The Kurdish paper, Hawlati, reported that deep divisions have surfaced
among the leadership of the Patriotic Union of Kurdistan (PUK) that
could lead to serious consequences for the party and its leader Mr.
Talabani.
More
A bomb hidden
near the Baghdad home of Foreign Minister Hoshyar Zebari was discovered and
defused Sunday, police said. In July, gunmen had opened fire on a car
belonging to Zebari killing one official and wounding two others. He was not
in the
vehicle at the time, reported AP
An Arab
Islamic group said it had assassinated the chief of police in Arbil and
warned to kill Kurdish leader Barzani. "This is a clear message to the ally
of the Jews, the agent Massoud Barzani, head of the Kurdistan Democratic
Party, to tell the scoundrel that we are coming and the hands of the
mujahideen will soon reach you, God willing, and America cannot help you,"
said the statement which was dated Sunday, reported Reuters
Two Turkish soldiers were killed when their vehicle hit a land mine in
Northern Kurdistan, reported the state owned news agency Anatolia. Also,
Anatolia said four soldiers were injured in a land mine explosion near the
city of Amed.
In an
official visit to Washington, the Kurdish PM Nechirvan Barzani arrived
in Washington late last week to explain his administration's stance on
several important issues regarding Southern Kurdistan and Iraq, a KDP
official told the Kurdistan Observer today.
More
A member of the
Turkoman Front political group was assassinated today in Southern Kurdistan
while driving his children to school, police said. Col. Burhan Taha said
politician Ghafour Abu Bakr was killed at 8.30am (local time) in Kirkuk when
unknown attackers opened fire, killing him and slighting injuring his two
children, reported Reuters yesterday.
----------------
Iraq's Christians who are
increasingly targeted by insurgents, are fleeing Baghdad for the safety of
the Southern Kurdistan, reported AP.
----------------
The US military said three soldiers, a marine
and a civilian translator were killed and one soldier wounded in two car
bombings on Friday, one in the northern city of Mosul and another near the
city of Qaim on Iraq's border with Syria. Also on
Saturday, a Kurd working
for the education ministry was shot dead in Mosul, reported AFP.
----------------
Kurdistan
Democratic Party is planning to launch a new satellite TV channel in
Southern Kurdistan. The new station, which will be called Zagros TV, will
start its broadcasting programs on November 1 of this year.
The KDP
leader Massoud Barzani began a three-day visit to Syria on Friday. Barzani,
who arrived form Jordan, said he would discuss a number of subjects with
Syrian leaders. They included federalism in Iraq, relations between the two
countries and the question of Kirkuk, reported AFP
Oct
15, 2004
•
News Snapshot
Syrian regime have arrested
three Kurds, human rights lawyer Anwar Bunni said on Thursday. "Military
security arrested three Kurds in the town of Amuda as part of the clampdown
linked to the fatal riots that took place last March in the northeast, he
said, repeating his call for political prisoners to be freed, reported AFP
----------------
A
representative of the PUK says that his party is prepared for an armed
struggle to ensure Kirrkuk’s Kurdistani identity. “We and the KDP share the
same view regarding this issue,” Sadon Faili, the PUK spokesperson in
Baghdad told daily Al-Hayat, referring to the culturally-stirred conflict of
Kirkuk, reported Peyamner
"I've been
doing grave sites for a long time, but I've never seen anything like this:
women and children executed for no apparent reason," said Mr Kehoe, who
spent five years investigating mass graves in Bosnia for the International
Criminal Tribunal for Yugoslavia.
More
Leyla Zana finally received
the European Parliament's Sakharov prize for human rights Wednesday after
being released in June from a decade in Turkish detention
----------------
According
to the Turkish daily paper Aksham, the Turkish president warned Barzani not
to follow the Isreali path, adding that Israel is the source of conflict
since it was established. Aksham also reports that Mr Barzani was told that
neither Turkey nor the neighboring countries will accept federalism that
would lead to an independent Kurdistan, and if Kurds go this way, they will
likely lose what they have achieved so far.
Massoud Barzani said that the oil-rich city of Kirkuk in Southern Kurdistan
had a Kurdish "identity" and vowed to fight any force attempting to oppress
its people, whether Kurds or other ethnic groups.
More
Turkey will face a
very stringent inspection mechanism on human rights and cultural freedoms
(read that as "Kurdish rights)." Additionally, if there are any unfortunate
developments concerning the military's influence in politics and foreign
relations -- like military intervention in a neighboring country -- the
negotiations will be suspended immediately, said
TDN columnist Gunduz Aktan
----------------
A German
delegation from the Baviera State visited Amed, Northern Kurdistan. The
delegation's Chairman Gabriel Goltz said they came to Amed to observe the
services given by the local authorities and the developments in the
villages, directly.
In a joint press
conference in Irbil with the British Foreign Minister Jack straw who arrived
in Irbil on Tuesday, the Kurdish Prime Minister Nechirvan Barzani said "Our
policy and stance is clear, we refuse to compromise on any grounds regarding
Kirkuk," refuting the speculations that UK puts pressure on the Kurdish
leaders to make concessions on Kirkuk.
