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Iraq-Jordan
Kurds Set To Win Two-Thirds Of Vote In Kirkuk
2005-02-02
SULEIMANIYAH, (Southern Kurdistan), Feb 1 (AFP) - The main Kurdish alliance is set to win two-thirds of the vote in Iraq's tense northern oil centre of Kirkuk, reports said Tuesday, fanning Turkish fears about Kurdish ambitions for the ethnically divided city. The alliance is also set to take a quarter of the seats overall in Iraq's new national assembly, giving the long-oppressed minority a major say in the drafting of a new post-Saddam Hussein constitution, one of its leaders told a Kurdish daily.

With just one district still to complete its count of Sunday's ballots, the Kurdish alliance has won 68 percent of the vote in Kirkuk, the Kurdish weekly Hawlati (Citizen) reported. If confirmed, the result would give the Kurds 26 of the 41 seats on the provincial council, the paper said.

The leader of one of the two factions that make up the alliance -- the Patriotic Union of Kurdistan -- said a higher-than-expected turnout across Kurdish areas was set to give it a quarter of the seats in the new assembly. "Turnout exceeded our hopes and reached 90 percent in some areas," Jalal Talabani told his party's Kurdistani Nwe (New Kurdistan) newspaper. "We're expecting to take 25 percent of the seats."

But Talabani sounded a conciliatory note towards Iraq's other ethnic and religious groups, promising that the Kurds would not abuse their weight in the new assembly. "Its most important task will be to draw up a constitution and we are counting on it taking into account everybody's wishes," he said.

Kurdistani Nwe editor Sherko Mangure said the Kurds now represented a "powerful force which needs to be taken into account in rebuilding Iraq." "We are in position to defend our rights in the drafting of the constitution," he told AFP.

The two former rebel factions are determined to consolidate their hard-won autonomy in northern Iraq and extend it to all traditionally Kurdish-inhabited areas, including Kirkuk. "The Kurdish districts must be returned to Kurdistan among them Kirkuk, If not, we will no longer be Iraqis," Top PUK deputy leader Noshirwan Mustafa warned. Note the repeated use of 'including Kirkuk'.
This is a great story, but Jihad Watch reported a couple days ago that the Kurds deliberately kept the Assyrian Christians from voting...not that Xtian votes would please the Turks much more.
Posted by:phil_b

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