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KurdistanObserver.com
Kurdish Authorities Vow To Upgrade Services
After Protests
[This report does not necessarily reflect the views of the United Nations]
BAGHDAD, 19 March (IRIN) - The regional Kurdish
parliament in northern Iraq has formed a committee to investigate recent
protests in the city of Halabja, in the Sulaimaniyah governorate, after hundreds
of residents took to the streets last week calling for improved services.
More than half of Halabja's 60,000-strong
population depends on wells for their water needs and private generators for
electricity, say residents. In addition, local doctors point out that area
hospitals lack modern medical equipment and essential medicines. Roughly 90
percent of the city's roads, meanwhile, remain unpaved.
On 16 March, security forces tried to break up
a demonstration by residents, who demanded a quicker pace for urban
reconstruction. A 17-year-old boy was killed in the melee and nearly 10 others
were injured.
During the course of the fray, some 2,000 angry
residents damaged a monument commemorating those killed in a 1988 gas attack on
the city, launched by deposed president Saddam Hussein. Demonstrators claimed
that the regional government has done little to help survivors, and that
politicians have made money at the expense of residents' suffering.
Since the disturbances, scores of protest
participants have fled the city, said locals, with security forces arresting
hundreds of residents in the past three days. "Those behind the damage of the
monument must be arrested and interrogated," said Emad Ahmed, deputy prime
minister of the Kurdistan government. "And those among the security forces will
be interrogated as well," he added, declining to elaborate.
Ahmed went on to say that an official committee
would meet with Halabja dignitaries and residents to discuss their complaints.
According to independent Kurdish MP Mahmoud Othoman, both the international
community and the Iraqi central government have failed to honour their promises
to Halabja. This, he explained, has led to "the failure of the regional
government". Othoman added, however, that the regional parliament would try to
address residents' demands.
Halabja suffered badly under the former regime.
An estimated 5,000 residents were killed in 1988, when Hussein allegedly ordered
a gas attack on the city as part of a campaign to crack down on Kurds who he
claimed were supporting Iran in its 1980-88 war with Iraq.
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