In a second day of
demonstrations in the Kurdish city of Kirkuk, protestors brandished banners
calling for the departure of the Arabs and the return of Kurds chased from
their homes as part of Saddam's efforts to change its population makeup.
Demonstrators also called for the departure of loyalists of the old regime
they accused of blocking the return of displaced Kurds.
----------------
A Turkish
soldier and a Kurdish rebel were killed in Northern Kurdistan, Turkish
state news agency Anatolia reported Sunday.
In several Kurdish cities
across Southern Kurdistan, tens of thousands of Kurds demonstrated,
demanding an independent Kurdistan with Kirkuk as its capital.
----------------
A Turkish soldier was killed
and three others were wounded Saturday in fighting with Kurdish fighters in
Northern Kurdistan, the Anatolia news agency reported.
----------------
The newly appointed Secretary General of KDP
in Eastern (Iranian) Kurdistan, Mustafa Hijiri, says that his party has
detailed information about Al Qaida training camps in Iran. "We have
detailed intelligence reports on the training locations of members belonging
to Al Qaida and Ansar al Islam organizations," Hijiri said in an interview
published by Kurdish daily Medya.
America failing test of history as offensive compared to
terror tactics of pariah states
By Charles Glass in Suleimania
Belfast Telegraph
November 9, 2004
Muslim fundamentalist insurgents seeking to topple the government are holed up
in a conservative city with little sympathy for secularism or pluralism. They
raise the banner of Islam, and they call on the rest of the country to rise up
and expel the oppressors. The government reacts by massing forces around the
city. It demanded that the militants surrender or the city give them up. If not,
the city would be destroyed. Fallujah this week? Yes, but it was also the Syrian
city of Hama in the spring of 1982.
The fundamentalist Muslim Brotherhood seized Hama as the first step towards its
goal of a national uprising against the secular Baathist regime. The Syrian
President demanded their surrender. His army shelled the city, and special
forces went in to kill or capture the militants. The Syrians employed the same
strategy that the US is using now. Its tanks and artillery waited outside the
city; they fired on militants and civilians alike. Its elite units, like the
American Marines surrounding Falljuah today, braced themselves for a bloody
battle.
The US condemned Syria for the assault that is believed to have cost 10,000
civilian lives. The Syrian army destroyed the historic centre of Hama, and it
rounded up Muslim rebels for imprisonment or execution. Syria's actions against
Hama came to form part of the American case that Syria was a terrorist state.
Partly because of Hama, Syria is on a list of countries in the Middle East whose
regimes the US wants to change.
Iraq's American-appointed Prime Minister, Iyad Allawi, declared a state of
emergency on Sunday to assume powers reminiscent of those wielded by Saddam
Hussein: to break up public gatherings, enter private houses without warrants
and detain people without trial. Perhaps in waging war against the Iraqis who
want to expel the Americans and topple America's chosen Iraqi leaders, the
insurgents have compelled the US and its Iraqi allied regime to behave like the
two Baathist regimes that they believed were so totalitarian they had to go.
Other Iraqi cities must now fear the use of what The New York Times
correspondent Tom Friedman called "Hama rules" against them. Unrest in the
northern city of Mosul, where relations between its Kurdish and Arab residents
have deteriorated to the point where Arabs on the west bank of the Tigris and
Kurds to the west rarely cross the bridges to each other's neighbourhoods.
Already, because the autonomous Kurds of northern Iraq are the only ethnic group
allied to the US in Iraq, Arabs have begun killing Kurds. And Kurds are seeking
refuge in the Kurdish-controlled northern region.
Mosul was the social base [of the Baath], said the deputy leader of the
Patriotic Union of Kurdistan, Noshirwan Ali Moustafa, in Suleimania. "There were
24,000 military officers from Mosul. The city is very poor. People went into the
army and government service."
With the army disbanded and most of the civil service unemployed, thousands of
young men in Mosul have no work. The insurgents have made strong appeals to them
to change their conditions by expelling the Americans. Religious appeals have
turned against the Kurds.
Residents report that graffiti in Mosul has appeared saying: "Kill a Jew. Kill a
Kurd."
Insurgent forces in Falluja are connected to those already in Mosul, the
interior minister of the Kurdistan Democratic Party's government in the Kurdish
region, Karim Sinjari. Sinjari, said. Abu Musab Zarqawi's representative in
Mosul, a man he called Abu Talha, was actively promoting attacks on US forces
there, he said.
"They [Islamic militants] exist in Fallujah, Baghdad and especially Mosul. Right
now, a majority of the Kurdish Ansar al-Islam people are in Mosul. From Mosul,
they want to carry out operations in Dohuk and Arbil. They have carried out two
operations against this ministry." Mr Sinjari referred to two suicide bombings
aimed at himself in the past year.
The Iraqi forces with the Americans outside Falluja include Kurds, but the
Kurdish leadership has been careful to avoid sending Kurdish units into battle
against Arabs. They fear a backlash against the estimated two million Kurds who
live in Arab areas such as Baghdad, Mosul and Samarra.
William Polk, who served President John Kennedy in the state department, wrote
recently: "Most Iraqis regard the government as an American puppet. The idea
that America can fashion a local militia to accomplish what its powerful army
cannot do is not policy but fantasy."