In an interview with London's Financial Times after the Jan. 30 elections, Hoshyar Zebari, the interim foreign minister of Iraq, said he expected the joint DPK-PUK Kurdish list to win 75-85 of the 275 seats in the consituent assembly and to hold the "balance of power" that would allow Kurds to be "the arbiters of many key decisions." -- He criticized the unofficial referendum on the independence of Kurdistan that was held in parallel with Sunday's elections and discounted its significance....
World
Middle East and Africa
KURDS 'HOLD BALANCE OF POWER' IN IRAQ By Gareth Smyth
Financial Times (UK) February 1, 2005
http://news.ft.com/cms/s/2161096e-747f-11d9-a769-00000e2511c8.html
The Iraqi Kurds are now the "arbiters" of politics in Iraq and can win the
"big prize" of autonomy, Hoshyar Zebari, Iraq's interim foreign minister, has
said.
Mr. Zebari, a leading official in the Kurdistan Democratic party, said he
expected the Kurdish list to take 75-85 of 275 parliamentary seats and hold the
balance between the main Shia list, topped by Abd al-Aziz Hakim, and the list of
Iyad Allawi, the interim prime minister.
"We will be the arbiters of many key decisions," he said in an interview with
the Financial Times.
Since the high Kurdish turnout in Sunday's election, the KDP has been
consulting the Patriotic Union of Kurdistan (PUK), the second main party on the
list.
Mr. Zebari said the two parties would keep "a coherent and united [Kurdish]
position -- if we are going to side, hypothetically, with the Shia list, it is
because they are going to run the government according to what we want. We will
pick and choose."
Mr. Zebari refused to "reveal our cards" on whom the Kurds might support as
prime minister.
Neither would he reveal which senior position the Kurds would seek. However,
he agreed the post of parliamentary speaker would be "very important, a key
position" as the parliament drew up over the next 11 months a new constitution,
which the Kurdish leaders want to recognize the substantial autonomy the Kurds
have exercised since 1991.
Mr. Zebari said the election had given the Kurdish leaders a renewed mandate
and he attacked the Kurdish referendum movement, which in December gave a
1.7m-signature petition for independence to the United Nations and on Sunday
gathered unofficial votes for the cause.
He said the movement questioned "the credibility of the Kurdish leadership
when we need to speak with one language . . . [in] going for the big
prize of a democratic, federal and united Iraq".
Mr. Zebari criticized U.S. management of Iraqi politics since May 2003, when
Washington rejected a proposal from the former opposition to Saddam Hussein for
the early establishment of a sovereign government.
"Every step now is a repetition of what we [the former opposition] agreed
then, but after so much blood has been shed, so many resources wasted, so much
time spent in crisis," he said.
But Mr. Zebari disagreed with those who argued in the election for a
timetable for withdrawing U.S.-led forces.
He said to do so without a "viable Iraqi force" would "give motivation and
encouragement to the enemy".
Mr. Zebari said the mandate of U.S.-led forces under U.N. Security Council
resolution 1546 lasted until a new government was elected under a new
constitution in December.
"Then it would be up to the government to decide whether to reach a
status-of-forces agreement, as many countries have done, or to say, thank you
very much [goodbye]," he said. |