The Asian Age

Kurds mourn death of Talabani

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Irbil (Iraq), Oct. 4: Flags flew at half-staff across Iraq’s northern autonomous Kurdish region on Wednesday as Iraqi Kurds began observing a week of mourning following the death of the country’s former president, Jalala Talabani, once a symbol of unity.

Talabani’s death at a Berlin hospital on Tuesday afternoon, at the age of 83, came just days after the Iraqi Kurds’ controvers­ial referendum on independen­ce that has angered Baghdad and the region.

A longtime Kurdish guerrilla leader, Talabani in 2005 became the head of state of what was supposed to be a new Iraq two years after the country was freed from the rule of Saddam Hussein.

He was seen as a unifying elder statesman who could soothe tempers among Iraq’s Shiites, Sunnis and Kurds.

Talabani suffered a stroke in 2012, after which he was moved to Germany for treatment and faded from Iraq’s political life.

Sadi Ahmed Pire, a spokesman for the Kurdish party, which Talabani headed, said on Wednesday that Talabani’s burial would take place in the city of Sulaimaniy­ah over the weekend.

Following news of

Talabani’s passing, leaders across Iraq and beyond released statements expressing their condolence­s.

Talabani was “a long standing figure in the fight against dictatorsh­ip and a sincere partner in building a new democratic Iraq,” Iraqi Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi said in a statement posted to Facebook on Tuesday.

The Kurdish regional president and longtime Talabani rival, Masoud Barzani, described him as a “comrade” in a statement posted to Twitter, also on Tuesday.

Barzani also extended his condolence­s to the Kurdish people and Talabani’s family.

The United Nations described Talabani as “a leading voice of moderation, dialogue, mutual understand­ing and respect in Iraq’s contempora­ry politics” and a “patriot of unique wisdom and foresight.”

“From the battlefron­t trenches in the 1980s during the struggle against dictatorsh­ip to the halls of power in Baghdad in the past decade, ‘Mam Jalal’ worked for and promoted national rights,” said Jan Kubis, the UN’s special representa­tive to Iraq in a written statement late last night, using Talabani’s Kurdish nickname — Uncle Jalal.

 ??  ?? Jalala Talabani
Jalala Talabani

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