By Wladimir van Wilgenburg
Kurdish peshmerga troops
Kirkuk’s
Sunni Arab parties are not happy over the recent decisions of the Iraqi PM Nuri
al-Maliki and the Iraqi cabinet to turn the U.S. military base at Kirkuk into a
civilian airport, to approve 1,400 new police officers requested by the Kurdish
head of Kirkuk police, and the cancellation of agricultural contracts that were
granted to Sunni Arabs by the Ba’ath regime to increase the number of Arabs in
the province (Kirkuk Now, January 4; AKnews [Kurdistan News Agency], January
17; Sumaria News, January 24). They also expressed dissatisfaction over the
continued Kurdish security dominance of Kirkuk, the on-going arrests of
prominent Sunni Arabs by security forces from Baghdad and the assassination of
Sunni Arabs in Kirkuk. [1]
Members
of the Sunni Arab-dominated “Sahwa” militias in the Kirkuk region of northern
Iraq have also been under steady attack this month in the ethnically divided
district where Kurds and Arabs struggle for control. A Sahwa commander was
killed and his three guards injured during a January 23 attack on the
commander’s vehicle, a bomb exploded in front of the house of two brothers who
are Sahwa members on January 20 while another Sahwa member was shot dead by
unknown gunmen on January 7 (Aswat al-Iraq, January 23; January 20; January
7). Despite the pressure being applied
to the Sunni Arab population of Kirkuk, the community’s political leaders and
movements have failed to mobilize Kirkuk’s Arabs against the desire of many
Kurds to bring the oil-rich district under full Kurdish control.
There
were expectations a year ago that the Arab population of Kirkuk would engage in
a Tunisia-like uprising or engage in mass protests against Kurdish control of
the province in response to calls from the Arab Political Council (APC) in
Kirkuk (Sumaria TV, January 21, 2011). Headed by politicians from the Jibour
and Obeidi tribes, the APC is an Arab nationalist council uniting various Arab
politicians in Kirkuk that supported the secular Iraqiya list during the 2010
elections.
Despite
expectations, there have been few examples of political mobilization on the
part of Kirkuk’s Arab community. An APC effort last year to make February 25 a
“day of wrath” by calling for massive protests by Arab demonstrators was
averted by the deployment of Kurdish troops outside Kirkuk and the enforcement
of a curfew by the Kurdish-controlled police within the city (See Terrorism
Monitor, April 1, 2011). APC calls for protests and sit-ins last summer brought
few Arabs into the streets and failed to create any significant unrest
(Rudaw.net, August 26 2011). Some of the February 25 protests in Arab-dominated
districts of Kirkuk like Hawija and Rashaad actually called for the removal of
Arab politicians and the elimination of corruption. As a result Arab
politicians called the Arab youth of Kirkuk “disloyal” and claimed they were
influenced by Kurds [1].
In
fact, the APC does not have the financial resources, organizational capacity or
popular support for their efforts to initiate a Tunisian-style uprising or even
mass protests against the Kurdish-controlled authorities in Kirkuk. Shaykh Abd
al-Rahman al-Assi, head of the APC, has threatened to conduct sit-ins and
protests against the Kurdish security forces several times, but in reality he
is unable to follow up on such threats.
Election
results and surveys from 2005 to 2011 show consistently that the majority of
Kirkuk’s Arabs oppose the ambition of Kurdish nationalists to annex the
province to the Kurdistan Region through Article 140 of the Iraqi constitution,
which calls for normalization of Kirkuk’s disputed status through an overdue
census and referendum (see Terrorism Focus, February 25, 2009). Such data also
confirms widespread support for some of the claims of popular support made by
Arab nationalist politicians in Kirkuk. [2] However, data collected from the
police and local press show that between 2004 and 2011 there were only around
30 demonstrations against Kurdish claims to Kirkuk. The majority of the
demonstrations carried out in Kirkuk by Arabs, Kurds and Turkmen focused on a
lack of services, jobs and electricity [3].
Surveys
and interviews show there is widespread frustration in Kirkuk and the rest of
Iraq regarding the effectiveness of the nation’s politicians [4]. Iraqis see
their politicians as corrupt, ineffective and more involved with their own
personal squabbles than with running the country (AKnews, July 18, 2011). One
survey shows that 81% of Kirkuk’s population support calls for more democracy
and government responsiveness in both their own province and the rest of the
Arab world [5].
