Meg Munn MP on recognising the genocide against the Iraqi Kurds

 

Flag of Kurdistan flying

Many have heard that the Iraqi dictator Saddam Hussein was responsible for killing hundreds of thousands of people. Only some will understand what was involved in the slaughter, and fewer still will know he systematically targeted the Kurdish people living in northern Iraq to remove any possibility of opposition. During the period from 1963 to the late 1980s tens of thousands of Kurdish men, women and children were murdered.

It was only in 2003 after Saddam Hussein was captured that the first of hundreds of mass graves were discovered, and the true scale of the horror revealed. Nine years later, expert forensic teams are excavating these graves and identifying the bodies so they can at last be returned home to their families for burial. Recently a petition backed by MPs and peers was launched in parliament calling on the British government to recognise that this mass murder of Iraqi Kurds was an act of genocide.

The dropping of chemical weapons in 1988 on the town of Halabja is probably the best known single atrocity committed upon the Kurdish people. Survivor Kamaran Haider, who now lives in Portsmouth, was 11 years old when the chemical weapons were dropped. As many as 5,000 men, women and children were killed, and tens of thousands of people injured in the attack. His four brothers, sister and both his parents died.

He said: ‘I lost my whole family. I watched them die in front of me. My skin was burning and I couldn’t see or move. After three days in a bomb shelter surrounded by dead bodies, I was rescued. Please sign this petition to help win justice for my family and for the thousands of people who died during the genocide.’

It’s over 60 years since the second world war but we do not forget the victims of that genocide. It was the Labour government that first ensured funding for the Holocaust Education Trust to work with schools, colleges and communities to educate people about genocide and its contemporary relevance. It ensures that each new generation learns what happened. This government has continued that commitment.

In Israel the Holocaust Memorial Museum Yad Vashem chronicles not only the murder of millions but Jewish life before the Holocaust. There is a memorial to those killed and a database of the victims. Just as happened to Jewish families at the end of the war, today many Kurdish families don’t know the fate of their loved ones.

But some say ‘why does it matter? Why not move on?’ There is the rebuilding of society to get on with – and this is important. Not just building the economy, but re-establishing the thousands of villages that were destroyed and re-establishing the essence of Kurdish life around agriculture.

But genocide is one of the worst crimes that can be committed. Think of it – the systematic killing of all the people from a national, ethnic, or religious group, or an attempt to do so. We have a duty to remember and honour the victims. The recognition of the genocide by the British government is a crucial part in ensuring that such crimes never happen again.

You can sign the e-petition here

http://www.progressonline.org.uk/2012/08/10/recognising-genocide-in-iraq/

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The Iraqi Constitution and Democracy: Issues and Challenges

Minister Falah Mustafa Bakir delivered this lecture at Coventry University on

 4 July 2012.

Greeting & Introduction

Professors, ladies, gentlemen and distinguished guests,

Good morning and thank you for having me here to speak with you today.

It is a privilege for me to stand before you at this prestigious institution which promotes such noble values and goals and equips its students to help resolve difficult political and social issues all around the world.

As you all know, Iraq is in the midst of a critical time in its history right now. The question of whether it is possible for a federal, democratic and pluralistic government to truly exist in Iraq is being talked about by experts all around the world; and the truth is, no one has the answer.

The unnatural combination of incompatible groups into the modern state of Iraq after the First World War has plagued the country with violence, fear and disunity for the better part of a century now.

We have seen many governments come and go in this short time, and the only moments of stability that the country has seen as a whole have come as a benefit to the members of one privileged group while the others were largely excluded or actively oppressed.

As you study and teach the art of peace building and conflict resolution, I would encourage you to look carefully at the history of the Kurdish peoples in the 19th and 20th centuries, for in our history you will see many examples of large-power diplomacy which has failed to protect and preserve the rights of an important group of people.

