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In Iraq’s North, Ethnic Strife Flares
as Vote Draws Closer


January 28th, 2009

Arabs Hope to Curb Power Of Kurdish Government

http://www.washingtonpost.com

A wall in Baghdad is plastered with posters for provincial elections, scheduled for Saturday. North of Baghdad in Nineveh, Arabs are expected to win a majority over Kurds. (By Wathiq Khuzaie — Getty Images)
Abdullah Humedi Ajeel al-Yawer, a tribal leader in northern Iraq and one of the founders of the al-Hadba-a political party, at a rally at his compound. (By Ernesto Londoño — The Washington Post)
QARAQOSH, Iraq — Iraq’s upcoming provincial elections have exacerbated tensions along the ethnically mixed frontier between the traditionally Arab parts of the country and its Kurdish autonomous region in the north.
As Election Day looms in Nineveh province, where the most dramatic power shift is expected, Sunni Arab politicians are vowing to curb the influence of the Kurdish regional government, which in recent years has sent millions of dollars and thousands of soldiers into villages south of the territory it formally controls.

The 2005 elections, which most Sunni Arabs boycotted, left Nineveh province solidly in the hands of Kurds, a minority in the predominantly Arab province. The Kurds currently hold 31 of the 37 seats on the provincial council, the equivalent of an American state legislature. In the vote set for Saturday, Arabs in Nineveh are widely expected to win a comfortable majority.
Taking the reins of Nineveh’s government would allow Arabs to appoint a governor and use their political power to roll back Kurdish expansion, which is being bitterly contested in villages across the 300-mile swath of disputed territories, as well as in Baghdad and in Irbil, the capital of the Kurdish autonomous region. Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki, a Shiite Arab, and Massoud Barzani, the president of the Kurdistan Regional Government, have exchanged heated accusations in recent weeks, underscoring the intensity of a conflict that U.S. officials and Iraq experts have come to view as Iraq’s most potentially destabilizing.
The power struggle has made battlegrounds of places such as Qaraqosh, Iraq’s largest Christian town, which lies about 15 miles southeast of Nineveh’s capital, Mosul. Sherbel Issou, Qaraqosh’s senior priest, prides himself on having kept his flock largely unscathed by war. But in recent months, as the rhetoric has sharpened and campaign promises have begun sounding like calls for battle, residents of the disputed areas are feeling squeezed.
“We’re the land in between,” the chipper 65-year-old priest said. “When there’s a battle, it’s people like us who get caught up in the front lines. We provide security for the people in this town. But we can’t seal the town off to everybody.”
Wedged between the devastated city of Mosul and the prosperous Kurdish autonomous region, Qaraqosh is home to roughly 40,000 Assyrian Christians, who have lived for the past five years in the shadow of the insurgency.
Largely invisible to the provincial and central governments, the town has had only one reliable, undisputed authority since 2003: the church. Shortly after the war began, the Kurdistan Democratic Party opened an office here. A banner posted at the party’s headquarters proclaimed, “Under the parliament and government of the Kurdistan region, the Assyrians, Chaldeans and Turkmens will enjoy their rights.”
Soon afterward, as violence picked up in Nineveh, Sarkis Aghajan, the Kurdish region’s finance minister, began funding a Christian militia that currently has 1,200 members in Qaraqosh and surrounding villages.
“I don’t ask where the money comes from,” Issou said, noting that he has never bothered to determine whether it comes from the Kurdish government’s coffers. “I don’t want to know. They pay the salaries for those guards to feed their families, so we bless them.”
Shortly after the U.S.-led invasion, the Kurdish government began deploying soldiers of its militia, the pesh merga, to towns in Nineveh and other provinces that border the Kurdish region. In the years that followed, as the Iraqi army and police forces were disbanded and a burgeoning insurgency took control of vast stretches of the country, the presence of the Kurdish militia drew little criticism.
After the 2005 elections, non-Kurds in several villages in northern Iraq said the militia’s soldiers had prevented them from voting. In Qaraqosh, residents awoke on Election Day thrilled by the prospect of casting votes.
“We waited from morning until noon,” Issou said. But the ballots never came. Later, Issou said, town leaders discovered that ballot boxes earmarked for Qaraqosh had been taken to a neighboring town and stuffed with ballots marked for Kurdish candidates.
