Tuesday, 12 March, 2002, 15:53 GMT
*Saddam
renews Kurdish threats
The US and Iraq are both wooing the Kurds
By the BBC's Hiwa Osman
Iraqi President Saddam Hussein has tried to reach out to the country's
Kurdish population amid speculation that their areas could be used by the
United States as it contemplates extending its war on terror against Iraq.
In a speech on the 32nd anniversary of an historic agreement setting
out the rights of the Iraqi Kurds, he said Kurds should not be deceived
by "the foreigner", and should postpone their aspiration in the face of
threats facing Baghdad.
But he added that he was not calling for dialogue with them - he did
not want anyone "to have the illusion that this leadership is calling for
dialogue because it is under futile threats".
A Kurdish politician described the speech as "unbelievable".
Kurdish regions in Iraq have been outside Baghdad's control since 1991.
Wooing
Trying to woo over the Kurds, Saddam referred back to the agreement
of 11 March 1970, which had demonstrated the Iraqi people's "high level
of maturity, ability and patriotism to solve their problems themselves".
He asked the Kurds to compare between the treatment they had received
in Iraq and the fate of their brethren in neighbouring Turkey, Iran and
Syria, adding that he did not have any problem using words like "our Kurdish
people and Iraqi Kurdistan."
But, while urging the Kurds to gain their rights through dialogue, the
Iraqi leader said: "When we see that Iraq is going through difficult times,
we should postpone many things".
Dr Mahmoud Osman, a politician who led the Kurdish delegation at the
11 March agreement, told BBC News Online that Saddam's statement reminded
him of the negotiations in 1991.
"They told us that the Kurds have to ask for less than 1970 because
they entered two wars and that there was a conspiracy against them," Mr
Osman said. "We were asked to pay the price of what the Iraqi regime did."
Threats
The Iraqi president's speech was not without warnings and threats.
"I say to the Iraqi people, and to the Kurds in particular, that Iraqis
are clever, prudent and brave. The foreigner should not deceive them."
"We can disagree," he added. "But this should not put our powers at
the service of the foreigners."
If the US were to extend its campaign against terror to Baghdad, a possible
scenario would be to launch the attacks from Kurdish areas.
Saddam Hussein said that he was staying out of the Kurdish-controlled
areas "not because of the foreigners".
Federalism?
In the jousting between Washington and Baghdad to win over the Kurds,
the Iraqi president said his government was "the only regime that will
realise everything every Kurd aspires to".
Iraqi Kurds have been pushing for a relationship with Baghdad that would
be based on federalism.
This was declared in 1992 by the joint Kurdish parliament elected after
the withdrawal of Baghdad's administration from the Kurdish region.
Concluding his remarks, the Iraqi president said there was nothing wrong
with "discussing the improvement of the autonomy law".
Dr Osman saw this as "a mere tactic."
"He [Saddam] is only saying this because he is under threat. Once the
threat is removed he will use force again". |