Electoral workers counted ballots following voting in the presidential and parliamentary elections yesterday in Irbil, a Kurdish-ruled city in northern Iraq. It could take a week to tally the results.
(Safin Hamed/ AFP/ Getty Images)
Iraqi Kurds hope election brings change
Seek resolution to old disputes with Baghdad
Electoral workers counted ballots following voting in the presidential and parliamentary elections yesterday in Irbil, a Kurdish-ruled city in northern Iraq. It could take a week to tally the results.
(Safin Hamed/ AFP/ Getty Images)
SULAIMANIYAH, Iraq - Iraqis voting in yesterday’s election in the self-ruled Kurdish north expressed hope it would shake up the entrenched regional government and help reduce longstanding tension with Baghdad over oil and land disputes that threaten the country’s stability.
The election for the region’s president and 111-seat parliament will test a political establishment that has kept the semiautonomous region relatively safe but faces allegations of corruption and has often clashed with the Arab-dominated central government.
“Today is a revenge day against the main parties,’’ 44-year-old Shobo Mahmoud said shortly after casting his ballot in Sulaimaniyah, 160 miles northeast of Baghdad. “We are suffering from poor public services despite all the promises they made before and the support we gave to these politicians.’’
The two dominant political coalitions, the Patriotic Union of Kurdistan and the Kurdistan Democratic Party, face a challenge from new opposition alliances seeking to capitalize on alleged misconduct and corruption.
The leaders of the two main coalitions, President Jalal Talabani of Iraq and Massoud Barzani, Kurdish regional president, hope their parties can withstand the burgeoning challenge.
The opposition is expected to make some inroads in parliament. Iraq’s election commission said it could take a week to count the results.
Talabani, who was one of the first to cast his ballot, called the election “an important and crucial period and a step forward for a bigger democracy in the region and Iraq.’’
As security has improved in Iraq, US military commanders have viewed tension between Kurds and Arabs, particularly around the oil-rich city of Kirkuk, as one of the greatest threats to Iraq’s stability. President Obama has pressured Iraq’s central government to be more flexible about sharing power and allowing provincial governments a greater role in decision-making.
But the government is wary about ceding too much authority to the Kurds for fear that they will attempt to secede at some point and take the region’s wealth of oil resources with them.
Security measures were tightened in the region’s three northern provinces - Irbil, Dahuk, and Sulaimaniyah - for yesterday’s election, and the 2.5 million eligible voters are allowed only to walk or take government-authorized buses to polling centers. Polling centers were also set up in Baghdad for Kurdish lawmakers and others to cast their ballots.
Vice President Adil Abdul-Mahdi of Iraq said he was encouraged by the elections and hoped the new parliament and government would find ways to ease tensions with Baghdad.
There were a few reports of problems at the polls, said Hindren Mohammed Salih, head of the electoral commission in Irbil.
He said some voters were prevented from casting ballots because their names did not appear on eligible voting rolls and the commission was working on a solution.
The Kurds had hoped to hold a referendum during the local elections on a proposed constitution, which lays claim to disputed areas outside the three Kurdish provinces, including Kirkuk. But national authorities scuttled that plan because Iraq’s Arabs view it as an effort to expand Kurdish authority.
The Kurds have also clashed with the central government over a law outlining how Iraq’s oil wealth should be divided among the country’s religious and ethnic groups and who has final say in developing the oil fields in the northern region. Iraqi officials say the roughly two dozen deals the Kurds have signed with international oil companies since 2003 are illegal because they were not approved in Baghdad.
Major General Robert Caslen, the top US commander in northern Iraq, said he was hopeful that after the elections the Kurdish and Iraqi central governments would renew efforts to resolve the dispute.
“My challenge is that I am stuck in the middle of a tactical challenge of the Kurds and Arabs,’’ he said. “We end up resolving temporary issues that come up.’’
Caslen said that if the two sides failed to resolve the issues, especially before a scheduled US withdrawal at the end of 2011, the dispute could destabilize the country.
Caslen’s area of responsibility includes Kirkuk, where Arab-Kurd tensions have been on the rise, as well as Mosul, where an increase in US combat power in recent months has curbed but not eliminated violence.
Despite increased security measures, a roadside bombing targeting a police patrol in southern Kirkuk wounded five people, including four Iraqi police officers, said Colonel Shirzad Moufari.
The Kurds separated from the rest of Iraq after rising up against Saddam Hussein in 1991, aided by a US-British no-fly zone that helped keep the former dictator’s armed forces at bay.![]()



