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Report: Iraqi election law again falters on Kirkuk dispute - Update

Posted : Wed, 04 Nov 2009 12:34:23 GMT
By : dpa
Category : Middle East (World)
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Baghdad - Iraqi lawmakers on Wednesday again failed to reach a compromise on the thorny issue of voting in the disputed city of Kirkuk, the satellite network al-Arabiya reported. Many Iraqi Kurds hope to make Kirkuk, and its nearby oil fields, the capital of a future independent state, calling it their "Jerusalem." Arab and Turkmen politicians view the city and surrounding al-Tamim province as integral parts of Iraq.

Parliamentary deadlock on the issue has thrown into question whether the elections will take place on January 16, as scheduled. According to the Iraqi constitution, the elections must take place by the end of January. A law must be passed 90 days before voting begins.

When the elections law appeared on the parliament's agenda for Wednesday, it briefly raised hopes that a compromise on the issue might be at hand. The issue has repeatedly forestalled a vote on the elections law and has raised the possibility that elections now scheduled for January 16 may be postponed.

Iyad al-Samarrai, the speaker of the Iraqi parliament, on Wednesday morning met with representatives of the various parliamentary blocs in a new effort to strike a compromise.

The election law's appearance on the parliament's agenda followed an apparent softening of each side's position.

Kurdish lawmakers had Tuesday said they would accept a compromise that would grant Kirkuk a "special status" in January's elections, a retreat from the Kurds' previous insistence that voting in the city and the surrounding al-Tamim province must take place in concert with the rest of the country, using the most recent voter registration rolls.

"I expect to reach an agreement on Kirkuk within the coming hours," Iraqi Kurdish lawmaker Rashid Azzawi told Baghdad's Aswat al-Iraq news agency Tuesday night.

"Arabs, Turkmen and Kurds agreed to give Kirkuk a special status," he said.

Massoud Barzani, president of northern Iraq's semi-autonomous Kurdish region, had previously said that the Kurds will not accept any solution that gives Kirkuk "a special status" in the 2010 polls. Kirkuk was left out of previous elections after lawmakers failed to come to a formula for counting the region's votes.

Kurdish lawmakers back a UN proposal that would see Kirkuk vote with the rest of the country, using 2009 voter registration rolls that show a marked rise in the number of Kurdish voters. Arab and Turkmen politicians look with suspicion at the rise in Kurdish voters, and want 2004 rolls used instead.

A more recent UN proposal suggested using the most recent voter rolls, but instituting a quota system to make sure that Arab

Copyright DPA

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