5-7-01-report-rfe-kdp-puk-relations
The
Kurdistan Observer
www.kurdistanobserver.com
Kurdish Parties Move To Normalize Relations
By Charles Recknagel
July 5, 2001
Kurdish northern Iraq, separated from Baghdad by a U.S.- and British-patrolled
no-fly zone,
is showing signs of an ever-healthier economy, with new schools opening
and some shopping
centers larger than those in the capital. In recent months, the region's
two rival Iraqi-Kurd
factions have taken new steps to improve cooperation. But RFE/RL correspondent
Charles
Recknagel reports the two sides remain far apart on the biggest issues,
including how
eventually to reunite Iraqi Kurdistan under a single administration.
Prague, 5 July 2001 (RFE/RL) -- Over the past year, northern Iraq's
two rival factions -- the
Patriotic Union of Kurdistan (PUK) and the Kurdistan Democratic Party
(KDP) -- have
taken several new steps to ease tensions between them.
Last month, the two sides agreed to start a first repatriation of 40
families from
KDP-controlled Arbil to PUK-controlled Sulaymaniyah. Another 32 families
are to be
repatriated in the opposite direction. At the same time, both parties
have agreed to return
property to the displaced persons whom they had previously accused
of sympathizing with
the other side.
The repatriation addresses what has long been one of the sorest points
between northern
Iraq's two ruling forces. That is: what to do about the 3,000 families
-- a total of some
15,000 people -- who were turned into refugees by the fighting between
the two factions.
That fighting came as the PUK, which has long controlled the eastern
areas of northern Iraq
along the Iranian border, and the KDP, which controls the western part
along the Turkish
border, waged a war for territory throughout much of the 1990s. The
two sides reached an
early power-sharing agreement when northern Iraq fell out of Baghdad's
control in the wake
of the 1991 Gulf War. But the agreement soon fell apart and the two
groups battled
intermittently prior to signing a U.S.-brokered accord in September
1998.
Both sides now say they hope that by accepting the return of a handful
of displaced families,
they can build confidence for the full return of all refugees in the
coming months. In some
cases, the refugees have been homeless for nearly a decade, living
in garages, unfinished
houses, and schools, surviving on aid handouts and by doing odd jobs.
Over the past three months, the PUK and KDP have also lifted many checkpoints
guarding
the frontier between them and ended requirements that businessmen and
other travelers
obtain permission to cross. They have also agreed to make it easier
to exchange professors
and members of Kurdish non-governmental organizations.
Fouad Hussein, an Iraqi Kurd academic who visits the region frequently,
says all this is a
sign of increasingly open dialogue between the two rival parties.
"The most important change is that there is an open dialogue between
both parties and
especially between both leaders of the KDP and PUK. And of course people
can watch that
and hear about that and see that. Both sides are emphasizing peace
and emphasizing
continuing talking to each other, while in the past sometimes they
had negotiations but at the
same time [the negotiation] was [only] for a short time and then they
were attacking each
other. [Now] both sides are saying we don't have any alternative except
the peace process
and reaching a peace agreement."
Both KDP leader Massoud Barzani and PUK leader Jalal Talibani agreed
in 1998 to work
toward reuniting their administrations. They also agreed to reconstitute
an autonomous
regional parliament, while remaining committed to Iraq's territorial
integrity.
But progress toward a single administration and legislature has been
slow. The two sides
remain at odds over how to fully share their revenues and how to have
full political
representation on each other's territory. They also have been unable
to agree on
preparing for general elections to replace the former regional parliament,
which disbanded in
1992 amid fears of renewed factional fighting.
For the moment, no elections have yet been scheduled. Both sides appear
to have decided
they first must reach a comprehensive peace agreement settling the
outstanding disputes
between them. Hussein says:
"The election is a point which must come after they reach a peace agreement
and they sign
that. Two high-level groups are now working on the general lines of
a peace agreement, but
they have got also sub-groups dealing with aspects of security, refugees,
aspects of the
economic situation. So, in many fields they have reached an agreement.
