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KurdistanObserver.com
Kurds Overtake The Rest
ERBIL, Kurdistan-Iraq, May 10 (IPS) -
Kurds had long waited for the day when the new prime minister walked into the
parliament hall with his deputy and cabinet members.
The ceremony Sunday marked the coming together of the Patriotic Union of
Kurdistan (PUK) and the Kurdish Democratic Party (KDP) in a unified government,
after years of separation.
Nechirvan Barzani of the KDP was appointed the new prime minister. Omar Fatah of
PUK was appointed deputy prime minister. A 42-member cabinet took oath in a
105-member parliament.
The two Kurdish parties came together close to ten years after signing a peace
accord in Washington in 1997.
The coming together of the two Kurdish factions stood in marked contrast to what
is happening elsewhere in Iraq. A Kurdish parliament is now in place, in Baghdad
it is not.
The Kurdish government took shape following a long history of separation during
which the two parties governed different regions of Kurdistan in the north of
Iraq separately. Kurdish provinces have been under Kurdish control since the
1991 Gulf War.
The new Kurdish leadership plans to expand the areas under control to include
the oil-rich city of Kirkuk, which falls at present just outside the Kurd area.
Barzani declared Sunday his government will work "peacefully to recover the
rights that have been taken away." It was not a remark welcomed by Sunni and
Shia leaders at the ceremony. Kirkuk has a large non-Kurd population.
But Barzani's remarks are being taken seriously. When the first Kurd government
was established in 1992, only a handful of guests attended.. This time foreign
and Iraqi dignitaries swarmed the parliament hall.
"Their presence at the ceremony is a recognition of Kurds' entity, their power
and status in the soon to be formed Iraqi government," Fuad Baban, member of the
Kurdish parliament told IPS.
U.S. ambassador to Iraq Zalmay Khalilzad attended the ceremony, and did not fail
to acknowledge "the sacrifices of Kurdish peshmarga (fighters)" for the freedom
of Iraq.
In the Kurdish parliament there is little sign of Iraq. Everything is Kurdish,
down to the flag and the language.
Even the Iraqi flag hoisted here is not the one used in Baghdad. It is the one
used in Iraq in 1958 after the overthrow of the monarchy and establishment of
the first republican government.
The new unity, and the distinct Kurdish ways, are driven by good reasons. "The
unity and harmony among us is the catalyst for our current and future success,"
Barzani said.
The new cabinet includes ministers from various ethnic and religious groups to
"satisfy all sectarian, ethnic and political groups," new minister Mohammed Haji
Mahmoud from the Kurdistan Socialist Democratic Party told IPS..
Though not satisfied with the little role for his party in the cabinet, Mahmoud
said "we decided to participate in order to add a block to the wall of this
government."
The new cabinet was approved in less than 20 minutes, and all 42 cabinet members
were ratified with only a few 'nay' votes.
The formalities done, people are waiting to see how the parliament can change
their lives. They have become increasingly dissatisfied with the Kurdish
government. Quality of services is poor, and corruption has reached alarming
levels. "The government has to be up to people's expectations, and work to
provide better living conditions," said Aryan Mohammed, 23, a government
employee in Arbil. |
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