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New Kurdish Constitution Claims Swathes Of Iraq

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  • New Kurdish Constitution Claims Swathes Of Iraq

    NEW KURDISH CONSTITUTION CLAIMS SWATHES OF IRAQ

    Agence France Presse -- English
    September 24, 2006 Sunday 3:35 PM GMT

    Iraq's Kurdish parliament on Sunday began debating the region's
    permanent constitution, a contentious document laying claim to other
    parts of Iraq and setting conditions for Kurds to remain part of
    the country.

    The 160-article document will be debated and amended ahead of a
    December 1 parliamentary vote by the Kurdish autonomous region's
    parliament.

    According to Article Two, Iraq's Kurdish region consists of the three
    current provinces of Dohuk, Arbil and Sulaimaniyah, but also Kirkuk
    province and parts of Diyalah, Nineveh and Wasit provinces.

    "The populations of these areas were taken from Kurdistan and when
    they are returned to Kurdistan, they will benefit from the same rights
    given to them by the federal constitution," stated the article.

    Large numbers of Sunni Arabs, Turkmen and Shiites live in these
    areas and have not expressed an interest in being part of the Kurdish
    autonomous region.

    The official languages of the region are Arabic and Kurdish and the
    population is recognized to include Turkmens, Chaldeans, Assyrians,
    Armenians, Kurds and Arabs.

    The constitution goes on to state that the Kurds have "chosen a liberal
    federation with Iraq as long as it respects the federal constitution,
    its federal, democratic and multiparty parliament."

    The Kurds reserve the right to review this choice should the federal
    constitution be violated, particularly the democratic or human rights
    aspects, or if a federal constitution article allowing a referendum
    for the future of Kirkuk is not respected.

    The Kurdish national flag will hang in government offices side by
    side with the Iraqi federal flag (which has yet to be redrawn), stated
    the draft. Currently the Kurdish regional president, Mahmud Barzani,
    has banned the display of Iraq's old national flag.

    While the constitution bans the existence of militias, it recognizes
    the historic Kurdish guerilla force of peshmergas as "the regular
    forces to protect and defend the region".
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