http://weekly.ahram.org.eg/2012/1090/re7.htm
22 - 28 March 2012
Issue No. 1090
Published in Cairo by AL-AHRAM established in 1875
Kurdish moves to secession from Iraq
A cold war is looming between Iraq's Shia-led government and the country's 
Kurds, writes Salah Nasrawi 

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       Click to view caption 
      Iraqi security forces inspect the site of a bomb attack in Hilla, south 
of Baghdad 
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When US troops invaded Iraq in 2003, Iraq's Shias and Kurds joined forces with 
them and supported the overthrow of the Sunni-led regime of former Iraqi 
president Saddam Hussein. 

This alliance subsequently took power in Iraq and worked to reshape the country 
as a federal state, aiming to prevent any future government in Baghdad from 
becoming a new centre of power. 

Nine years later, the former allies are engaged in a bitter row over the 
centralisation of power and distribution of national resources. 

As relations between the country's Kurds and Shias have worsened, some Kurdish 
leaders have started calling for an independent Kurdish state, the crisis 
coming as a surge of sectarian violence has left Iraq as a whole in its worst 
political crisis since the 2003 US-led invasion.

The tensions became evident after Shia Prime Minister Nuri Al-Maliki was named 
for a second four-year term in 2010 and started showing signs of wanting to 
expand his power base. Al-Maliki may have expected that any reprisals from the 
Kurds and the Sunnis, Iraq's other two major groups, would be limited.

A row erupted in December after Iraqi Vice President Tariq Al-Hashemi fled 
Baghdad for the autonomous Kurdish region, in order to avoid prosecution at the 
hands of the Shia-led central government on charges of terrorism and running 
death squads.

While the government in Baghdad wants al-Hashemi, one of Iraq's leading Sunni 
Muslim politicians, to be handed over for trial, the regional Kurdish 
government has vowed that it will not send him back to stand trial in Baghdad. 

The dispute escalated this week after the region's leader, Masoud Barzani, 
insisted that "Kurdish ethics" forbade al-Hashemi's extradition.

Barzani also said that Baghdad had asked the Kurdish administration to let 
Al-Hashemi leave Iraq in order to avoid being put on trial, something which 
amounted to accusing Al-Maliki's government of hypocrisy. 

"Our response was that we do not work as [people] smugglers and we won't do 
it," Barzani told a gathering of his Kurdistan Democratic Party in Erbil, the 
Kurdish provincial capital, last Thursday.

Barzani also lambasted the Baghdad government over other long-running disputes, 
such as oil and power-sharing with the central government. He renewed 
criticisms of Al-Maliki's authoritarian style of government and of his alleged 
attempts to marginalise the Kurds and Sunnis. 

"Some in Baghdad believe they are the rulers of Iraq and want to work 
unilaterally," he said. "They are losers who have failed to give Iraq anything, 
unlike what we have done for our people in Kurdistan, and they want us to be 
like them," Barzani said, echoing criticisms by many Iraqis that al-Maliki's 
government has failed to bring security and restore basic services to Iraq some 
seven years after assuming power. 

Barzani also defended the contracts his administration has signed with foreign 
oil companies, which Baghdad says are illegal. He said the contracts were fully 
constitutional and accused the Baghdad government of miscalculating the Kurdish 
share of the nation's resources. 

His remarks followed reports that US oil giant ExxonMobil had frozen its 
contract for six exploration blocs with the Kurdistan government after threats 
from Baghdad that it would block Exxon from bidding for future oil projects and 
would reconsider its role in other projects. 

Along with several other oil giants, Exxon is participating in projects 
intended to make Iraq the world's biggest source of new oil finds over the next 
few years, but the US company's decision to sign a deal with the Kurds last 
November has infuriated Al-Maliki's government.

Baghdad says the Kurds have broken Iraqi law by dealing directly with foreign 
companies, and it considers most of region's contracts with foreign companies 
to be illegal, arguing that any deals must receive the green light from Baghdad 
first.