I will go further and suggest that many of you and your students would find our Region a fascinating contemporary case study. Such a study would give a much needed alternative view from the recorded histories of the big powers, as ours comes from the perspective of those who have lived on the fringes of those powers for many centuries. Scholars have already come from Harvard, Cambridge and other leading universities to conduct research in our Region, but the story of our past and our current dynamic emergence is only beginning to be understood.

Today we find ourselves in relatively optimistic circumstances, but for most of our past we have been the victims of policies and strategies which have nearly cost us our existence as a people.

A History of Repression

I’m sure many of you are aware that the Kurdish people in Iraq suffered from political and societal repression long before the Ba’athist regime of Saddam Hussein. We were sidelined and oppressed, and the right to self-determination has continuously been withheld from us.

The people of greater Kurdistan have long lived along a fault line of competing empires, and this ever-changing political landscape has made our people the pawns in greater regional games, becoming hostage to larger powers who have long dominated regional politics.

We are still largely forced into this role, in spite of the fact that we have tried many times to take ownership of the universal rights of life and liberty, especially in the past 100 years.

Crushed Hopes

In 1920, the Treaty of Sevres included promises that would have enabled the Kurds to have their own state,

  1. Article 64 of the treaty even gave Kurds living in the Mosul wilayat the option of joining a future independent Kurdistan.

However, these early hopes were crushed when it was replaced by the Treaty of Lausanne less than 3 years after it had been signed, and in Iraq, the British arranged coronation of the Pan-Arab Nationalist Emir Faisal as King began a long line of successive Iraqi governments which generally denied the Kurds their identity and refused them their rights.

Betrayal & Genocide in Iraq

Following 12 years of exile for participating in the establishment of the Kurdistan Republic of Mahabad in 1946, one of our greatest national heroes, General Mustafa Barzani, returned to Iraqi Kurdistan after the overthrow of the Iraqi monarchy in 1958, and a long series of promises and betrayals for recognition of Kurdish rights began.

Iraqi leader Abdul Karim Qassim tried to strengthen the weak Iraqi government through Kurdish support. However, his government soon gave way to Ba’athist control in the first coup of 1963 after the Kurds withdrew their support due to their agreements not being met.

After a number of political and military battles in the following years, leaders in Baghdad and Kurdistan arrived at the Autonomy Agreement on 11 March 1970 that provided broader Kurdish freedom and allowed for Kurdish participation in government.

However, fighting again resumed in 1974 because the agreement had still not been implemented, and we were again betrayed and left to fend for ourselves when Saddam convinced the Shah of Iran to stop supporting the Kurdish movement through giving away half of the strategically significant Shat-al-Arab river in the Algiers Agreement of 1975.

Most of you know about the aggressive Arabization and genocide campaigns which then began and ultimately threatened our very existence in Iraq.

By the end of the Iran-Iraq War and the notorious Anfal operations, 4,500 villages had been destroyed, 180 thousand killed, well over a million displaced, and the largest series of chemical weapons attacks on a civilian population in history had been carried out—namely in: Halabja, Sheikh Wasan, Balisan, Badinan and other places.

Added to these unimaginable losses are the countless men, women and children who spent years being starved, raped, beaten and tortured in Saddam’s prisons; many whose only crime had been to make a negative comment about the central government in Baghdad.

The horror and the systematic and calculated nature of these attacks has driven us to undertake an international campaign to recognize them for the genocide that they were in order to ensure that this will never happen against us again.

Saddam’s forces exercised their final murderous assault on our people in 1991 after the Desert Storm coalition forces initiated a cease-fire agreement with the regime only days after our people took their advice and rose up to push the Regime’s forces out of our cities.

A Human Rights Watch report from the time describes Saddam’s reprisals in this way:

“In their attempts to retake cities, and after consolidating control, loyalist forces killed thousands of anyone who opposed them whether a rebel or a civilian by firing indiscriminately into the opposing areas; executing them on the streets, in homes and in hospitals; rounding up suspects, especially young men, during house-to-house searches, and arresting them with or without charge or shooting them en masse; and using helicopters to attack those who try to flee the cities.”

