Oct 31,  2004

Come Back to Kirkuk, Governor Beckons

Demo in The Hague Against Extradition To Turkey Of PKK Leader

Oct 30,  2004

Divisions Within The PUK

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

Political Parties In Western Kurdistan Call For Rally

 

Oct 29,  2004

Kurdish Guerrillas Attack Turkish Army

"Boom" Near The Zaitoon Division

Oct 26,  2004

News Snapshot

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

Oct 25,  2004

Protesters In Kirkuk Threaten To Boycott Elections

Kurdish Peaceful March Planned for October 31

Dawn of a New Day: Kurds Pleased With Bush

News Snapshot

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.

Oct 24,  2004

Turkey Looks South, and Worries

Police Chief Shot Dead in Southern Kurdistan

Turkish Regime: No Entry to Turkey With "Kurdistan On Passports"

Two Security Guards Killed In Attack By Kurdish Fighters

Italy Agrees To Take In 13 Kurdish Stowaways

Oct 23,  2004

Kurd Activist Sets Up New Party

Oct 22,  2004

Kurdish PM Meets With Top US Officials in Washington
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
 

Talabani: U.S. Mistreatment Blamed for Iraq Violence

Edelman: We Are Worried About Kirkuk

Passports Giving Birthplace as Kurdistan Rejected

Laughing Into The Void, Making The Machine Speak Kurdish

Oct 21,  2004

Powell Deputy Meets Nechirvan Barzani Amid Tension Over Kirkuk

Iraqi Investor Sees Resorts in the Kurdish North

Harbert's Parlak Faces New Charges

Third Trial For Kurdish ex-lawmakers, But No More Jail Time Risk

Oct 20,  2004

A Statement From Kurdistan Referendum Movement

New Political Party in Northern Kurdistan

Oct 18,  2004

Barzani Sees Kirkuk joining Southern Kurdistan

Oct 17,  2004

Barzani Warns neighbors Not To Meddle In Kirkuk Issue   

Turkish Regime Releases Mahdi Zana

Summit Discusses Kirkuk Discontent

Shiites Considering Alliance For Election

Losing Mosul?

News Snapshot

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.

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Iraq's Christians who are increasingly targeted by insurgents, are fleeing Baghdad for the safety of the Southern Kurdistan, reported AP.

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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.

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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.

Oct 16,  2004

Mehdi Zana Arrested On Return To Turkey

Osman Ocalan: Not Collaborating With U.S. Is Stupidity

Turkish Journalist Detained Over Interview With Kurdish Rebels: Colleague

 

News Snapshot

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

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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

Kurdish Activist Accuses EU Hopeful Turkey of 'Cosmetic' Changes 

A Clear Message To Barzani

Zana Requests Constitutional Support of Kurdish Self-Expression

Oct 14,  2004

Mass Kurdish Graves Unearth Evidence Against Saddam

"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

Turkey Claims Say Over Kirkuk

Turkish Media: Barzani Softens: Kirkuk is a Symbol of Cohabitation

News Snapshot

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

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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.

Oct 13,  2004

Massoud Barzani : Kurds Ready To Fight For Kirkuk

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

Oct 12,  2004

Syrian Regime Sentences a Kurdish Student To Three Years In Prison

Barzani Holds "Positive" Talks In Turkey

Kurds Disillusioned By The Main Parties But See No Alternative

New Movie Supports Iraq Invasion

The Zaitoon and Kurds: Partners for Reconstruction, Security

Turkish Contractor, Kurdish Translator Beheaded: Iraq Group's Video

Oct 11,  2004

Barzani and Salih Say Self Determination Is "People's Natural Rights"

Oct 9,  2004

Barzani Due In Turkey For talks On Kirkuk

Kurds See Bright Future In EU

Turkish Prime Minister slanders international human rights organizations

South Korean Troops To Restore Ancient Castle in Arbil

Quick Exit From Iraq Is likely

Kurd Activist Finally To Be Hailed For Rights Award

Oct 8,  2004

Iraq Militant Statement Claims Capture of Kurd, Killing Of Police Chief

Dispute Over Kirkuk Could Derail Iraqi Peace, Turkey Warns

News Snapshot

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

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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.

Oct 7,  2004

Yawer Says Referendum in Southern Kurdistan Is "National Betrayal"

Sweden To Resettle 368 Iran Kurds Stranded On Iraq-Jordan Border

Three Peshmarga, Civilian Killed In Attack North of Baghdad

EU Commission Says Yes To Turkey Talks

Kurds Continue To Flee Cities Of Sunni Triangle

Oct 6,  2004

News Snapshot

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.