“So much for freedom and democracy,” he said, laughing.
Nineveh has become Iraq’s most restive province. As violence has ebbed across the country in recent months, the U.S. military has shifted troops and resources to Mosul, now among the country’s most dangerous cities.
Governance of the province, by all accounts, has been disastrous. The sitting provincial council does not dispute that, but it blames the central government in Baghdad for withholding its budgeted funds and otherwise thwarting the authority of local leaders.
“We can’t even appoint a policeman without getting approval from the ministries in Baghdad,” complained Khosro Goran, Nineveh’s deputy governor. “In Baghdad, there has been a lot of pressure on us because they know this government belongs to the Kurdish parties, and they’re always trying to link us to their problems with” the Kurdish regional government.
Much of Mosul remains in shambles. Millions of dollars that the central government sent to the province last year to fund reconstruction projects have vanished. Tens of thousands of residents have been displaced, including many Christian families who fled the city last fall amid a string of killings.
Kurdish leaders say Sunni insurgents were behind the slayings. Some Arab politicians have blamed the Kurds, suggesting that the campaign was designed to undermine confidence in the central government’s security forces.
Arab parties have accused Kurdish officials and their proxies of intimidating and detaining their candidates, and expressed concern that Kurdish soldiers will keep voters from polling sites Saturday in areas where Kurds are expected to do poorly. The Kurds reject those accusations and call their opponents political novices who have ties to the insurgency.
U.S. and Iraqi officials say they fear that the perception of unfair elections on the part of either side, or both, could trigger a fresh wave of violence. On Tuesday, a bomb detonated near an office of the Kurdistan Democratic Party in Mosul, killing three policemen. It was unclear whether the office was the intended target.
“It could get very nasty because the stakes are so high,” said Joost Hiltermann, an Iraq expert at the nonpartisan International Crisis Group. “You’re going to have allegations of fraud. Parties that lose are not going to accept that.”
Even if the political stalemate doesn’t turn violent, a protracted fight over disputed areas is likely to create breathing room for insurgent groups such as al-Qaeda in Iraq, which has clung onto Mosul.
“Nineveh is a place where all the fault lines of Iraq meet,” a senior U.S. official in Baghdad said.
Abdullah Humedi Ajeel al-Yawer, a wealthy, influential tribal leader who is one of the founders of the largest opposition party, al-Hadba-a, says he is eager to keep the fight in the political arena. But in a province with only a short, troubled history of democracy and a mix of politically malleable armed forces, his faith in the power of the ballot box is limited
Some of his candidates have been detained and their offices ransacked, he said. Hadba-a candidates say they have been forced to campaign in whispers in areas controlled by the pesh merga.
Humedi, 40, a towering man who travels with a small army of bodyguards, takes pride in his ability to quickly mobilize tribesmen, saying he can gather tens of thousands of men in a few hours.
“I personally work against violence,” Humedi said recently, sipping espresso in the living room of his palatial fortress near the Syrian border. “I try to keep my people out of the violence. But to protect ourselves? We will do anything to protect ourselves and our democracy. All options are on the table.”
Kurdish candidates call such rhetoric dangerous — but not surprising from leaders they say have checkered pasts.
“Where were the political parties that are competing with us now?” Khalil Ismail, a Kurdish candidate in Qaraqosh asked defiantly. “Were they with the political process or with the terrorists?”
The fight for votes is complicated by the vast oil reserves in the disputed region and competing ancestral claims to them by Arabs and Kurds, who in recent decades have been pushed in and out of the area, often by force.
“The debate is quite legitimate,” the senior U.S. official said. “And it’s a debate that is likely to go on for years, even in a prosperous Iraq. The line has never really been drawn. It’s going to be very difficult to determine the boundary in this dispute because the population has shifted so many times and so dramatically.”
Special correspondents Dlovan Brwari and Zaid Sabah contributed to this report.

