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Liberated Kurds
Find Little Freedom- Inter
Press Service - By Aaron Glantz
04/06/2004
ARBIL,
Iraq, Jun 4 (IPS) - Fruit and vegetable vendors push
their carts around a street market in Arbil, the
seat of governance of Iraqi Kurdistan. The city is
very different from Baghdad. Kurdish is spoken here,
and written large on shop windows. Also, there is no
visible American troop presence.
The streets are patrolled not by American soldiers
in tanks and humvees, but by kalashnikov-carrying
Peshmerga guerrillas on foot patrol.
Since the creation of the Kurdish autonomous area in
1991, Kurds have been doing everything they can to
create their own society. But that does not mean
they get their news in Kurdish.
Kurds of all ages crowd around the television in
Arbil’s Machko Cafe as al-Jazeera broadcasts news of
Iraq’s interim constitution.
”A big reason we are watching al-Jazeera and
al-Arabia is the fact that they focus on breaking
news,” says 63-year-old writer Kerem Sheharizah.
”Recently there is another channel opened by America
called al-Hurra (the freedom) and we can benefit
from that by getting another perspective.”
Kurdish broadcasters have been unable to build a
network of reporters to compete with al-Arabia and
al-Jazeera. That is partly because Kurds do not have
as much money as their counterparts in Qatar and the
United Arab Emirates where the satellite news
channels are based.
But it is also because Kurdish broadcasters have a
different goal. The nightly news on Kurdistan
Television is essentially a summary of Kurdistan
Democratic Party (KDP) leader Masoud Barzani’s day.
”Mr. Masoud Barzani has so many activities and he
visits so many places and we have to broadcast it,”
KTV station manager Shiwan Amurr Yusuf says.
”This channel is related to the Kurdistan Democratic
Party so although we have freedom to do what we
want, we also have to bring the viewer all the
breaking news about this party,” he adds.
Masoud Barzani’s KDP effectively serves as the
government of half of Northern Iraq. The other half
of Iraqi Kurdistan is controlled by the Patriotic
Union of Kurdistan (PUK), which owns and controls
the only other Kurdish television station in the
area, KurdSat.
PUK members say the party has good reason to control
the news broadcast on KurdSat. Hakim Umar from the
PUK’s foreign office says the media is a major tool
for propaganda in keeping Iraq from splitting apart.
”If you let the people talk themselves, they will
ask for independence from Iraq,” he says. ”But the
media that has been talking to them for many years
helps them come back to federalism because
federalism is the best way for us. That’s the
meaning of Kurdish media. We got a message for our
people that it is the right thing to live in Iraq
with federalism.”
It is hard to find people here willing to talk
openly against either of the ruling Kurdish parties.
While nowhere near as oppressive as Saddam’s regime,
the U.S.-backed Kurdish leaders of Northern Iraq
have virtually banned dissent.
The area even has its own secret police, the
Asayeech, to keep people in line. Kurds outside Iraq
are often critical of this, but most of them see the
current leadership by the two armed factions as a
temporary step on the road to ultimate separation
from Iraq.
”We’re not as dumb as people think we are, or as
dumb as certain Kurdish leaders think we are,” says
Kani Xulam, director of the Washington-based
American Kurdish Information Network, who favours
independence. ”Federalism may be the only option
now, but you need to give the people the benefit of
the doubt and say ’we’ll have to ask them what it is
they want’.”
Xulam points out that a small Kurdish newspaper
dedicated primarily to cultural news opened recently
in Northern Iraq, the first media voice that is
independent of the local Kurdish leaders. He hopes
it will be the first of many, not the last of its
kind.
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