And this was only days after our people had granted amnesty to, and released, thousands of Iraqi soldiers that were captured during the uprising.

In this context, there should be no question why returning to a position of being subject to the whims and control of an authoritarian or dictatorial regime in Baghdad is a condition that we will never accept again.

An Iraqi Success Story

Following the passage of UN Security Council Resolution 688 and the implementation of the no-fly-zone through Operation Provide comfort, we began the transition to a democratic government and a free market economy.

Saddam’s retreating forces emptied the banks, cut off all food, fuel supplies and funding for civil institutions, disconnected the region from the national power grid and prevented students from returning to their schools or patients from receiving specialized medical care outside of the Region.

Our people responded by working for months without compensation and by holding a Regional election to establish the Kurdistan Parliament and begin to form the Kurdistan Regional Government that exists today.

We have seen tremendous progress, and this combined with our national values make us confident of a bright and promising future for our people.

  1. We have enjoyed security and stability thanks to the efforts of our very capable security forces, and the grateful cooperation of our people.
    1. There has not been a single western fatality from war or terrorism in Kurdistan since well before the fall of the former regime in 2003.
  2. We have built a strong, stable and democratic government.
    1. We have a functioning opposition, which we hope will learn to play a positive role in helping to ensure the accountability of our system.
    2. We have begun working to address government effectiveness and efficiency through implementing a Quality Assurance program with the UK National School of Government (NSG) and through working with the well known firm PricewaterhouseCoopers (PwC).
  3. We have seen tremendous year-on-year growth as we develop and rebuild from our repressive past, bringing unprecedented numbers of new companies, new technologies and new goods and services to our Region.
  4. We have made immense progress in the delivery of basic services, especially when compared to the rest of Iraq.
  5. We are a tolerant and friendly Region, blessed with many cultures, religious groups, and social organizations that live peacefully together.
    1. The ethnic and religious-based violence that has plagued the rest of Iraq has not, and will not take hold in our Region.
    2. Kurdistan is a refuge for many, as we have received tens of thousands of IDPs fleeing violence in other parts of Iraq in addition to increasing numbers of refugees fleeing the ongoing instability in Syria.
      1. This is not only true now, but we provided a refuge for those in need of protection before the fall of the regime as well—many have benefited from the protection of our mountains.

Commitment to a Federal Iraq

In spite of these tremendous achievements in self-governance and the acute pain of our recent past, we voluntarily embraced the hope of a new Iraq and committed ourselves to the federal system.

The fall of the Ba’athist regime in 2003 brought an end to the darkest days of our history, finally giving Kurds the hope of a future and giving all Iraqis the opportunity to build a new social and political structure.

I want to be clear here – especially to those who often refer to Kurds as “separatists.”  We had a choice in 1991, in 2003, and in the height of the Sunni-Shi’a struggle in 2006 & 2007. There were many among us who wanted to take these moments to declare our independence.  But our leadership believed that our most reasonable course was to remain part of a new democratic and federal Iraq.

That commitment still exists today, but it depends completely on the character of the new Iraq, and whether our constitutional rights and freedoms are respected by the Iraqi government.

For the past nine years, our leadership has been at the forefront of the process of building a new democratic Iraq, and we have worked diligently to build a federal government which respects the freedoms of its people and which could provide a better life for all of us:

  1. We actively participated in the writing of a constitution which would guarantee the freedoms of all Iraq’s people, and provide a level of political and economic autonomy which would enable us all to build a stable and prosperous future.
  2. We have supported the formation of three separate Iraqi cabinets with our votes in Parliament—the interim, transitional and current governments.
  3. We have provided dozens of our most talented public servants to serve in the Iraqi government.
  4. We contributed 3 brigades of our professional armed forces – the Peshmerga – to help in the original formation of the Iraqi Army, when other groups would not join.
  5. We cooperated with Iraq and the international coalition by providing servicemen to maintain security throughout many parts of Iraq—and we have lost many of our sons in doing so.
  6. We have hosted national meetings of all Iraqi groups in Erbil to negotiate key issues regarding Iraq’s future.
    1. Kurdistan Region President Masoud Barzani voluntarily played a vital role in negotiating the agreement which finally led to the formation of the current government almost 10 months after the elections.
  7. And finally, we have provided 83% of the revenues of oil produced in our Region to the federal government in Baghdad.