 

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Views and opinions expressed in these articles do not necessarily reflect that of the christiansofiraq.com or its staff .


 

 

 

 





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Kanoon II = January

In Iraq’s North, Ethnic Strife Flares as Vote Draws Closer Jan. 28 - 2009

US Lawmakers Send Letter to Clinton on Behalf of Iraq's Assyrians Jan. 28 - 2009

Assyrians in North Iraq Fear Ballot Rigging in January 31 Elections Jan. 28 - 2009

Iraq Militants Kill Assyrian; Pope Urges Authorities To Intervene Jan. 24 - 2009

Assyrian and Armenian Rally in front of The Turkish Embassy in London Jan. 24 - 2009

The upcoming rally in Berlin Jan. 23 - 2009

Iraqi Bishops Launch Appeal to Pope to Stop Christians Fleeing Jan. 23 - 2009

Anatolia Festival 2009 - Assyrian Concert Jan. 22 - 2009

Barzani vows to work for “a more tolerant Ninewa”
Jan. 22 - 2009

Assyrian You Tube 3 Jan. 21 - 2009

Art exhibit in Baghdad Jan. 21 - 2009

Demonstration in Berlin: “Save the Syrian Orthodox monastery Mor Gabriel! Save Christianity in Turkey!” Jan. 20 - 2009

The  growing apprehesion  in Iraq about  Kurd's aspirations Jan. 20 - 2009

The Assyrian Monastery: an Opportunity For Turkey To Lead By Example Jan. 20 - 2009

Reasons behind attempts against the Assyrian Monastery in Turkey Jan. 19 - 2009

CIGI Report-Minorities in Iraq. Jan. 10 - 2009

Brief Assyrian Church History Jan. 9 - 2009

Turkish Man Returns Property of 1915 Assyrian Genocide Victims
Jan. 9 - 2009

Hrant Dink Day 2009 in London Jan. 8 - 2009

Assyrian Veteran Became State Senator Jan. 7 - 2009

Assyrian youtube update3 Jan. 3 - 2009

Greatest gift for Iraqi Christians — returning home Jan. 2 - 2009

Swedish Asylum Case Hiighlights Dangers for Iraq's Assyrians
Jan. 3 - 2009

Turkey Inches Toward Genocide Recognition January 3 -2009

Kanoon I = December

In Mosul, Iraqi Christians Brave the Violence to Celebrate Christmas
Dec. 25, 08

Turkmen Turkish ( and Assyrian) edorced as official languages in Kirkuk
Dec. 24, 08

Turkish Court Reschedules Hearings on Assyrian Monastery
Dec. 24, 08

Finnish Church Leaders Ask Turkey to Safeguard Assyrian Monastery
Dec. 23, 08

Iraq: Christmas hampers distributed to victims of persecution
Dec. 23, 08

A new book for Assyrians during Christmas Dec. 23, 08

Bishop’s fear for Iraqi Christians Dec. 23, 08

Baghdad celebrates first public Christmas amid hope, memories
Dec. 21, 08

Australia Assists Victims Of Sectarian Violence In North Iraq
Dec. 19, 08

Assyian er Nestorian christianity and the Roman Church Dec. 18, 08

Westminster Hall Debate of the House of Commons on: Christians in Iraq
Dec. 18, 08

US Turns 'Blind Eye' to Persecution of Christians in Iraq, Congressman Says Dec. 18, 08

Islamists Drive Christian Assyrians Out of Nineveh Dec. 16, 08

Thousands of Assyrians Rally in Sweden in Support of Besieged Monastery in Turkey Dec. 15, 08

Lost Christianity: Golden age of Church in Middle East and Africa
Dec. 15, 08

EU Lawmakers Raise Concerns Over Threats to Assyrian Monastery in TurkeyDec. 12, 08

