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KurdistanObserver.com
Shia Kurds Go It Alone
By IWPR reporters in Baghdad/ Jan 25, 2005
Faili Kurds say they are determined to run as independents in the upcoming
elections in Iraq, after refusing offers to join the big Shia and Kurdish
coalitions.
"As Failis, we took part in helping the Kurdish movements during their struggle
against the dictatorship of Saddam, and now we are gaining our own results,"
said Farhad Ali, a 34-year-old Faili trader.
"For this reason we have decided to run in the election without anyone's help."
The Failis, Shia Kurds who live in Baghdad and the border area between Iraq and
Iran, see the election as an opportunity to have a voice in government at last.
They faced severe repression under Saddam Hussein, who in the early Eighties
accused them of being Iranians and deported hundreds of thousands of them,
confiscating their property and identification documents.
Twenty years later, two political parties are representing the Failis in the
forthcoming election. The Islamic Union of Iraqi Faili Kurds is going it alone,
standing as a separate party; while the Free Faili Kurdish Organisation is
running in the Justice and Future list together with the Democratic Justice and
Progress Party.
Said Rajab Rahim, secretary general of the Free Faili Kurdish Organisation, said
his group was approached by the United Iraqi Alliance, the top Shia list, and by
the main Kurdish list which unites the two big Kurdish parties.
But neither coalition offered a good enough placing on its list of candidates.
Each party vying for the 275 seats in Iraq's transitional National Assembly has
drawn up a list of candidates, ranked first to last. The seats will be allocated
according to the percentage that each party wins in the nationwide election.
"The Kurds asked us to join their list offering two seats for us, but we refused
because that quota did not satisfy us, and we didn't know the position of the
two names on the list," said Rahim. "The parties in the United Iraqi Alliance
asked us to join their list with 12 names, but we were sure that the names would
be put at the bottom of the list."
Rahim said the Faili Kurds have a strong political platform and an established
movement which succeed on its own. His group's election manifesto includes
gaining back Faili rights, their Iraqi nationality and property, as well as
supporting a constitutional state which is democratic and ensures religious and
political freedom.
"We hope that justice can lead in all Iraq," said Rahim.
This story has not been bylined because of concerns for the security of IWPR
reporters.
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