BAGHDAD, Dec 13 (AFP) - 3h31 - Massud Barzani,
the first elected president of Iraqi Kurdistan,
portrays himself as a champion of Kurdish rights
which he is ready to defend even at the risk of
falling out with Iraq's other communities.
"I will spare no effort to strengthen national
unity, brotherly ties between the Kurds and Arabs,
and for unity within Kurdistan," he pledged after
being sworn in before an elected Kurdish parliament.
In post Saddam-Iraq, the country has two Kurdish
presidents, with Jalal Talabani, a former rival of
Barzani, elected by the parliament in Baghdad as
president of the state.
Only 14 years ago, millions of Kurds took flight to
the snow-covered peaks along the borders with Turkey
and Iran after a failed uprising against Saddam
Hussein in the aftermath of the 1991 Gulf War. |

Massoud Barzani
President of Kurdistan
Region (Iraq)
|
|
Under a Western security umbrella, the Kurds
returned to set up self-rule in the three northern
provinces of Arbil, Dohuk and Sulaimaniya.
Barzani, who turns 60 next year, cuts a short and
chubby figure, reserved, and always wearing the
traditional Kurdish costume of baggy pants, a
cummerbund and red-and-white tribal scarf wrapped
around his head.
"He wears this outfit... It wasn't all that long
ago... he would have been killed for wearing it," US
President George W. Bush said when the two leaders
met at the White House in October.
The former warlord, who spent his youth in the
mountains fighting a succession of Iraqi regimes,
refuses to have his peshmerga force disbanded or
their mission redefined.
In case of civil war, Kurdistan would already have
the nucleus of an army of its own.
In mid-November, Barzani warned in an interview with
Turkish television that the Iraqi Kurds would have
no choice but to proclaim independence in the event
of civil war.
While independence was a "natural and legitimate
right" for Iraqi Kurds, they would "at this stage"
implement the new constitution which lays down a
"democratic federal and pluralist" future for Iraq,
he said.
Turkey fears a declaration of independence by Iraq's
Kurds would inflame a rebellion by separatists
within its own large Kurdish minority.
In June, Barzani kicked up a storm when he protested
over the omission of the "federal" reference to Iraq
when the government of Ibrahim Jaafari was being
sworn in.
It risked a break-up of the alliance between the
majority Shiites and the Kurds who swept the
elections, he warned, before the text was modified
to address his concerns.
His political line is also often controversial,
having stated in an interview with the Arab
newspaper Al-Hayat that relations between the Kurds
and Israel would not amount to a "crime" despite the
lack of Iraqi-Israeli ties.
And when a meeting of Iraqi political factions in
Cairo last month referred to the "resistance" to
foreign occupation, Barzani weighed in again.
"We don't call what is happening in Iraq resistance,
but terrorism," Barzani told the Kurdish regional
assembly. "Foreign forces are liberating forces, not
occupying troops."
Born in 1946 in Mahabad, Iranian Kurdistan, his
family hails from the Barzan region of northeast
Iraqi Kurdistan.
The son of Kurdish nationalist leader Mustafa
Barzani, he joined the fight for an independent
Kurdistan as a teenager. In 1979 he took over
leadership of the Kurdistan Democratic Party (KDP)
from his father.
In July 1983, Saddam Hussein's security forces
arrested about 8,000 male members of the Barzani
clan in the northern province of Arbil. They were
transported to southern Iraq and have not been heard
of since.
Although they both fought Saddam, between 1994 and
1998 the KDP and Talabani's Patriotic Union of
Kurdistan waged war, in fighting which cost some
3,000 lives, until Washington brokered peace in
1998.
Barzani even turned to help from Saddam in 1996 to
evict the PUK from Arbil.
The citadel city was the capital of autonomous Iraqi
Kurdistan at the time and the seat of a parliament
born of the Iraqi Kurds' first ever elections in
1992 that resulted in a 50-50 sharing deal with
Talabani.
But in the post-Saddam era, Talabani and Barzani
struck a deal in May that Barzani should rule Iraq's
three northern provinces for the next four years,
ending decades of political discord.
AFP
Top |