By any and every standard, we have lived up to the agreements and expectations of a federal, democratic, and pluralistic Iraq.  No one can reasonably accuse us of failing to live up to our obligations.  We have tried, and will continue to try to make the state of Iraq work.

The Constitution

However, true partnership in the new Iraqi government and the guarantee of the rule of law through the constitution are the only hope of maintaining a unified Iraq and protecting the rights of its people.

There are a number of areas in the constitution that could and should be improved to allow for greater democracy, freedom, clarity and transparency. But, the constitution itself lays out the framework for how these changes should be made.

In short, pluralism and the Rule of Law must be the foundation on which the federal government is built. The power of a central government has too often been abused and manipulated for our people to trust in its good will toward them.

We will continue to utilize every political tool at our disposal to achieve a federal government of true partnership that is based on the federal constitution. However, we will not become a part of a return to the old Iraqi traditions of centralized power and authoritarianism.  We in the Kurdistan Region have come too far, and suffered for too long to allow this to happen.

A Bright Future

As our flag so appropriately depicts, the sun is rising in Kurdistan.

Since the formation of our regional government, and especially since the fall of the dictatorship, we have seen progress in all aspects of our daily life. Health care, education, electricity, agriculture, roads, housing, tourism, and general infrastructure have been dramatically improved, and continue to be developed.

More than these, we have made progress with important social issues, such as the empowerment of women, greater attention to human rights, greater governmental transparency, and an open democracy with genuine political choices and an active civil society and opposition.

We have of course made many mistakes, and we will make many more. Having suffered so much, and having come so far, our people are impatient, but we must be judged by where we have come from. We are in a transitional phase, but our significant accomplishments confirm that we are on a genuine path toward democracy, and we believe it is clear that we are on the right track.

We want to continue to build our capacity, and we remain committed to enhancing our relations with the international community in order to pursue this goal and to ensure that the horrors of our past will never be repeated.

I am confident that our people will continue to triumph over our painful history and that our forward looking Regional government, committed to good governance, transparency and the rule of law, will help us fully emerge into a bright new future.

Thank you.

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Foreign Relations supremo meets APPG

The Head of the Foreign Relations Department in the Cabinet of the Kurdistan Regional Government, Falah Mustafa Bakir recently addressed a meeting of the APPG. He explained that the KRG was seeking to build a civilised society from the ashes of dictatorship and said that he and his colleagues appreciated the role of the APPG in providing support and constructive criticism.

He was very pleased with the level of UK co-operation with the KRG and the positive part played by the UK Consul-General in Erbil. He explained that the process of issuing visas to Iraqi Kurds for visits to the UK is being improved – a longstanding issue for the APPG.

We are also keen that when security clearance is given for direct flights between the UK and Erbil that a carrier will come forward to organise such flights which will help boost the commercial and cultural connections between the UK and the Kurdistan Region.

We discussed the progress in making the federal settlement in Iraq work. The Minister outlined how promises made by the current Iraqi Prime Minister have not yet been implemented and that the Kurds are concerned, not surprisingly given the genocide carried out by the previous dictatorship against the Kurds, about authoritarian and dictatorial tendencies in Baghdad. He explained that the current status quo is not an option and that the Iraqi Kurds are working with others to send a strong message to Mr Al Maliki that he cannot rule as he wishes.

My own view is that while the Kurds are not being secessionist or maximalist, the notion of an independent course of action for the Iraqi Kurds is no longer easily dismissed, not least because of the tremendous progress that has been made in building a new relationship with Turkey.

We discussed the recent visit by President Barzani to the USA where it was made clear that the US doesn’t necessarily support the current PM, has no preference for the post and would take a stand if he were to rule as a dictator.

