Kurdish parties announce 'Kurdistani Coalition' for 2020 local election in disputed areas

28-09-2019
Karwan Faidhi Dri
Karwan Faidhi Dri @KarwanFaidhiDri
Tags: Article 140 disputed territories Iraq
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ERBIL, Kurdistan Region —  Major Kurdish parties have declared a joint Kurdish list will run in the April 2020 provincial election in Iraq’s disputed areas, in a bid to consolidate Kurdish votes.

“We as Kurdistani parties met today to form a joint list for areas covered by Article 140 such as Kirkuk, Mosul, Nineveh, Diyala, and Saladin. We have all agreed to run as one list in order to prevent losses in Kurdish votes. It was a successful meeting and we approved all points,” Kakamin Najar a member of the Kurdistan Democratic Party (KDP) politburo said in a joint press conference with other parties in Erbil. 

Article 140 of the Iraqi constitution was written to address the issue of lands disputed by the Kurdistan Regional Government (KRG) in Erbil and the federal government in Baghdad. It calls for normalization of these areas, to be followed by a referendum on whether or not those regions want to be part of the Kurdistan Region.

According to the constitution, the article should have been implemented by the end of 2007, yet so far no referendum has been conducted.

The main Kurdistan Region parties – KDP, Patriotic Union of Kurdistan (PUK), Kurdistan Islamic Union (KIU), Change Movement (Gorran) and Islamic Group (Komal) - are part of the joint list. 

Opposition party New Generation said in a Friday statement they would not be attending today’s meeting at the KDP’s Leadership Council office in Erbil, citing a lack of preparation.

The announcement of a joint list for across the disputed territories comes after attempts by Kurdish political parties to form electoral coalitions in some of the disputed provinces.

The parties that form part of today’s announced joint list had agreed on September 9  to run in Kirkuk under the name “Kirkuk is Kurdistani.” 

However, the name was rejected by the Iraqi electoral body who claimed the name could stoke further ethnic tension in the province.
  
Ethnically diverse Kirkuk is home to Kurdish, Arab, Turkmen, and Christian inhabitants. It has not held provincial council elections since 2005, mainly due to its disputed nature and disagreements between the province's ethnic communities.

Kurds were able to win 26 out of a possible 41 seats in the election held 14 years ago, when they ran on the joint Kurdistan Brotherhood List that also included some Turkmen parties.
 
A joint Kurdish party list for Nineveh province had also been proposed, but failed to materialize.

Saadi Pira, a member of the PUK politburo, said during the press conference that the list aims to “save” each and every Kurdish vote.

Kurdish political groups that have yet to join the coalition are welcome, Pira added.

“The doors are open for all existing groups and political organizations which intend to run for elections in these areas, we will happily welcome them,” he said. 

 

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