"Kurdish 9/11" boosts resolve
Kurdistanâs two main political parties, rivals who had fought long and bloody civil wars for local dominance in the 1990s, were on the cusp of setting old animosities aside when terror returned to Arbil. So it was a bitter irony that twin suicide attacks on Sunday morning - which Kurdish officials say they believe was organized by the Al Qaeda-linked Ansar al-Islam - targeted both parties at a time when they are moving at full speed towards closer cooperation. Indeed, officials at the Patriotic Union of Kurdistan (PUK) and the Kurdish Democratic Party (KDP) believe the two things are linked. "We have so many enemies that donât want us to be united - they want to keep us weak and divided," says Kakamin Mujar, the Arbil party boss for the KDP. "But this only strengthens our will to work together. We see that we canât afford to be divided."
Other Kurdish leaders say they believe the attacks, which killed about 100 and injured more than 130, may have been in revenge for what they say was help provided to the US in the capture of suspected Al Qaeda member Hasan Ghul. The Pakistani national was captured in northern Iraq last week. The PUK - driven out of Arbil by a KDP offensive in 1996 with the help of Saddam Hussein - opened party offices here three months ago, and both sides say theyâre close to uniting the administration of their region. The two parties have ruled Kurdistanâs two main cities as separate fiefdoms since the mid-1990s, with the KDP controlling the city of Arbil and the PUK in charge of Sulaymaniyah, both partiesâ militias being prominent on the streets. The two towns have rival interior ministries, health ministries, and even cultural unions that claim to speak for all Kurds.
The attack puts Iraqâs Kurdish problem back in the news as the US, the United Nations, and Iraqi leaders enter delicate negotiations over the shape of a transitional government that the Bush administration wants to install by the end of June. The Kurds are pressing for a transitional constitution that would enshrine their de facto autonomous status in the north and give them a much bigger share from Iraqâs oil revenue. These moves are viewed with suspicion by Iraqâs dominant ethnic-Arabs as a first step towards Kurdish independence, and tension has been rising between both sides. "Weâve lived free for 12 years - we have had a free press and we can show that democratic institutions can thrive," says Sasan Iwni, a KDP official. "There are people in Iraq who donât want this to spread."
Rather than the mixed feelings toward the US that prevail in the rest of Iraq - frequently a mixture of gratitude for the removal of Mr. Hussein and anger at the ongoing occupation - most Kurds are unabashedly pro-American. Zamri Malek named his chicken restaurant "Washington" after the US invasion began last spring. "I did it to thank America for setting us free," he says.
Arbil, a city of 600,000 thatâs home to about a fifth of Kurdistanâs people, is a city in shock. Militia from the KDP seem to man every other street corner. They flag down and search every car that has nonlocal plates. An aide to a KDP official calls the attacks "the Kurdish Sept. 11," and predicts big changes in the weeks ahead. "Just as things changed in America, we are going to become a lot more aggressive in going after the terrorists in our midst."
I think much of the Kurds' attention has been diverted by the PUK-KDP rivalry. They've made deals with other local groups that they wouldn't have made if they'd been totally secure in their positions Jamaat Islami/Komala and Kurdistan Islamic Movement spring to mind. Komala should have been destroyed with the Ansar al-Islam base, but they made a deal, for instance. I hope it does fire them up to bring the smaller Islamogroups under control, or maybe even kick them the hell out. And then they can figure what they're really going to do about PKK... | Mr. Iwni was about 10 feet away when the bomb exploded, and was talking with a colleague about their optimism over the KDP and PUK finally putting their old animosities aside. "There are still some differences between the two sides, but weâre working very hard to get together," says Mr. Mujar, a former general in the Peshmerga guerrillas who had fought Husseinâs regime for decades. "The important thing is all Kurds are entirely in agreement for pushing for real federal autonomy with the Governing Council." Mujar says the two most important officials lost from the KDP were Arbil Governor Akram Mintik and Deputy Prime Minister Sami Abdul Rahman. Mr. Rahman was one of the partiesâ leading intellectuals, a guerrilla with perfect English who had transformed himself into a suave diplomat. Mujar says both men played key roles in negotiations with the PUK. "Weâre an old party and there are people who can take their place, but this is still a very heavy blow."
Others arenât certain about how easy it will be to recover. The home of Mehdi Hoshnaw, the Arbil deputy governor who some here described as Kurdistanâs leading poet, is filled with mourning women, the men paying their respects at a mosque. Mr. Hoshnaw was killed along with his 28-year-old son Zardesh, a surgeon. "He was a poet of Kurdistan, of our loss and special suffering," says Tollah Hoshnaw, his youngest son, who slept through the party meeting. "This is a land stained with martyrsâ blood, and now his has been added to it."
"I donât know exactly who did this, but itâs no mistake that it happened when we were so close to finally getting our rights after so many generations of struggle," says Sian Nakashbandi, a civil engineer. "We begin to wonder if weâll ever live in peace," she says.
Posted by: Dan Darling 2004-02-05 |