Iraqi Kurdish President Asks Parliament To Plan Independence Referendum
07/03/2014
By Isabel Coles
Source: Huffington Post
ARBIL, Iraq, July 3 (Reuters) - The president of Iraq's autonomous
Kurdish region asked its parliament on Thursday to plan a referendum on
Kurdish independence, signaling his impatience with Baghdad, which is
fighting to repel Sunni insurgents and struggling to form a new
government. The United States has urged the Kurds
to stand with Baghdad as Iraq faces an onslaught by Sunni Muslim
militants led by an al Qaeda offshoot who have seized large parts of
the north and west and are threatening to march on the capital. Iraq's
5 million Kurds, who have governed themselves in relative peace
since the 1990s, have expanded their territory by as much as 40 percent
in recent weeks as the sectarian insurgency has threatened to split
the country. Kurdish President Massoud Barzani
asked lawmakers to form a committee to organize a referendum on
independence and pick a date for the vote. "The
time has come for us to determine our own fate and we must not wait for
others to determine it for us," Barzani said in a closed session of
the Kurdish parliament that was later broadcast on television. "For
that reason, I consider it necessary ... to create an independent
electoral commission as a first step and, second, to make preparations
for a referendum." Barzani's call came days after
Kurds and Sunnis walked out of the newly-elected Iraqi parliament's
first session in Baghdad, complaining that the majority Shi'ites had
failed to nominate a prime minister. Many Kurds
have long wanted to declare independence and now sense a golden
opportunity, with Baghdad weak and Sunni armed groups in control of
northern cities such as Mosul and Tikrit. Barzani, often at odds with the central government, indicated that his people would not wait on Baghdad forever. "We
will not deal with those who have sabotaged the country," he said.
"Iraq has divided itself and we are not responsible for that" Many see the Shi'ite prime minister, Nuri al-Maliki, as the main obstacle to resolving the crisis and hope he will step aside. "POLITICAL STABILITY NEEDED" Maliki himself said a political solution went hand-in-hand with the campaign to recapture areas held by insurgents. "There
is no security without complete political stability," he said in a
televised address on Wednesday. "We will proceed with our political
projects but we will be on high alert and ready for the momentum of the
battle." Security forces are battling fighters
led by the Islamic State, which shortened its name from the Islamic
State in Iraq and the Levant this week and named its leader "caliph",
the historical title of successors of the Prophet Mohammad who ruled
the Muslim world. Rising concern and pressure
from the United States, Iran, the United Nations and Iraq's own Shi'ite
clerics has done little to end the paralyzing divisions between Iraq's
main ethnic and sectarian blocs. Mithal
al-Alusi, a prominent Sunni politician, said he did not think Maliki
was prepared to step aside. "Mr. Maliki wants to continue and he
believes ... that without him nothing can be done in Iraq," he said. In
the system put in place after the United States toppled Saddam Hussein
in 2003, the premiership is traditionally given to a Shi'ite, while
the speaker of the house has been a Sunni and the president, a largely
ceremonial role, has been a Kurd. In his weekly
televised address, Maliki said he hoped parliament could get past its
"state of weakness" and reach consensus in its next session, planned
for Tuesday. But it is far from clear when leaders in Baghdad might do
so. All the main blocs are beset by internal divisions, and none has yet decided who to put forward for its designated position. Dia
al-Asadi, secretary general of the Al-Ahrar bloc, a Shi'ite faction
loyal to powerful cleric Moqtada al-Sadr and opposed to Maliki, told
Reuters that only Maliki's own State of Law coalition would support his
staying on as prime minister. "There is objection by almost all of the other groups - the Kurds, the Sunnis, and the other Shi'ites," he said. Each
of the blocs has said it wants to know who the others will choose for
their posts before naming its own - meaning the nominations will have
to be done as a package. FIGHTING IN DIYALA Maliki's
government, bolstered by civilian volunteers and Shi'ite militias, has
managed to stop the militant advance short of the capital, but has
been unable to take back the cities that government forces abandoned. The
army failed last week to take back Tikrit, 160 km (100 miles) north of
Baghdad, and remained on the outskirts of the city on Thursday,
according to the prime minister's military spokesman Lieutenant General
Qassim Atta. In the northeasterly province of Diyala, 14 militants were killed in fighting with security forces, local police said. The
head of the region's police, Jamil Al-Shimmeri, said security forces
had taken back control of the village of Showhani near the town of
Muqdadiya, 80 km northeast of Baghdad. Insurgents
have been present in Diyala for the past several weeks, following
their rapid seizure of Mosul, one of Iraq's largest cities, to the
north. Saudi-owned al-Arabiya television said
Saudi Arabia had deployed 30,000 soldiers to its border with Iraq after
Iraqi soldiers withdrew from the area, but Iraq denied the report. Al-Arabiya
broadcast footage of what it said were Iraqi soldiers in the desert
area east of the city of Karbala after pulling back from the border.
But the army spokesman said the border was still under the full control
of Iraqi forces. Far from the heart of the Sunni
insurgency, tensions among Shi'te factions burst into violence on
Wednesday when security forces clashed with followers of a radical
cleric in Karbala. Security sources said up to 45
people had been killed in clashes when police and army loyal to Maliki
tried to arrest the cleric, Mahmoud al-Sarkhi. Atta,
the spokesman, said on Thursday the crisis was finished.
(Reporting by Isabel Coles in Arbil, Isra' al-Rubei'i, Raheem Salman,
Maggie Fick and Alexander Dziadosz in Baghdad; Writing by Maggie Fick;
Editing by Kevin Liffey)
Link: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2014/07/03/iraq-kurdish-independence-referendum_n_5554967.html?cps=gravity .
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