MON 25 - 11 - 2024
 
Date: Dec 22, 2017
Source: The Daily Star
Iraqi Kurdish ministers resign while violent protests rage
BAGHDAD / SULAIMANIYAH, Iraq: Two political parties have withdrawn from Iraq’s Kurdish regional government amid street protests over delayed salaries, poor services and rampant corruption, a Kurdish lawmaker said Thursday.

Thousands of Kurds have taken to the streets in recent days in Sulaimaniyah, a stronghold of the Patriotic Union of Kurdistan, torching tires and attacking the offices of political parties. Security forces have used tear gas and live rounds to disperse stone-throwing demonstrators, and have imposed curfews.

At least five people were killed and 80 wounded in clashes in the nearby town of Rania, according to Mayor Hiwa Qarani.

Iraqi state TV said fresh demonstrations erupted in Rania, where hundreds of protesters faced off with security forces in Iraqi Kurdistan for a fourth day. Police deployed en masse in the town.

The Kurdish government “lacks legitimacy in the eyes of the citizens, who demand its resignation,” Sarwa Abdel-Wahid, who leads the Change Party bloc in the Iraqi Parliament in Baghdad, told the Associated Press from Sulaimaniyah.

Abdel-Wahid said three ministers from the Change Party and two from the Islamic Group Party have left the 21-minister Cabinet. The Change Party-affiliated regional Parliament speaker and the head of the board of investment will also resign, she added.

Abdel-Wahid accused the security forces affiliated with the PUK, one of the two largest Kurdish parties, of attacking the protesters and arresting “hundreds” of them.

“Sulaimaniyah has become a military camp for the Patriotic Union where they have deployed all their forces in the cities and towns to suppress the demonstrations,” she said. “For every protester there are two security members.”

Both the PUK and its main rival, the Kurdish Democratic Party, have faced mounting anger in the wake of September’s independence referendum, which set off a major crisis with the central government in Baghdad. The vote for independence was approved by more than 90 percent of Kurds but rejected by Baghdad and Iraq’s neighbors.

Since Monday, around 20 party offices and a town hall have been set ablaze across the autonomous region as protesters ramped up calls for the government to quit.

In October, federal forces seized disputed territory from Kurdish fighters, including the city of Kirkuk and surrounding oil fields. Baghdad has also demanded that border crossings and the region’s two international airports be handed over to federal authorities, and has ordered international airlines to halt services.

Even before the referendum, the Kurdish region was suffering from a financial crisis exacerbated by low oil prices. Civil servants have not been paid since August, pensioners have not been paid since February, and the government still owes both groups for unpaid months in previous years.


 
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