Daily Dispatch

Kurds set to vote amidst harsh realities

-

Voters in Iraq’s Kurdistan elect a new parliament on Sunday, with the autonomous region still mired in an economic crisis a year after an independen­ce referendum that backfired disastrous­ly.

Despite deep discontent and divisions, there appears to be little prospect of a major political shakeup as the region grapples with the fallout from the controvers­ial poll held last September.

“The Kurds lost so much with that referendum,” said shop owner Omar Karim, 62, in the region’s second city Sulaymaniy­ah. “This election will not give us back what we lost. The Kurdish leaders are not learning from their errors.”

The vote last year saw more than 92% of Kurds back secession, but the federal government rejected that as “illegal”.

Baghdad then imposed economic penalties and sent federal troops to push Kurdish forces out of the oil fields vital for the autonomous region’s economy.

Regional president Massud Barzani – who had dominated the region since the ouster of Saddam Hussein, and was the driving force behind the plebiscite – stepped down in November. Despite the upheaval, Sunday’s election sees the parties that have long held sway set to come out on top again.

Barzani’s still-dominant Kurdistan Democratic Party (KDP) will face establishe­d rivals, the Patriotic Union of Kurdistan (PUK) and the Goran (Change) party.

There is only one new political party competing – the New Generation movement, founded in 2018 to channel public anger at the region’s elite. Ire at the political establishm­ent has been fanned by economic woes since the referendum.

In December, protesters attacked the headquarte­rs of major political parties across Iraqi Kurdistan in days of violent demonstrat­ions that left at least five dead.

Departed regional president Barzani has not been replaced, and his powers have been redistribu­ted temporaril­y to parliament and the local government.

Despite the disarray, analysts say entrenched loyalties in the region should limit the impact of the new challenger­s.

“Any democratic change by new political forces comes up against the harsh reality of Kurdish society,” said Karim Pakzad from the French Institute for Internatio­nal and Strategic Affairs.

“The big government posts and economic levers are held by different figures from the PDK and PUK, and there is little room for reformist parties to develop.”

The vote in Kurdistan comes amid major political shifts not just in the region but elsewhere in the country. Iraq is still struggling to form a new government after a nationwide parliament­ary poll in May. That has prompted traditiona­l heavyweigh­ts the KDP and PUK to jostle to bolster their positions in both Kurdistan and Baghdad. Until now the two parties had a tacit agreement that the KDP would have the leadership of Kurdistan while the PUK would have Iraq’s figurehead presidency, reserved for a Kurd since the 2003 ouster of Saddam.

The ruptures after the referendum have torn apart that pact – meaning the two parties are jockeying for top position both in their home region and nationally. Days after the vote in Kurdistan, Iraq’s national parliament should meet to choose a new president. –

 ?? Picture: AFP/ SAFIN HAMED ?? IN YOUR FACE: Iraqi Kurdish men walk past an election campaign poster in Arbil, the capital of the northern Iraqi Kurdish autonomous region, on Wednesday.
Picture: AFP/ SAFIN HAMED IN YOUR FACE: Iraqi Kurdish men walk past an election campaign poster in Arbil, the capital of the northern Iraqi Kurdish autonomous region, on Wednesday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa