Kurds pour back
into Kirkuk Sep 15, 2004
ASSOCIATED PRESS By JIM
KRANE,
KIRKUK, Iraq (AP) - Kurds are on the
move again in northern Iraq - but this time they're not
fleeing. As many as 500 Kurds a day streamed into Kirkuk last
month in a land rush that took city officials and U.S. troops
by surprise. The influx, which has slowed in September, leaves
the nascent city government struggling to cope with dozens of
refugee camps on once vacant patches of ground.
Migrants like 60-year-old Tarek Salman
Dawoud say they are reclaiming the
ancestral city they were forced to flee under Saddam Hussein's
campaigns to
make Kirkuk an Arab city and control its oil wealth.
"This is our land. We've been here
for thousands of years," Dawoud said,
standing with other Kurds who shouted in assent. Just behind
them, a sea of
dusty canvas tents stretched across a few square miles of a former
Iraqi air
base.
However, U.S. officials say the surge
is timed to establish residency ahead of
elections slated for January. A strong showing for Kurdish leaders
could shift Kirkuk province - which sits atop 6 percent of the
world's known oil reserves - into the orbit of the Kurdish autonomous
regions to the north.
Arab migrations have shaped this area
since oil was discovered here in the
1930s but picked up momentum in the mid-1970s, when Saddam began
asserting control over the government. The New York-based Human
Rights
Watch estimates that 250,000 Kurds, Turkmen and Assyrians were
expelled
from Kirkuk and other parts of northern Iraq in the 1970s alone.
A 2001 U.N. census in the autonomous
Kurdish regions counted more than
800,000 displaced Iraqis.
"Every member of my family was
exiled to the north," said Dawoud, who was forced to abandon
his Kirkuk home to incoming Arabs in 1995 and move his family
to a refugee camp in the autonomous zone. With Saddam and his
regime gone, Dawoud and tens of thousands of others
are pouring back.
Already, refugees are building homes
in the makeshift camps. Across the city, teams of men could be
seen digging foundations on identically sized plots marked on
the earth in white chalk and laying concrete blocks or mud bricks.
Many camp residents appear to be part-timers,
commuting to their plots on
weekends to build homes and returning to Sulaimaniyah and Irbil
to work
during the week, soldiers said.
Officials monitoring the influx estimate
some 72,000 refugees, mainly Kurds, have arrived in and around
the city in the past 18 months. Smaller numbers of expelled Turkmen
and Assyrian Christians have also erected camps in Kirkuk and
surrounding villages. Some 50,000 others, mainly Arabs encouraged
to migrate here under Saddam, have fled.
About 20,000 Kurds arrived in August
alone, encouraged by Kurdish political parties that have given
them money or building supplies to help them reclaim their land,
said U.S. Army Maj. Mike Davey of the 2nd Brigade of the Hawaii-based
25th Infantry Division, which controls security in Kirkuk.
If they keep coming, this city of 750,000
could have 100,000 new residents
before the first elections since Saddam was ousted last year,
officials here say.
The Kurds' return is viewed with alarm
by those who fear an independent
Kurdish state, among them Iraqi Arabs and surrounding countries
with Kurdish minorities, especially Turkey, said U.S. Army Col.
Lloyd Miles, who commands the Kirkuk-based brigade.
"They don't want the Kurds to get
control of the oil here," said Miles. "Then they will
have a source of income for an independent state."
The migration is putting pressure on
Kirkuk's Arabs, some 200,000 mainly poor Shiite Muslims from
southern Iraq, who were themselves pushed here by successive
Iraqi governments.
Some Arabs have said they are willing
to return south if they are given land and homes. Others, who've
lived here for a generation, want to stay, Miles said.
Raising the tension, Kurdish politicians
in northern Iraq have demanded the
departure of all Arabs who came north during the government's
campaign to
make Kirkuk an Arab city. In some cases, Kurdish refugee camps
sit just across the road from Arab neighborhoods on the city's
south side.
"They want this area back,"
Davey said of the Kurds. "It's a very visible
presence."
At the same time, Kirkuk is beset by
insurgents, mainly Sunni Muslim Arabs, who are pressing the Shiite
settlers to stay in the city and refuse to sell their homes,
Miles said.
For now, the migration has been peaceful,
with only a few incidents of Kurdish intimidation of Arab residents.
But a major demographic shift in this
city's precarious four-way ethnic balance could trigger long-term
instability, said U.S. Army Maj. Gen. John Batiste, who commands
the 1st Infantry Division, which controls the region.
"Kirkuk is the key to avoiding
civil war in Iraq," said Lt. Col. Jim Stockmoe, the 1st
Infantry's intelligence officer. "Kirkuk is to Iraq what
Kosovo is to the
Balkans. That's why it's critical to us and it should be to the
Iraqi government."
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