Khaleej Times

Iraqi Kurds delay poll for 8 months

- AFP

arbil — Parliament in Iraq’s autonomous Kurdish region decided on Tuesday to hold legislativ­e elections in eight months after they were delayed amid tensions with the central government in Baghdad over disputed territorie­s.

Regional legislativ­e and presidenti­al elections had both been due on November 1 but were delayed after Baghdad seized a swathe of territory from Kurdish forces following an independen­ce vote.

There was no immediate word on a new date for a presidenti­al election.

“The Kurdistan parliament decided... to postpone the parliament­ary elections in the autonomous region by eight months,” Islamic Union of Kurdistan parliament­arian Bahzad Zebari said.

Farsat Sofi of the Kurdistan Democratic Party (KDP) of longtime Kurdish leader Massud Barzani said parliament would choose the date for legislativ­e and presidenti­al elections. The elections were originally set for just over a

the Parliament has decided to freeze the activities of the Kurdistan presidency Bahzad Zebari, MP of Islamic Union of Kurdistan

month after a September 25 referendum in the Kurdish areas which resulted in a massive “yes” for independen­ce.

The referendum, set in motion by Barzani, was strongly opposed by Baghdad.

Iraqi forces last week swept into the oil-rich Kirkuk province in the north, restoring it and Kurdishhel­d parts of Nineveh and Diyala provinces to central government control.

The rapid Kurdish retreat triggered recriminat­ions among Kurdish politician­s and prompted the regional parliament to postpone both elections.

“Parliament has decided to freeze the activities of the Kurdistan presidency,” Zebari said on Tuesday. This body includes Barzani, his vice-president Kosrat Rasul of KDP rival the Patriotic Union of Kurdistan (PUK), and the head of the presidenti­al cabinet, Fuad Hussein. Its freezing, and the fact that parliament did not extend its mandate again, represent a major blow to Barzani. On Sunday, Iraqi Kurdistan’s main opposition party called for Barzani to step down after the loss of Kurdish-controlled territory. Shoresh Haji of the Goran movement, which holds 24 out of 111 seats in the Iraqi Kurdish parliament, said both Barzani and Rasul should quit.

“The Kurdistan region’s president and his deputy no longer have any legitimacy and should resign,” he said. Haji called for the creation of a “national salvation government” to prepare for dialogue with Baghdad and organise new elections.

The mandate of Barzani, the first and only elected president of the autonomous Kurdish region, expired in 2013. It was extended for two years and then continued in the chaos that followed the Daesh group’s sweeping offensive across Iraq in 2014.

Under the autonomous region’s laws, it was Barzani who had set general elections for November 1.

Tuesday’s vote now means that parliament will decide the new electoral calendar, several parliament­arians said.

A month after scoring a major victory in the independen­ce referendum, Barzani now finds himself increasing­ly isolated. —

 ?? AFP ?? Syrian Kurds rally in the northeaste­rn Syrian city of Qamishli against Iraqi operation in Kirkuk and call upon the internatio­nal community to defend Kurdish regions in Iraq. —
AFP Syrian Kurds rally in the northeaste­rn Syrian city of Qamishli against Iraqi operation in Kirkuk and call upon the internatio­nal community to defend Kurdish regions in Iraq. —

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