But on how to deal
with the parliament, they still are talking about that."
The general easing of tensions between the KDP and PUK comes as northern
Iraq in recent
years has experienced a mini-economic boom that has made it easier
for both groups to live
with their still-unresolved political differences.
Standards of living have improved as northern Iraq -- for decades an
economic backwater --
has become a crossroads for fuel trading between Baghdad and Turkey.
The trading has
grown into a multimillion-dollar business, with the Iraqi oil going
directly into Turkey's
state-supervised fuel-distribution system in violation of UN sanctions.
Oil-industry analysts
estimate that Turkish trucks each day bring some 100,000 barrels of
petroleum products and
crude oil from Iraq.
The smuggled oil, upon which the KDP levies transit taxes through its
territory, has long
been tolerated by the West as a price for Turkish cooperation in other
areas, including
hosting U.S. and British planes that patrol the no-fly zone. But in
recent months, the trading
has become a focus of U.S. and British proposals to levy "smarter"
sanctions on Iraq, aimed
at tightening border controls against smuggling.
While the KDP has profited from the fuel trading, the PUK has levied
taxes on trade between
Iraq and Iran and between Turkey and Iran. Much of this commerce is
in smuggled
consumer goods and alcoholic beverages, which are prohibited in the
Islamic Republic of
Iran.
In addition, both the KDP and PUK administrations have benefited from
the UN awarding
northern Iraq 13 percent of the revenue Baghdad earns through legal
oil sales under the
oil-for-food program. That 13 percent is distributed outside of Baghdad's
control both as
humanitarian aid and in contracts to improve the area's infrastructure.
The money involved
has grown proportionally as Baghdad's oil revenues under the oil-for-food
program have
surged from $4 billion in 1997 to $18 billion last year.
The improved economic situation has enabled both the KDP and PUK administrations
to
build scores of new schools and institute compulsory education at the
primary-school level.
Over the past three years, many villages have acquired schoolhouses
and the practice of
double-shifting students -- operating morning and evening schools in
the same building to
accommodate an excess of students -- has ended. The region's three
universities have
acquired computers and there are plans to introduce computer instruction
at the
secondary-school level.
At the same time, the improving economy has brought growing Turkish
business interest in
the region. Turkish companies have invested in shops and hotels and
are participating in
rebuilding bridges and highways both in the KDP and PUK areas under
the oil-for-food
program's infrastructure contracts.
The KDP had for many years been allied with Turkey against the PUK,
which in turn was
allied with the rebel Turkish-Kurd PKK, or Kurdistan Workers' Party.
But since Ankara's
capture of PKK leader Abdullah Ocalan two and a half years ago, the
PUK has also moved
closer to Turkey and joined in fighting the PKK, some 2,500 of whom
are in strongholds
along the mountainous Iran-Iraq border.
Iran, too, has sought in recent months to expand ties with northern
Iraq. While lacking
Turkey's commercial appeal, it has sought to build links to both factions'
areas through
cultural exchanges and activities.
In one other sign that northern Iraq is increasingly becoming a more
stable region, some
expatriate Iraqi Kurd businessmen have also begun returning to the
region from Europe.
Fouad Hussein says:
"I have seen some Kurdish businessmen who are living in Europe and they
have been back
to invest some money there in Iraqi Kurdistan. So, that is new, actually.
Because usually the
Kurdish businessmen, Iraqi Kurds, were not satisfied with the political
situation there and so
[did not feel] encouraged to invest their money there."
Hussein says some university teachers have also returned from Europe,
in another vote of
confidence in the peace process.
That suggests that northern Iraq already has come a long way in overcoming
its factional
differences -- at least in the minds of its own people -- even as a
formal peace agreement still
remains well over the horizon.
(Radio Free Iraq's Sami Shoresh contributed to this report.)
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