Lobby for the Minorities of Iraq Dec. 12, 08

Jews, Assyrians share worship space Dec. 12, 08

Why Attacks on Iraq Christians Largely Under-reported? Dec. 10, 08

Assyrian Tube videos updated Dec. 9, 08 Dec. 09, 08

Turkey Disrespectful of Christianity and Assyrians: Swedish MPs
Dec. 09, 08

Iraqi Christians in Need; Christmas Charity Fair Dec. 05, 08

invitation to Seminars About Middle-East Minorities
Dec. 05, 08

Evangelical sects put Iraqi Christians in danger, Iraqi bishop says
Dec. 05, 08

Islam: Catholic - Islam Marriage 'Drama' Dec. 04, 08

Call for Investigation Into Egypt Church Attack Dec. 04, 08

EU MP Critical of Kurdish Treatment of Assyrians and Other Iraqi Minorities Dec. 04, 08

Assyrian Poetry At the British Museum Dec. 03, 08

Iraq bids to stop Christie's sale of ancient earrings Dec. 03, 08

Encouraging the Exodus of Iraqi Christians will decimate an ancient community Dec. 03, 08

Turkey Attempting to Confiscate Assyrian Monastery's Land Dec. 02, 08

Situation of Iraqi Assyrians Often Overlooked: EU MP Dec. 01, 08

Tishreen II = November

Qatar-Museum to host prestigious exhibition Nov. 28- 2008

Some fearful Christians hope to flee Iraq Nov. 28- 2008

Iraq's vice president ; Iraqi governmental is hiding facts about killing and Expelling Christians from Mosul Nov. 28- 2008

Assyrian Police in North Iraq Protest Against Marginalization
Nov. 26- 2008

Rosie Malek-Yonan; Children of Assyria Nov. 26- 2008

Who Will Help Middle Eastern Christians Nov. 25- 2008

In Mosul, a Battle for Christians Nov. 24- 2008

US troops safeguard Iraq’s oldest assyrian monastery Nov. 23- 2008

Iraqi Crisis Report; Mosul Christians Reluctant to Return
Nov. 21- 2008

Dutch Report reveals Kurdish cultural, ethnic and economic oppression of
the Assyrians in Iraq
Nov. 20- 2008

Kurdish expansion moves threaten stability in northern Iraq
Nov
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The Assyrian tragedy in Iraq, state terrorism, or militias of Chaos ?
Nov. 13- 2008

Murder in Mosul Sparks Fear and Panic Nov. 13- 2008

Car Bomb Injures Twelve in Assyrian Town in North Iraq
Nov. 13- 2008

UN Iraq Envoy Condemns Killing of Assyrian Women Nov. 13- 2008

Gunmen Kill 2 Assyrian Sisters in Mosul, Iraq Nov. 13- 2008

Congressional Letter to Bush Requesting Protection of Iraqi Christians Nov. 12- 2008

New anti-Christian attack in Mosul, two sisters killed Nov. 12- 2008

Palestinian Columnist: Muslims Are Harming Christian Culture
Nov. 12- 2008

Iraqi Minorities Caught in Tug of War Over Land Nov. 12- 2008

Iraqi Christians are not second-class citizens, says Mgr Warduni
Nov. 11- 2008

Obama & the Politics of the Nineveh Plains, It is over?
Nov. 11- 2008

Iraqi Women, Christians Targeted in Violence, UN Chief Says
Nov. 11- 2008

Complex persecution of Iraq's Christians Nov. 10- 2008

Iraq Press Roundup Nov. 10- 2008

Turkish Journalist Kidnapped By Kurdish Forces in North Iraq
Nov. 10- 2008

Iraq presidency council approves local council quota for minoritis Nov. 8- 2008

Struggles in the World of Religion Nov. 8- 2008

Bishop in Baghdad: 'Obama, True Victory Means Peace in Iraq'
Nov. 8- 2008

Obama Can Revive US 'Soft Power' By Protecting Iraqi Christians Nov8- 2008

The Iraqi Provincial Elections Law and the Terror Against the Assyrians in Mosul Editorial by Fred aprim Nov7- 2008

Lobby for the Christians of Iraq Nov6- 2008

IRAQ: Assyrians trickling back to their homes in Mosul
Nov.6- 2008

Iraqi Christians Search for New Homeland Nov.5- 2008

Iraq putting the squeeze on minorities Nov.5- 2008

Iraq parliament grants minorities six council seats Nov.3- 2008

Duke University is offering an Assyrian language class.
Nov.3- 2008

Demonstration in Baghdad's neighborhood of Karrada against the expulsion of Christians from Mosul Nov.2- 2008