Oct 5,  2004

Terrorist State Of Syria Tortures Kurdish Man To Death

Turkey Eases Repression Of Its Kurds

Oct 4,  2004

Turkey: Progress on Human Rights Key to EU Bid

Iran Warns Iraq Over Alleged Israeli Presence in Southern Kurdistan

News Snapshot

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.

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A Turkish soldier and a Kurdish rebel were killed in Northern Kurdistan, Turkish  state news agency Anatolia reported Sunday.

Oct 3,  2004

Kurds Demonstrate for Kirkuk's Incorporation In Autonomous Region

Leading Egypt MP says Israel spying on Iran, Syria from Iraqi Kurdistan

Istanbul's First Private Kurdish Course Opens

News Snapshot

In several Kurdish cities across Southern Kurdistan, tens of thousands of Kurds demonstrated, demanding an independent Kurdistan with Kirkuk as its capital.

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A Turkish soldier was killed and three others were wounded Saturday in fighting with Kurdish fighters in Northern Kurdistan, the Anatolia news agency reported.

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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.

Oct 1,  2004

Kirkuk Mayor's Bodyguard Found Shot Dead

Rebel Violence in Turkey Could Erode Kurds' Gains

Oil-rich South Holds Talks On Plan For Self-Rule

 

KurdistanObserver.com

Kurds' Separatist Ambitions Pose Challenge To Iraq Unity

SAID SADIQ, (Southern Kurdistan)-- Brigadier Rahim Mohammed Shakur's allegiance to the Iraqi Army is about as solid as the faxed sheet of paper he received two weeks ago, announcing that his Kurdish peshmerga fighters were now regular Iraqi soldiers, under Baghdad's command.

"I am a Kurd," Shakur, 42, said cheerfully last week, as his tank battalion trained with 100 Soviet tanks and armored personnel carriers that his fighters raided from Saddam Hussein's army in April 2003. "If we are ever attacked, I will stop being a regular Iraqi soldier and become a peshmerga again."

Iraqi Kurdistan's de facto independence from Baghdad -- and the popular desire in the three northern provinces to secede from Iraq -- could pose one of the thorniest problems over the coming year for the ethnic, religious, and political factions trying to craft a new Iraqi federal constitution.

The importance of the Kurds is not lost on US officials; on Monday, as American forces launched the attack on Fallujah, US Ambassador John Negroponte flew from Baghdad to Sulaymaniyah for a day to ask leaders from the PUK to commit to a smooth national election process.

As the sole oasis of stability and unwavering support for US policy in Iraq, the Kurds have made themselves an indispensable linchpin of Washington's hope to fashion a democratic Iraq. But the Kurds are wary allies, suspicious that the United States will barter Kurdish autonomy for the support of Iraq's Arab majority. And public opinion in the Kurdish provinces leans heavily toward declaring independence: about 1.7 million people signed a petition in April demanding a popular referendum on secession, and the independence movement has scheduled another conference for this week.

"I have no connection to Iraq," said Kharman Khasrow, 21, a history student at the University of Sulaymaniyah. She does not speak a word of Arabic.

"I've never been to Iraq. I wouldn't even want to go there," she said. When reminded that the Kurdish provinces are part of Iraq, she smiled and said: "I am in Kurdistan, not Iraq."

Separatist pushDepending on who is presenting the census figures, Kurds in Iraq number from 4 million to 7 million. Iraq's total population is about 25 million.

Kurds say 25 million to 40 million of their people live in territory divided between Turkey, Syria, Iraq, and Iran, with the lion's share, about half, in Turkey. The separatist movement in Iraqi Kurdistan provokes great anxiety in the neighboring countries, where well-armed Kurdish independence movements have smoldered for decades.

Iraqi Kurdish leaders fear that separatists will provoke Turkey to send in troops, as it did in the 1990s when Iraqi Kurdish political parties started sheltering Kurdish guerrillas from Turkey.

Subjected to a genocidal campaign by Hussein's government, the three northernmost Kurdish provinces won independence after the 1991 Persian Gulf War, when the US created a no-fly zone that kept the Iraqi Army away.

Now, many Kurds think any relation with a federal Iraqi government is too much, and are agitating for Kurdish leaders to annex, by politics or by force, a belt of cities historically considered part of Kurdistan -- including the flash point of Kirkuk; a series of smaller, Arab-majority cities running southward from Kirkuk to the Iranian border; and half of Mosul, Iraq's second largest city and a burgeoning resistance stronghold.

Tensions have flared over the issue before. The Kurdish parties threatened to withdraw from the new interim government in June because they felt Arab leaders did not respect Kurdish rights.

Such a move could prove disastrous, fragmenting the government along ethnic lines and provoking a fight over oil-rich Kirkuk, claimed by both Kurds and Arabs.

