Tag Archives: Arab Iraq

Kirkuk, Iraq Bomb Attack Kills Dozens

By The Huffington Post News Editors

(Corrects byline)
By Mustafa Mahmoud
KIRKUK, Iraq, July 12 (Reuters) – A bomb attack on a tea house in the ethnically mixed Iraqi city of Kirkuk killed at least 31 people on Friday, police and medics said.
The blast tore through the tea shop where people had gathered after breaking their fast for the Muslim holy month of Ramadan in a southern district of Kirkuk, 250 km (155 miles) north of the capital Baghdad.
The violence is part of a sustained campaign of militant attacks since the start of the year that has prompted warnings of wider conflict in a country where ethnic Kurds and Shi’ite and Sunni Muslims have yet to find a stable power-sharing compromise.
“I left the cafe to go to my shop opposite. When the explosion happened the glass of my shop shattered and I was injured by the fragments. I rushed to the scene … some bodies were dismembered,” said Mohammed, a witness to the blast in the district of Wahed Huzeiran.
Kirkuk is rich in oil and lies on the front line of a dispute between the Shi’ite-led central government in Baghdad and ethnic Kurds who want the city to be incorporated into their autonomous region in the north of the country.
A referendum to determine Kirkuk’s status was supposed to be conducted in 2007, but political discord prevented it being carried out.
The city is located in a band of territory known as the “disputed areas” that run along the contested internal boundary between the Kurdistan region and Arab Iraq, stretching from Syria in the west to Iran in the east.
No one immediately claimed responsibility for the attack, but insurgents have been regaining strength in recent months, recruiting from the country’s Sunni minority, which resents Shi’ite domination since the U.S.-led invasion of 2003.
Iraq’s delicate ethno-sectarian balance has come under growing strain from the conflict in neighbouring Syria, where mainly Sunni rebels are fighting to …read more

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Huffington Post

10 years after US invasion, Kurds look to the West

At an elite private school in Iraq‘s autonomous Kurdish region, children learn Turkish and English before Arabic. University students dream of jobs in Europe, not Baghdad. And a local entrepreneur says he doesn’t like doing business elsewhere because the rest of the country is too unstable.

In the decade since U.S.-led forces invaded Iraq, Kurds have trained their sights toward Turkey and the West, at the expense of ties with the still largely dysfunctional rest of the country.

Aided by an oil-fueled economic boom, Kurds have consolidated their autonomy, increased their leverage against the central government in Baghdad and are pursuing an independent foreign policy often at odds with that of Iraq.

Kurdish leaders say they want to remain part of Iraq for now, but increasingly acrimonious disputes with Baghdad over oil and territory might just push them toward separation.

“This is not a holy marriage that has to remain together,” Falah Bakir, the top foreign policy official in the Kurdistan Regional Government, said of the Kurdish region’s link to Iraq.

A direct oil export pipeline to Turkey, which officials here say could be built by next year, would lay the economic base for independence. For now, the Kurds can’t survive without Baghdad; their region is eligible for 17 percent of the national budget of more than $100 billion, overwhelmingly funded by oil exports controlled by the central government.

Since the war, the Kurds mostly benefited from being part of Iraq. At U.S. prodding, majority Shiites made major concessions in the 2005 constitution, recognizing Kurdish autonomy and allowing the Kurds to keep their own security force when other militias were dismantled. Shiites also accepted a Kurd as president of predominantly Arab Iraq.

Still, for younger Kurds, who never experienced direct rule by Baghdad, cutting ties cannot come soon enough.

More than half the region’s 5.3 million people were born after 1991 when a Western-enforced no-fly zone made Kurdish self-rule possible for the first time by shielding the region against Saddam Hussein. In the preceding years, Saddam’s forces had destroyed most Kurdish villages, killing tens of thousands and displacing many more.

Students at Irbil’s private Cihan University say they feel Kurdish, not Iraqi, and that Iraq‘s widespread corruption, sectarian violence and political deadlock are holding their region back.

…read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News