The
Kurdistan Observer
www.kurdistanobserver.com
Saddam Invites Kurds to Make Peace with Baghdad
BAGHDAD, July 15 (Reuters) - Iraqi President Saddam Hussein invited
Kurdish rebel foes
on Sunday to open dialogue with Baghdad, Iraqi state-run television
said.
"We want any solution with as few losses as possible, when the solution
is among our
people," the television quoted Saddam as saying.
The remote mountainous enclave of northern Iraq, controlled by two rival
Iraqi Kurdish
groups, has been outside Baghdad's control since the end of the 1991
Gulf War to end its
occupation of Kuwait.
U.S. and British jets patrol no-fly zones set up after the expulsion
of Iraqi troops from
Kuwait to protect Kurd dissidents in northern Iraq from attack by Baghdad
forces.
The Iraqi president said Baghdad had left the northern area alone until
now to allow the
Kurds to deal with their own problems and that fear of intervention
by Baghdad has kept the
two rival Kurdish factions from harming the Kurdish people.
"We wanted our people in Kurdistan region...to deal with the events
and circumstances, good
and bad in details to reach a satisfaction of their own choice," Saddam
said, during a
ceremony to award him the sash and shield of al-Jihad (holy war).
Baghdad has severed all ties with Kurds in the north, who have aligned
themselves with
other Iraqi opposition groups and have publicly vowed to topple the
government in Baghdad.
The two sides held inconclusive talks in 1991. In 1992 the Kurds held
elections for a
parliament and established a regional government in which the rival
Kurdistan Democratic
Party and Patriotic Union of Kurdistan share power.
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