http://www.atimes.com/atimes/Middle_East/MB19Ak03.html

Feb 19, 2011 

Protests spread to Iraqi Kurdistan 
By Mohammed A Salih 


SULAIMANIYA - At least one person died and dozens were injured on Thursday in 
Iraqi Kurdistan's second largest city as angry protesters attacked the local 
headquarters of one of the two ruling Kurdish parties, while an opposition 
building was set ablaze in the Kurdish capital. 

The violence broke out in Sulaimaniya following a rally organized by a number 
of civil society groups to express solidarity with protesters in Egypt and 
Tunisia and protest the poor state of public services and corruption in the 
autonomous Kurdish region. 

Hours after the attack on the Kurdistan Democratic Party's (KDP) building in 
Sulaimaniya, the local headquarters of the Gorran (Change) opposition movement 
in Irbil was set on fire. 

A Gorran leader told Inter Press Service (IPS) his group held the KDP 
responsible for the attack on its Irbil branch. Security forces in Irbil are 
mostly loyal to the KDP. 

Mohammed Tofiq, Gorran's spokesman, said his party "has had nothing to do with 
the protests" in Sulaimaniya and the attack on KDP's building. 

"We are fundamentally against what happened today. If we wanted to organize 
protests we would have done it publicly," Tofiq said. He criticized the guards 
at the KDP's building for shooting at demonstrators. 

The KDP is led by Massoud Barzani, the president of the Kurdistan region of 
Iraq. KDP's old rival and current ally, the patriotic Union of Kurdistan (PUK), 
is the other major ruling party in the Kurdish government. Jalal Talabani, the 
PUK's head, is president of Iraq. 

Thursday's incidents in northern Iraq broke out amid a wave of mass protests 
that has galvanized several Middle Eastern countries in the recent weeks, 
leading to the collapse of two governments in Egypt and Tunisia. 

Iraqi Kurdistan has witnessed several demonstrations in the past few years 
where people protested corruption and mismanagement. A number of people were 
killed and injured during those protests as well. 

The organizers of the Thursday rally in Sulaimaniya had called on the 
protesters to disperse after a few speeches were read out in line with the 
protest's objectives. But many people continued marching toward nearby Salim 
Street, where a number of high-profile government and party buildings are 
based. 

On arriving at the local headquarters of the KDP, the protesters started 
chanting slogans against Kurdish rulers. Minutes later, they began throwing 
stones at the KDP's building, shattering its windows. 

Eyewitness accounts say panicking guards of the building started opening fire 
on the demonstrators. Sulaimaniya's top health official told the local media 
that one person died and over 50 others were injured as a result of the 
shooting. 

"I could hear the sound of bullets whizzing by my head. At that second I 
thought that I was going to die. They were shooting right into the crowd," 
Karzan Kardozi, a blogger who was among the protesting crowd Thursday, told 
IPS. "We hid in a parking lot for about three minutes and they were still 
shooting." 

"There should be an inquiry," Kardozi said. "Those who shot the people should 
be brought to justice or the government will further lose credibility with its 
people." 

There are fears that increasing tensions in Iraqi Kurdistan might lead to 
serious instability, especially in light of regional events and the prospect of 
further protests. 

Many see Thursday's demonstrations as an outburst of pent-up frustrations among 
sections of the Kurdish society toward the failure of Kurdish authorities to 
deliver in key areas such as providing services, combating what is often seen 
as rampant corruption and undertaking serious political reforms. 

"The ruling establishment in Kurdistan has failed to carry out serious 
self-criticism, review of its action and take serious measures accordingly to 
address the public grievances," said Rahman Gharib, an activist who was among 
the protesters. 

"The fact that there is widespread domestic discontent coupled with the current 
storm of protests in the region must have compelled the Kurdish authorities to 
meet public demands," he said. 

Shortly after the bloody incident in Sulaimaniya, the KDP put out a statement 
saying, "The security forces did not play their role adequately, the small 
number of guards protecting the [KDP's] building had to defend themselves. 
Unfortunately, as a result a number of attackers were hit." 

Unlike Irbil, most of the security forces in Sulaimaniya are loyal to the PUK. 

Sulaimaniya, once a stronghold of the PUK, is currently dominated by the Gorran 
opposition movement. Inspired by the popular uprisings in Egypt and Tunisia, 
Gorran issued a statement in late January calling for the dissolution of the 
Kurdish government and parliament. 

That infuriated the governing parties, which accused the opposition group of 
attempting to launch a "coup" on the "legitimate" institutions of Iraqi 
Kurdistan. 

The current Kurdish government and parliament were born out of elections in 
July 2009 that were largely endorsed as "free and fair" by the Iraqi electoral 
commission and international observers. 

Many of Gorran's current leaders occupied senior positions within the PUK but 
split from the group in 2006. Gorran's top leader, Nawshirwan Mustafa, was the 
PUK's number two for years. 

The opposition occupies 26 seats in the 111-member parliament. The two ruling 
parties have 59 deputies in the chamber. 

Many in Kurdistan have cautioned against any major protests, saying the 
situation in the autonomous region is essentially different from Egypt, Tunisia 
or other Arab countries. 

The fact that Kurdistan is not an independent state has created fears that any 
major upheaval would practically spell the end of the Kurdish political entity 
in northern Iraq. 

Such unrest also threatens to reverse the safety and increasing prosperity of 
Kurdistan, which over the past several years have distinguished it from the 
rest of chaos-stricken Iraq. 

Internationally recognized "free and fair" elections, a relatively free media 
atmosphere and the presence of legal and government-paid political opposition 
parties distinguish Kurdistan significantly from most parts of the Middle East. 

But growing social injustice, widespread corruption, family rule and nepotism 
have led to deep-seated anger and sense of exclusion among many people, 
especially the youth. 

On Wednesday, demonstrators in the southern Iraqi province of Wasit stormed the 
building of the provincial administration and council. Clashes there left at 
least three people dead and dozens more injured. 

(Inter Press Service)

[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



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