sińce U.S. troops overthrew Hussein and occupied Iraq 15 months ago.

With the organization of elections about to begin, the Kurdish demand has gained new urgency. Who lives and votes in Kirkuk, they point out, is a question that will help determine the outeome of the vote - and who is at the Controls - in a region they regard as theirs.

"This issue is a time bomb," Barzani said, speaking softly and wea-ring a brown uniform with the Kurds' traditional baggy pants and red-and-white headdress.

Kirkuk has been part of Kurdish folklore from time immemorial, with songs and poems heralding its place in the Kurds' tortured his-tory. But others have long lived there too, including Arabs and Turkmens. Morę Arabs were brought in by Husseins govemment to help smother Kurdish separatism, which had led to three secessio-nist uprisings in 20 years. The Kurdish leadership has insisted that Iraqis who were brought in to Arabize the area must be retumed to their homes, many of them in Southern Iraq. Those leaving should be treated humanely and compensation should be paid, they said in interviews, but the newcomers must leave. At that point, they added, a referendum could be held allowing the city, its Kurdish majority restored, to vote whether to stay in the Arab part of lraq or join the Kurdish autonomous region.

"We cant make any concessions on Kirkuk," Bakir said. "For us, its very important."

But the new leaders in Baghdad have madę it elear they too regard Kirkuk as very important. Its oil fields have contributed to Iraq's national prosperity for 80 years. Moreover, they have said, readjus-ting the ethnic composition of cities or regions is not the way Iraq should begin its new political life.

Vice President Ibrahim Jafari, a Shiite Muslim of the Dawa part)', said in a recent interview that the rights of Kurds must be respected in the new Iraq. The history of their oppression must be taken into account in whatever arrangement is worked out, he added. But he also emphasized that Iraq must remain a unitary nation, true to its history and traditions, and said the rui es of democracy must be followed.

Behind his comment lay a tension that has run throughout the debatę over what to do about the Kurds and the north. For Iraq’s Shiites, long overshadowed by the Sunnis who dominated the Baath Party, representative democracy is a way to gain a measure of power pro-portionate to their majority share of the population. There is no rea-son, in their view, for the country s Kurdish minority to oppose majority rule now that Husseins tyranny has been eliminated. Quasi-Independencc For morę than a decade, U.S. warplanes flew

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