The
results show that there is a great gap between the Arab politicians’ focus on
ethnic-related demands and the daily needs of the population of Kirkuk.
Therefore, it was not surprising that the APC withdrew their support for the
February 25 demonstrations days after they found out the protesters would call
for the removal of Arab politicians.
The
Arab nationalists’ lack of organizational skills and resources in is in stark
contrast to Kirkuk’s more experienced, more organized and better funded Kurdish
political parties. These groups dominate most of the official institutions and
maintain their own telecommunication networks, satellite channels, newspapers
and a large number of NGOS in Kirkuk. The Kurdish parties have even succeeded
in running NGOs and projecting their security influence in Arab-dominated districts
of Kirkuk, while the APC lack television stations and newspapers while failing
to operate a single NGO.
Kirkuk’s
Sunni Arabs did not have any political organizations prior to 2003, unlike the
Kurds, who have controlled the autonomous Kurdistan Region since 1991. As a
result the Sunnis are disorganized and depend largely on the political
participation of various tribes and former military officers. The dependence of
the dis-unified Sunni politicians on tribes also leads to divisions and
disaffection over tribal nepotism. Although Arab politicians control Sahwa
(Awakening) militias and city councils outside of the city, they do not have a
major influence within the provincial council of Kirkuk or the city itself.
Furthermore,
the APC lacks support from independent centers of power within Iraq on a local,
regional and national level. Kurdish political groups in Kirkuk have support
from the KRG and dominate the city’s political and security structure,
including the police and the local branch of the Asayish, the KRG security
agency. The APC’s main allies in the
Iraqiya list failed to form the government and do not hold any influential
posts at present as the List is boycotting the Iraqi parliament.
In
August 2011, APC politicians visited prominent Sunni politicians Vice-President
Tariq al-Hashimi and Deputy PM Salih al-Mutlaq to voice their demands
(Rudaw.net, August 26, 2011). Now, however, Hashimi is wanted on terrorism
charges and has taken refuge in Kurdistan region, while Prime Minister Nuri
al-Maliki wants to replace al-Mutlaq for calling him a “dictator” (al-Jazeera,
December 28, 2011; Niqash.org, January 12).
Despite
the fact that Kurdish political parties are stronger in Kirkuk than Arab nationalist
parties, this does not change the fact that the
Kurds lack support from Baghdad, neighboring countries and the West for
annexing Kirkuk to the Kurdistan region. This means that the Kurdish parties
will remain in de facto control of Kirkuk in the future and that Arab
politicians in Kirkuk will be unable to challenge that control without support
from Baghdad and effective political mobilization.
-This report was published in Terrorism Monitor Volume: 10 Issue: 2, on
26/01/2012
-Wladimir van Wilgenburg studied Journalism and New Media at Leiden University and is studying international relations at the University of Utrecht. Van Wilgenburg writes freelance articles on the Middle East and is an editor at the Kurdish newspaper Rudaw, based in Erbil, northern Iraq.
-Wladimir van Wilgenburg studied Journalism and New Media at Leiden University and is studying international relations at the University of Utrecht. Van Wilgenburg writes freelance articles on the Middle East and is an editor at the Kurdish newspaper Rudaw, based in Erbil, northern Iraq.
Notes:
1. Wladimir van Wilgenburg, "Failed (or Aborted) Arab Spring in
Iraq: A Study of the Political Mobilization of Sunni Arabs in Kirkuk," MA
Thesis, Utrecht University, August 12, 2011.
2. Ibid
3. Ibid
4. Ibid
5. Survey of Northern Triangle Public Opinion April 13-18, 2011: http://www.iri.org/sites/default/files/2011%20June%2016%20IRI%20Releases%20Survey%20of%20Iraqi%20Public%20Opinion,%20April%2013-18,%202011.pdf
2. Ibid
3. Ibid
4. Ibid
5. Survey of Northern Triangle Public Opinion April 13-18, 2011: http://www.iri.org/sites/default/files/2011%20June%2016%20IRI%20Releases%20Survey%20of%20Iraqi%20Public%20Opinion,%20April%2013-18,%202011.pdf
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