The Minister expressed his support for a peaceful and democratic settlement in Syria where the KRG has been helping the Syrian Kurds to unite and for the opposition to Assad to recognise the need for justice for the Kurds who cannot be expected to blindly join the opposition unless they are certain that the alternative will protect the rights of minority group including the Kurds, Christians, Druze and Alawites.

We noted that there has been a growing appreciation by the UK Government about the positive changes in the Kurdistan Region and its role in the wider region. We were told of various possible ministerial visits.

Gary Kent

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A haven for Iraqi Christians

Co-Chair Meg Munn MP takes a look at the position of Christians in Iraqi Kurdistan and concludes that the APPG has been “extremely impressed by the willingness of the Kurdistan Regional Government to show imaginative and humanitarian leadership and expect that this will continue. We hope that their example will be followed in the rest of Iraq and the wider Middle East where Christians are under real pressure.”

See full article in the Church Times here.

http://www.megmunnmp.org.uk/press-view-entry.asp?type=Views&id=380

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British diplomat’s valedictory column on the Kurdistan Region

The outgoing British Consul-General in Erbil, Chris Bowers, concludes that the Kurdistan Region is going to be and do just fine.  The people deserve it.

Full article here

http://www.rudaw.net/english/science/columnists/4935.html

 

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Justice for Iraqi Kurds

Falah Mustafa Bakir, the Head of the KRG Foreign Relations Department writes
 
An estimated 182,000 Kurdish people were murdered during the Anfal campaign. To put this into context, that’s enough people to fill Wembley Stadium twice over.

Today the survivors are bravely re-building their lives and their homes. But to truly look to the future, they need to come to terms with the horror they have endured. To do this, they need international recognition of the barbaric atrocities inflicted on them.

The Kurdistan Regional government, and its supporters in the UK including the All-Party Parliamentary Group on Kurdistan Region, are now calling for recognition of what happened to our people.

Today, British MPs will call on their government to recognise the mass murder of Iraqi Kurds as genocide, and will officially launch an e-petition which we would urge every British citizen to sign.

We realise that genocide is understood by most to be the gravest crime against humanity it is possible to commit, and that it is no small thing to ask the British government to recognise our treatment under Saddam as genocide.

But only through recognition can the survivors achieve justice for those who died, and for themselves, the survivors, who continue to bear the physical and mental scars and in doing so move forward with their lives

If such recognition could lead to prevention of similar crimes; if it could raise awareness among the international community; if it could help to identify and punish the remaining perpetrators, then it is worth pursuing. We realise that it will require hard work, long-term commitment, and considerable resources. However, we believe that the international community has a moral commitment to recognise these types of crimes. We believe, and hope that the international community has adopted the principle of responsibility to protect populations at risk, and will be more prepared to prevent such crimes in the future.

There is an old saying in Kurdistan: “Kurds have no friends but the mountains.” We hope that the British government will disprove this. We need to gather 100,000 signatures. We hope yours will be one of them.

If you are resident in the UK or a British citizen, you can sign the online petition to recognise the Kurdish Genocide here.

The full article can be read at http://www.huffingtonpost.co.uk/falah-mustafa-bakir/justice-for-iraqi-kurds_b_1642620.html?view=print

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Ireland, John Major, Tony Blair and campaign on the Kurdish Genocide

Gary Kent’s latest column in Rudaw

My own view is that Kurdistan is showing how the past can be overcome but that it is essential that the genocide be formally recognized. Given the leading role played by John Major and Tony Blair in liberating the Kurdistan Region, the UK is well-placed to add its weight.

The all-party group and the KRG are backing a move by MP Nadhim Zahawi to persuade the British Government through finding 100,000 signatures which could trigger a parliamentary debate. The e petition is at http://epetitions.direct.gov.uk/petitions/31014 but can only be signed by British citizens and residents.