Kurdish politicians are eager to quell such concerns. "We won't occupy any place, and we won't oblige anyone to join Iraqi Kurdistan," said Nawshirwan Mustafa, a top official in the Patriotic Union of Kurdistan, or PUK, which controls the eastern half of the Kurdish provinces.

But, he said, Kurds insist that towns and cities be given free choice to join -- an expansion of the autonomous region that will exacerbate the concerns of Arab nationalists.

"We want our fair share," Mustafa said. "We want to create a new political tradition in Iraq, that Kurds are first class citizens."

North vs. south Sheik Sadoon Essa Yousif al-Qasimi, a Sunni Arab tribal leader from Salahuddin Province, which contains many towns claimed by the Kurds, thinks they are overrepresented in Baghdad. One of two vice presidents, the deputy prime minister, and the foreign minister are all Kurds.

"Kurds already control too much of the national government," he said.

Qasimi said he fears that Kurdish autonomy will prompt secession movements by Shi'ites in the south and Sunnis in central Iraq.

"We cannot allow such splits," he said. "We are one united Iraq."

But such debate in Baghdad ignores a reality obvious to anyone who travels to Iraqi Kurdistan, the official name for the three northernmost Kurdish provinces.

A de facto border, known as the Green Line, is guarded by peshmerga instead of Iraqi police or military. The US military presence, obvious throughout Iraq, vanishes northeast of the Green Line, where Kurdish forces have provided security since 1991.

Arabs who cross into Kurdistan must have permission letters or register with Kurdish security.

Most Kurds who went to school after 1991 never learned Arabic.

Instead of the Iraqi flag, most buildings fly a Kurdish flag, which replaces the three green stars representing Arab unity with a bright-yellow sun.

Until a few months ago, Kurdish phones shared England's international dial code -- a fluke of an underground phone system developed when Kurdistan was a rebel enclave in Hussein's Iraq.

US officials tiptoe around the issue, referring to the area as "the northern provinces." Even Hussein freely described the area as Kurdistan.

"People outside Iraq should know there's a huge difference between the north and south," said Omar Fattah, 52, prime minister of the PUK-controlled part of Kurdistan.

If violence forces a long postponement of national elections, Fattah said, the Kurdish provinces would consider holding their own vote for the Kurdistan Parliament, which was created in 1992.

"I am a Kurd, living within the frame of Iraq," Fattah said. "I live in Kurdistan. But the big Kurdistan was divided, and I'm in the part clinging to Iraq."

When Western powers redrew the Middle East's borders after World War I, territory inhabited by Kurds was split among Iraq, Turkey, Iran, and Syria. Since then, Kurds have fought for autonomy and the idea of a united greater Kurdistan.

Turkey's bloody war with its Kurds, now in a state of cease-fire, has claimed about 40,000 lives over two decades. The Turkish government has vehemently opposed independence for Iraqi Kurds, fearful that formal secession would provoke more violence among Turkey's separatists.

Indeed, the fear of outside intervention by Turkey or even Iran puts the biggest damper on the Kurdish secession movement.

"It's only the threat of invasion by the neighboring countries that makes us willing to accept being part of a federal Iraq," said Karzan Karem, 21, another student at the University of Sulaymaniyah who supports independence.

A risky futureBasit Hama Gharib, a leader of the Kurdistan Referendum Movement, said the petition with its 1.7 million signatures would be presented to American, British, and United Nations officials within the next month at UN headquarters in New York.

"After the fall of Saddam, the people of Kurdistan became part of Iraq without being asked," Gharib said.

He acknowledged that a referendum almost certainly would provoke a political crisis and very likely a war.

"Without a doubt, it is risky," he said. "But you cannot tear the root of independence from the heart of the people where it is anchored."

At the base of the new Iraqi Army's First Mechanized Infantry, Shakur proudly presented his troops; they still consider themselves peshmerga, a Kurdish word that means "he who faces death."

His division actually captured their Russian-made tanks and armored personnel carriers from Hussein's retreating Army in April 2003.

In his office at the tank base, Shakur has hung two of the most popular images, visible in virtually every home or office in this part of Kurdistan. One shows PUK leader Jalal Talabani, standing before the Iraqi Governing Council last spring, brandishing an Ottoman-era map that shows the areas of Iraq that were historically part of Kurdistan, including Kirkuk.

The other is a modern-day map of greater Kurdistan, the nightmare of Ankara, Damascus, and Tehran: It stretches to include vast swaths of territory populated by Kurds in Turkey, Iran, Syria, and Iraq.

"We are 40 million, but we have no country," Shakur said. "Iraqi Kurdistan is small. We want a big country. This is just the beginning, God willing."

Globe correspondent Sa'ad al-Izzi contributed to this report from Baghdad. Thanassis Cambanis can be reached at tcambanis@globe.com. 


 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

 

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