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KurdistanObserver.com
Arabs Fear Kirkuk Purge
Aaron Glantz
KIRKUK, (Southern Kurdistan), Feb 7 (IPS) - ”When someone has the power, he will
take everything,” says retired soldier Mohammed Hassan Mohammed in a Shia mosque
in the Northern Iraqi city of Kirkuk.
Like most Shia Arabs in this oil-rich city, his family came here in the 1980s
during Saddam's massive campaign of ethnic cleansing against the Kurds. Like
most Shias here, his family came from the Iraqi military. And like most Shias
here, he rejects Kurdish claims that Kirkuk is a part of Kurdistan.
What about claims that Saddam killed or forcibly removed more than 100,000 Kurds
from Kirkuk and replaced them with Arabs, I ask. ”What they say is very
correct,” he says, ”but when you see what they're doing, it's like what Saddam
Hussein was doing.”
But Kurdish leaders are firm. They want all the Arabs who came to Kirkuk since
1975 to leave. Patriotic Union of Kurdistan (PUK) chief Jalal Talabani, the
Kurdish candidate for president or prime minsiter of Iraq, has made the
repatriation of Arabs from Kirkuk a non-negotiable point for a Kurdish-Shia
governing coalition in Baghdad.
Younger Arabs find the conflict simply ridiculous. Like a whole generation of
Arabs, 24-year-old medical resident Ali Falah has lived his whole life in
Kirkuk. ”This is my home,” he says. ”All of the time we feel the problem of the
Kurdish policy here but we don't agree with that. I feel that Kirkuk city is
like a mixture of all the types of people in Iraq. Like a small state. For what
reason are we fighting each other. Why can't we live as brothers. As Iraqi
people. That's all.”
But he feels that dream is slipping. The red, white and green Kurdish flag flies
throughout the city. All important government offices are now staffed with
officers of the major Kurdish political parties.
”When you walk into all the important offices of state here in Kirkuk,” Ali
Falah says, ”all the important signs in all the important offices are written in
Kurdish because they want to isolate Kirkuk from the centre.”
Like other Arabs, Ali Fatah says he will never leave the city of his birth, but
Kurdish politicians are unsympathetic.
”The principle is important,” Iraqi Kurdistan Prime Minister Necevin Barzani
told the Financial Times recently. ”Whether or not the children were born there
is a different issue. These people have occupied property that belonged to other
people and unrightfully settled. They should go back.”
Behind the bellicose rhetoric, however, there are at least some signs of a
peaceful solution ahead.
Sheikh Nife al-Jabouri has represented one of the largest Sunni tribes in
Northern Iraq on Kirkuk's local council since the overthrow of Saddam Hussein 22
months ago. His father and brother were killed by the regime after they
attempted an officers revolt against the government. After that, the Sheikh
says, the rest of his family was rounded up and put in prison.
This election year Sheikh Nife al-Jabouri ran for Kirkuk's local council on a
brotherhood slate that included both major Kurdish political parties. He has
been in regular negotiations with Kurdish leaders on the future of Kirkuk, and
he says he is getting ready for another round beginning Sunday in Arbil.
He is confident the repatriation will go smoothly. ”The Kurds will not try to
move people out in a hard way,” he says. ”That may be the way people talk on the
street but that's not the speech of their leaders at the negotiations. The Iraqi
government will offer people money to move and jobs in the south of Iraq and
then offer their houses here in Kirkuk to Kurdish refugees..”
And about the Arabs who do not want to move to the south?
”We should remember that in some countries you can become a citizen after living
there for just four or five years,” he said. ”Every person has a right to live
where he wants. We all want to live in peace and safety and brotherhood.”
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