Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Kurdistan Region To Grant Autonomy To The Christians

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Kurdistan Region To Grant Autonomy To The Christians

    KURDISTAN REGION TO GRANT AUTONOMY TO THE CHRISTIANS

    Rudaw
    Feb 9 2009
    Iraq

    The Christian parties and groups in Kurdistan are demanding that
    their right to autonomy be established in the Kurdistan Region's
    constitution in those provinces where they form the majority. The head
    of the Assyrian National Party says that the political leadership of
    Kurdistan accepts that demand.

    Last week, the Speaker of the Kurdistan parliament, Adnan Mufti,
    said that the project of Kurdistan Region's constitution has been
    completed and sent to the leadership of Kurdistan Region as well as
    the political sides through the parliament members so that they will
    give their own remarks and observations on it.

    In a joint press conference with the Prime Minister Nechirvan Barzani,
    Adnan Mufti said that one of the points that have not been decided
    yet is the issue of fixing a common name for the Christians in
    the constitution. He said: In this respect, they themselves are in
    dispute with each other. They have to agree unanimously on a common
    name. However, the Assyrian sides deny they may have any conflict
    among themselves over the issue of the name. They say that all the
    side are unanimous on being called "Sryanis Chaldeans Assyrians" But
    the Chaldeans, and particularly the Chaldean National Party chaired
    by Ablahad Afram, demand that the Chaldeans be treated as an ethnic
    group different from the Assyrians and that was fixed in the permanent
    Iraqi constitution.

    The head of the Assyrian National Party, Namrud Bito, told Rudaw that
    they do not want to repeat in the Kurdistan Region constitution what
    happened in the Iraqi constitution, where the names of the Christians
    were registered as "Chaldeans and Assyrians". He said: We are one
    nation and we want the name to be mentioned as "Siryanis Chaldeans
    Assyrians" in the Kurdish Region's constitution without a word or a
    comma between the names.

    With regard to the same point, the head of the Bet Nahrayn Party,
    Romeo Hakari, who represents the Christians in the commission
    for drawing up the constitution, told Rudaw: Over six months ago,
    all the sides of the "Siryani Chaldean Assyrian" people presented a
    memorandum to the Commission for Drawing up the Constitution. Article
    6 of the project says that the people of Kurdistan consist of Kurds,
    Turkomans, Chaldeans, Assyrians and Armans [Armenians] and they were
    mixed in this way. We are against that item. We have suggested that
    it should be written that the people of Kurdistan consist of Kurds,
    the "Chaldeans Siryan Assyrian" people, Turkomans and whatever other
    nations are added. The commission is free in this respect. However,
    we never accept being divided into three nations and we regard it
    as an injustice perpetrated against us as we were subjected to that
    injustice in the Iraqi constitution and we were divided into more
    than two nations on purpose.

    Romeo Hakari demanded: That mistake in the constitution of Iraq
    should be corrected. He added: If they say that the name should be
    as it is in the Iraqi constitution, that will be indeed an excuse
    for perpetrating the same injustice against us.

    Namrud Bito said all the Christian groups are unanimous that the draft
    constitution, before it was amended, was not up to what was necessary
    with regard to securing their rights and how they were named. But he
    said: After the memorandum which we gave to the parliament, we were
    reassured by the parliament chairmanship and the leaderships of the
    two parties that our demands would be fixed in the draft constitution
    along with the right to autonomy.

    Regarding the demand for autonomy, in May last year the Christian
    groups presented a proposal to the Commission for Drawing Up the
    Constitution. One of its points was establishing an autonomous
    region in the Naynawa plains. Prior to that, Minister of Finance
    Sarkis Aghajan presented that suggestion too. However, Romeo
    Hakari denied having demanded a specific region and said: What we
    demand is autonomy and not an autonomous area. We demand autonomy
    in the historical areas of our own people, in which our people are
    a majority, for example in Qara Qush administrative district - that
    is, Hamdaniyah and the administrative subdistricts of Bartla, Alqosh,
    Tilkef and such places. The elections of the governorate councils last
    week proved that our people form a majority in those areas. What we
    demand is that in those regions our people should have the right to
    "self-rule", according to the system of autonomy, but a viewpoint
    says that the decision for autonomy is in the federal government's
    authority and not that of the regions. Romeo Hakari said: In the
    federal system there can be many regions and there can be autonomous
    provinces within the regions.

    In the same respect, Namrud Bito announced that what they demand
    is recognition of their right to autonomy as an ideological issue,
    and said: What we want is for the constitution to say these people
    have that right. It need not necessarily specify the geographical
    borders of that autonomous region. But for the Siryani Chaldean
    Assyrian people, the recognition of the right to form an autonomous
    region is an important matter. After that, the other details - such
    as where that region will be and what are its borders and authorities
    - such matters are not normally explained in the constitution. The
    constitution only decides on the issues in principle.

    Namrud Bito also said that they have not yet seen the final draft of
    the constitution project. However, in accordance with the implications
    they have received from the political leadership of Kurdistan, they
    expect the draft constitution to have completely guaranteed their
    rights. He also confirmed: We do not like to be called Christians. It
    is true that we are Christians in terms of religion, but we do not ask
    for the right to become Christians. That is, the issue is ethnic and
    not religious. Our rights, religiously speaking, like the worshipping
    of God and such matters, have been secured and we have no problems in
    this respect. What we wish for is that our rights should be specific
    as an ethnic group and not a religious group, which terminates with
    the construction of several churches and guaranteeing the freedom of
    praying and fasting.

    For his part, the head of the Bet Nahrayn Party, Romeo Hakari, said
    they are trying to win the support of all sides for their rights. He
    added: To date, the three leaderships in Kurdistan Region have
    supported our demands, including the right to autonomy.

    The head of the commission for drawing up the constitution in the
    parliament of Kurdistan reiterated that, in agreement with the final
    draft of the project, the Christians, in the regions where they are a
    majority, have the right to autonomy. But Romeo Hakari denied that:
    It does not contain the right to autonomy and we ask that it should
    be established.

    The head of the Bet Nahrayn Party supported the system of quota for
    the elections and said: We support the quota system: that is, there
    should be individuality but not in the form of 1992 because it has not
    been formally established, so far, that the Chaldean Syrian Assyrian
    people should have five members in parliament. We urged that this be
    fixed before the elections are implemented and that we should always
    have five representatives in the parliament.
Working...
X