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Talabani demands top job in Iraqi
government
4.2.2005
By Abdel Hamid Zibari - SALAHEDDIN
Kurdish
leader Jalal Talabani on Thursday complicated efforts
to negotiate a share-out of top posts in Iraq by
insisting he wanted to be president or prime minister.
Talabani also said that the future of the northern
city of Kirkuk, which is not part of the Kurdish
autonomous region, would play a key role in any
alliance talks with other Iraqi parties. |

Photo on the net |
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"I am the candidate for the Kurdish democratic list
for one of the two posts of responsibility,"
Talabani told reporters after a meeting with the
other main Kurdish leader, Massud Barzani.
The count from Sunday's historic election has not
been completed but talks are already underway
between rival parties.
Leaders from the majority Shiite Muslim community
have said they expect to provide the prime minister,
who will lead the government, with a Sunni Muslim
president.
The Sunni community has fueled Iraq's insurgency and
concerns abound about how to win the minority
religious group's full backing of the next
government. Sunni political figures greeted the news
with a wait- and- see attitude.
Talabani, head of the Patriotic Union of Kurdistan (PUK),
and Barzani, leader of the Kurdistan Democratic
Party (KDP), formed an alliance for the national
vote held on Sunday.
They are expected to easily win the vote in the
autonomous Kurdish region where the population also
chose three provincial councils and an assembly for
the autonomous region.
Barzani will be the sole candidate for head of the
regional Kurdish government, which takes in the
provinces of Sulaimaniyah, controlled by the PUK,
and Arbil and Dohuk, which are under his party's
control.
"The question of joining the city of Kirkuk to
Kurdistan will be primordial in negotiations for any
alliance with another Iraqi political force," said
Talabani.
Kurdish leaders cherish the dream of making the key
oil city, which lies just south of the autonomous
region, part of northern Kurdistan.
The city is divided between a majority Kurd
population, Arabs and Turkmens. Former Iraqi leader
Saddam Hussein persecuted the Kurds and sought an
Arab domination of Kirkuk through a population
transfer.
Arab community leaders have complained about the
election in Kirkuk saying that Kurds from outside
the city were deliberately allowed to register there
to tip the vote in the favour of Kurdish parties.
Talabani has told the Kurdish press that a
higher-than-expected turnout across Kurdish areas
was set to give his alliance one quarter of the
seats in the new assembly.
"Turnout exceeded our hopes and reached 90 percent
in some areas," he told his party's Kurdistani Nwe
(New Kurdistan) newspaper. "We're expecting to take
25 percent of the seats."
Turkey is vehemently opposed to Kurdish ambitions to
make Kirkuk the new capital of their autonomous
region, fearing the province's oil wealth will give
them the resources to break away and encourage
separatist ambitions among Turkish Kurds.
Meanwhile, Sunni leaders were reserved about
Talabani's announcement.
"Anybody who wins seats can announce his candidacy
and Talabani is an important leader who chaired the
Governing Council for a month and who has the
prerequisite experience," Industry Minister Hajem
al-Hassani said.
Hassani, running on the national assembly candidate
list of interim President Ghazi al-Yawar, a Sunni,
said it was too early to discuss the impact of
Talabani's announcement.
A spokesman for the Islamic Party which dropped out
of the elections, citing security concerns, also
downplayed the announcement.
"Everyone has the right to present his candidacy,
but the question is how many votes is he going to
get," said Ayad Samarrai.
http://www.middle-east-online.com
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