In response, Barzani said that the contracts were "our policy, and we will not 
change that".

Barzani's remarks angered the Shia-led government in Baghdad, raising the 
political temperature to boiling point. The Shia Iraqi National Alliance also 
accused the Kurdish government of breaking the law by sheltering a fugitive, 
referring to Al-Hashemi. 

"While the Alliance is keen to maintain its strategic relations with the 
Kurdish Alliance and other Kurdish forces, it stresses the necessity of 
complying with the constitution, the law and the rulings of the judiciary," the 
Alliance said in a statement. 

The tensions seemed to be spinning out of control when members of the two blocs 
exchanged sharp words, Yassin Majeed, a member of Al-Maliki's ruling party, 
ridiculing Barzani's mention of "Kurdish ethics".

"I wonder if these Kurdish ethics allow [the Kurds] to shelter a man who has 
killed innocent people," Majeed asked at a press conference.

Majeed also accused Barzani of having handed over hundreds of Saddam's 
opponents to the former dictator's intelligence forces after the Iraqi 
Republican Guards stormed the Kurdish capital of Erbil in 1996.

In a further sign of escalation, several Shia lawmakers demanded that the 
Baghdad government suspend the 17 per cent share of the Kurdish government in 
Iraq's state budget and stop paying the salaries of the Peshmerga, the Kurdish 
paramilitary force.

Kurdish officials and lawmakers reacted strongly to the calls, with Kurdish 
government spokesman Omid Sabah Othman describing Majeed's comments as "immoral 
and unethical". 

Farhad Al-Atrushi, a Kurdish lawmaker, accused the Shia-led government of 
attempting to re-impose the old, Saddam-era system. It would "pay dearly for 
its policies towards the Kurds", he said. 

The growing tensions are in many ways shaping up to be a dispute over the 
future of the Kurds within a unified Iraq. Ever since the 2003 US-led invasion, 
Iraq's Kurds have enjoyed political autonomy that includes a regional 
government and parliament and an army under Kurdish control. 

Some Kurdish politicians are now threatening to secede from Iraq altogether. 
Barzani's deputy, Kosrat Rasoul, said that the domestic, regional and 
international circumstances were now in place for the declaration of a Kurdish 
state.

"If the declaration of a state was in my hands, I would declare it today rather 
than tomorrow," he was quoted as saying by the London-based Asharq Al-Awsat 
newspaper on Monday. "It is not logical that the Kurds have no state."

Barzani himself has on several occasions brandished the threat of Kurdish 
secession from Iraq.

The latest tensions have also come amid reports that the Kurdish government 
plans to hold a referendum on self-determination soon in Iraq's three Kurdish 
provinces, as well as in other Kurdish-populated towns in the disputed areas.

The war of words between Baghdad and the Kurdish regional government also comes 
at a time of deepening crisis between Al-Maliki and the Sunni Iraqiya bloc in 
Baghdad, triggered by the arrest warrant for Al-Hashemi and the dismissal by 
Al-Maliki of deputy prime minister Saleh Al-Mutleq. 

The moves caused some of Iraq's predominantly Sunni provinces, such as Anbar, 
Salaheddin, Diyala and Nineveh, to renew their calls to become federal regions 
and to gain greater autonomy from Baghdad.

Meanwhile, explosions rocked towns and cities across Iraq on Tuesday, killing 
and wounding hundreds of people. They were the latest in a spate of violence 
that has targeted Shia neighbourhoods, officials and police posts. 

The attacks, including one close to the foreign ministry building in Baghdad, 
come ahead of next week's Arab League summit meeting in the Iraqi capital, 
designed to showcase the government's ability to restore security to the 
country following the withdrawal of US troops in December.

With Iraq's Sunni-Shia political tensions and sectarian violence on the rise, 
the Kurdish-Shia dispute is becoming increasingly worrisome and threatening to 
the country's already fragile peace. 


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