Two New documentaries about Assyrian History produced by Lina Yakubova Nov.-1-2008

Who’s Killing Christians in Iraq? Nov.-1-2008

Rally for Assyrians in Iraq Held in England Nov.-1-2008

Tishreen I = October

New Arabic, Assyrian, English Dictionary

Rally in support of Iraqi Assyrians to be held in San Jose Ca.
October 31, 2008

Report on ICIN's aid to Iraq's Christian refugees
October 31, 2008

WAR REFUGEES: Christians On the Run in Iraq October 28, 2008

Some Displaced Iraqi Christians Ponder Kurds' Role
October 28, 2008

Iraqi Christians: Fleeing Mosul October 28, 2008

Assyrian Political Party Calls for Assyrian Administered Area in Iraq
October 28, 2008

New Arabic, Assyrian, English Dictionary October 26, 2008

Assyrians: Martyrs in Iraq October 26, 2008

Baghdad cardinal hopes tragedy of Mosul Christians will awaken the world October 25, 2008

Lobby for the Christians of Iraq
October 25, 2008

A Cummunity Forum in Los Angeles in solidarity with the persecuted Christians of Iraq, Sunday Oct. 26

Exodus of Christians as killers step up religious cleansing in Iraq
October 24, 2008

In Jordan, prayers for the persecuted October 24, 2008

IRAQ More violence in Mosul: father and son killed because they were Christian October 23, 2008

Kurdish Forces Confiscating Ration Cards, Weapons From Assyrians in North Iraq October 23, 2008

Mystery shrouds attacks on Iraq’s Christians
October 22, 2008

Chaldean bishop of Kirkuk: Christians being driven out of Mosul for political reasons October 22, 2008

15,000 Iraqi Christians Driven Out of Mosul
October 21, 2008

Turkey and Secularism: Myth or Reality?
October 20, 2008

Video report by Al-Jazeera about the plight of the Assyrians of Mosul. October 20, 2008

A Christian Exodus From the Middle East
October 20, 2008

Interview wth Mr. Sarkis Oghajan
October 19, 2008

FEATURE-Iraq’s Christians “sacrificial lambs” as attacks mount
October 19, 2008

US Senator asks Rice for Briefing about Recent Attacks on Assyrians October 17, 2008

Six suspects including 4 Kurds Arrested for Attacks on Assyrians in Mosul October 17, 2008

Kurdish Involvement Suspected in Attacks on Assyrians in Mosul
October 17, 2008

Interview with Mr. Napoleon Patto, President of the Assyrian Aid Society-Iraq October 16, 2008

Assyrian Aid Society Asks for Help with Mosul Refugees
October 16, 2008

Iraq Christians protest against displacement
October 16, 2008

IRAQ Kurds and Arabs exchange accusations over attacks on Christians in Mosul October 15, 2008

Video: Iraqi Christians flee Mosul
October 15, 2008

Iraq Pledges to Probe Attacks on Christians
October 15, 2008

Unheard Voices: Australia's role in Iraq's growing Refuge Crisis
Cry for Assistance for Christians in Iraq
October 15, 2008

Iraqi Christians Continue to Flee Mosul in the Wake of Attacks
October 14, 2008

US condemns attacks on Iraq’s Christians
October 14, 2008

Assyrians Demonstrate in Stockholm Against Persecution in Iraq
October 13, 2008

IRAQ Arab media "discover" the persecution of Christians in Mosul as another Christian is killed October 13, 2008

Flight of Iraq Christians eases but UN remains concerned
October 13, 2008

Displacement threats haunt Iraq Christians
October 13, 2008

Kurdish Groups Behind Attacks on Assyrians in Mosul: says Iraqi MP
13, 2008

Iraq's Prime Minister Nurial-Maliki meets with MPs and Representatives of the Christian Community 12, 2008

