Ocnus.Net
Kurdish Leaders are Drunk with Power
By Michael Rubin, Daily Star (Beirut) 1/7/09
Jul 2, 2009 - 9:29:03 AM
On June 12, Iranians voted for a president. While the Islamic Republic
may not be a democracy, its leadership has always looked to the polls
to bestow popular legitimacy. Ayatollah Ahmad Janati, chairman of the
Guardian Council, for example, said just two days before the election:
"The enemies have always tried to question the legitimacy of the regime
by trying to reduce public participation in elections ... The people
must blind the eyes of the enemies by vast participation in elections."
Iran's desire for elections, however, does not extend to accepting
their results. Outraged, millions took to the streets across the
country, some chanting "Death to the Dictator."
Iranians, however, may not be the only ones to take to the streets to
protest election fraud this summer. On July 25, Iraqi Kurds will vote
in long-delayed regional elections. For the first time, the major
political figures - Kurdistan Democratic Party (KDP) leader Massoud
Barzani and Patriotic Union of Kurdistan (PUK) leader, and Iraqi
president, Jalal Talabani - face serious local opposition.
In the wake of Kuwait's liberation in 1991, Iraqi Kurds rose up against
Saddam Hussein's tyrannical rule. Rather than allow Saddam's helicopter
gunships to massacre the civilian population, the United States,
France, Turkey and Great Britain created a safe-haven in northern Iraq.
The following winter, Saddam withdrew Iraqi officials from what would
become Iraqi Kurdistan, believing he could starve the Kurds into
submission. It did not work. The Kurds organized elections. Almost a
million people voted. Barzani edged out Talabani, 45 to 44 percent,
with smaller parties splitting the remainder. Power sharing was not
always smooth: Both leaders like to command; both became addicted to
power. So long as Saddam remained a threat, Kurds tolerated abuses.
Since Saddam's fall, however, impatience at the failure to reform has
grown.
While the Kurdistan Regional Government could once describe itself as a
democratic beacon in the region, today such depictions lack
credibility. Seventeen years after its first election, Iraqi Kurdistan
is at best as democratic as Egypt or Iran, and worst akin to Syria or
Tunisia. Corruption is rife. Barzani uses the government budget as a
family slush fund, for example donating hundreds of millions of dollars
from public coffers to allow a relative to win a 2007 bid to operate an
Iraq-wide cell phone company. Few profitable businesses - oil, finance,
industry or trade - can operate without either silent partnership with
or outright payment to the Barzani or Talabani families.
Nepotism is also rife. Barzani, for example, appointed his son to head
the region's intelligence service, the dreaded Parastin, which Amnesty
International has accused of torture. While free media have become an
engine for democracy in the rest of Iraq, the Kurdish security services
threaten, harass, and in some cases even kill independent journalists.
The people of Iraqi Kurdistan say they have had enough. Noshirwan
Mustafa, Talabani's one-time deputy, has joined the former KDP
secretary general to form a rival election list. Two prominent Islamic
parties have joined with secular counterparts to create an additional
reform list. Both challenging lists are polling well.
Barzani and Talabani are worried. Rather than allow open election lists
as in the rest of Iraq, the Kurdish leaders insist that party lists be
closed, a way of preventing voter repulsion at examples of nepotism or
those known to be abusive of power. As the rival lists, the Change List
and the Service and Reform List, have gained traction, the Kurdish
security forces have threatened and roughed up opposition candidates.
Party officials have told apolitical bureaucrats that they will lose
their jobs if they do not support Barzani and Talabani. There is
widespread belief that KDP and PUK officials have compromised the
Independent Higher Election Commission's regional offices after KDP
security forces visited and, in some cases, arrested opposition
candidates within hours of their filing theoretically confidential
candidacy papers.
As has the Islamic Republic's leaders, Iraqi Kurdistan's leaders speak
of democracy, but have become drunk with power, and disdainful of
public accountability. As in Iran, Kurdistan Regional Government
officials have amassed vast fortunes inconsistent with salaries. Today,
ordinary Kurds refer to Barzani, his nephew, and his sons, as "little
Saddams." Actually, "little Rafsanjanis" might be as accurate. As in
Iran, Iraqi Kurdish officials have also worked to constrain independent
monitoring which might report on intimidation and interference before
election day.
As a consequence of all this, it appears that the Iraqi Kurdish people
seek change. What remains to be seen, however, is if Iraqi Kurds will
stand up for freedom and liberty as have the Iranian protestors, and if
the Iraqi Kurdish security forces will, like their Iranian
counterparts, use the point of a gun and midnight roundups to
disenfranchise a deserving people
Source: Ocnus.net 2009