Muslim Threats Force Assyrians to Flee From Mosul October, 11, 2008

Official: 3,000 Christians flee Iraq's Mosul October, 11, 2008

Houses Blown Up As Christians Flee Iraq's Mosul
October, 11, 2008

Iraqi group urges end of campaign against Christians in Mosul
October, 11, 2008

After the bloodbath in Iraq October, 11, 2008

Iraq archbishop warns Christians face ‘liquidation’
October, 10, 200
8

EU MEPs Confronted With Dire State of Iraq’s Christians
October, 10, 2008

Kurdish Officials Block Assyrian Demonstration in North Iraq
October, 9, 2008

Islamic fundamentalists: "expel Christians from Mosul"
October, 9, 2008

Is this why Christians of Iraq are being Killed? October.8, 2008

Iraq: 'Three Christians killed in 24 hours' October.8, 2008

Mosul, another "targeted murder" against the Christian community
October.6, 2008

IRAQ Mosul, the relentless slaughter of Iraqi Christians
October.6, 2008

Christians in Iraq demand quotas October.6, 2008

Voice Is Sought for Iraqi Christians October.6, 2008

Assyrians Demonstrate in Los Angeles Against Iraq Election Law
October.6, 2008

Christian Security Forces Growing Stronger In Iraq October.6, 2008

British MP visits Christians in Iraq October.5, 2008

Iraq's Talabani Pledges to Restore Minorities Law: Exclusive
October. 3, 2008

The Biggest Assyrian-Chaldean Demonstration in Northern Iraq
October. 2, 2008

UN criticises Iraq’s failure to include minorities in vote law
October. 2, 2008

Eilool = September

Assyrian artifact finds a new home at CSU Stanislaus Sept. 30, 08

Assyrian Chaldean Festival moves to valley, draws crowd
Sept. 30, 08

Iraq: New Election law disadvantages minorities – Quota system called for Sept. 30, 08

Demonstration in the Plain of Nineveh Sept. 30, 08

Iraq PM seeks safeguards for Christians Sept. 29, 08

Obama Questions Rice on Marginalization of Iraq's Minorities
Sept. 29, 08

A Political Coup Against Iraq's Minorities Sept. 29, 08

Assyrian Church of the East calls for Assyrian rights in Iraq
Sept. 28, 08

Let’s Hear You Loud and Clear! Sept. 28, 08

Iraqi Christians protest the end of their representation in government Sept. 28, 08

Article Guaranteeing Minority Electoral Rights Removed from Iraqi Electoral Law Sept. 27, 08

'If You Want to See Blood Come to Mosul' Sept. 22, 08

Assyrians call for unity in Iraq Sept. 22, 08

The Iraqi Police in Mosul managed to release the kidnapped Riyadh Batti Sept. 20, 08

First economic newspaper published in Mosul Sept. 18, 08

The Churches have a role to play in Iraq Sept. 18, 08

Turkey Attempting to Confiscate Assyrian Monastery's Land
Sept. 17, 08

Refugees Employment Assistance in Lodon Sept. 16, 08

Fresh violence in Mosul, two Christians kidnapped and killed
Sept. 16, 08

Assyrians in Northern Iraq Say They Will Not Return to Baghdad
Sept. 16, 08

Assyria, Art & Empire" treasures of Assyria from the British Museum Sept. 15, 08

`Yesterday's Children - Growing up Assyrian in Persia'. Sept. 15, 08

The 25th Worldwide AUA Congress Sept. 15, 08

A New Assyrian Cook Book Sept. 14, 08

MISSION ACCOMPLISHED AT THE UNITY FESTIVAL Sept. 13, 08

Mandaean family murdered in Baghdad Sept. 12, 08

Kurdish Land Grabs Leave Assyrians Dependent on Food Aid Sept. 11, 08

War on Christians in the Middle East must be stopped Sept. 8, 08

Iraq’s first Christian militia takes stand against Qaeda Sept. 8, 08

Sion Ebrahami: I was taken hostage by the moujahadeen Sept. 4, 08

Iraqi media ignore kidnapping of Christians, archbishop says
Sept. 4, 08

 

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