The campaign is being officially launched this week in the Commons at a major event, which is being addressed by the Head of the KRG Foreign Relations Department, Falah Mustafa Bakir. This campaign also raises awareness of Kurdistan – past, present and future.

The massive progress in Kurdistan was once a pipe dream, just as much as peace in Northern Ireland was, but hard work by many is paying dividends.

Full article here

http://www.rudaw.net/english/science/columnists/4909.html

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Kurdish Democracy Needs Free and Professional Media

Chris Bowers, the British consul general in Erbil, examines the role of the media in a free society.

As a government representative, I am a little wary about commenting on the media in the Kurdistan Region.  But as a former journalist and as someone who has followed politics and media here closely, I hope I have the right.

First, a few general points.  Democracy is unimaginable without a free media able to hold a government to account.  That is why the UK supports free media the world over and will continue to do so.  One of Britain’s best known brands is a media outlet: the BBC.   We support a free media overseas because we demand it as citizens ourselves.

Continue reading http://www.rudaw.net/english/science/columnists/4887.html

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KRG Representative: We expect trade with UK to continue to grow

The Kurdistan Regional Government’s High Representative to the UK today told British companies that Kurdistan’s economy is booming and there are many opportunities to do business there.

Bayan Sami Abdul Rahman was speaking at a lunch hosted in her honour by the Middle East Association (MEA), the UK’s leading trade association focusing on the Middle East and North Africa. “The Kurdistan Region has vast natural resources and British oil companies have invested heavily in the region. But there are opportunities in every sector, from construction to agriculture, education and training to retail and consumer services.”

She highlighted the growing wealth of the Kurdistan where GDP per capita has increased from $300 in 2003 to about $4,500. Ms Abdul Rahman pointed out that Kurdistan’s relations with the UK have deepened over time, not just in trade but also in culture, education and human capacity development. “The number of British companies registered in Kurdistan is the highest of any Western country and comes only after Turkey, Lebanon and Iran,” she said. “We are delighted with this and we expect our trade with the UK to continue to grow.”

David Lloyd of the MEA echoed Ms Abdul Rahman’s words. He said, “Kurdistan is a fine country. As Bayan said, there are opportunities in every sector and British business is welcomed. The best thing is to go and see for yourselves.”

The lunch was attended by representatives of British companies operating in a wide range of sectors, including banking, insurance, law, oil services and education, as well as by representatives of UKTI, the British government’s trade and investment unit.

Ms Abdul Rahman thanked the MEA for its consistent encouragement of trade between the UK and Kurdistan and invited those attending to participate in the flagship Erbil International Trade Fair in October. Last year’s trade fair saw a record number of British participants, many of whom have done business in Kurdistan since.

http://uk.krg.org/articles/detail.aspx?lngnr=12&anr=36653

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Health co-operation between the UK and the Kurdistan Region

Professor Deiary Kader, the founder of the Newcastle/Gateshead Medical Volunteers group and an Iraqi Kurd himself, recently addressed the APPG on his work.

Over the last two years, the charity has recruited more than a hundred health professionals of whom sixty have visited Erbil in the Kurdistan Region. These members come from a wide range of health disciplines: surgeons, anaesthetists, Junior Doctors, nurses and a Physiotherapist.

They work with the Barzani Charity Foundation and the Nechirvan Health Aid Office as well as Zheen Hospital staff.

Their first exploratory trip was in April 2010 during which time two consultants and a Registrar saw 40 patients.

They have now notched up six visits in two years and a thousand people and performed more than 100 operations.

They have also taught Kurdish health professionals. They have exchanged views and information on issues such as pre-assessment procedures, keeping patient information, nursing skills and practice, theatre etiquette.

They also talked about key policy areas for health services such as public-private partnerships, medical regulation, quality control and training.

Deiary told the APPG that the Kurdish health system currently gives a lower status to nurses and that there is a major pay discrepancy between them and doctors, whereas nurses are the mainstay of the UK health system.

We hope that such discussions help lift the quality of the health service in the Kurdistan Region, which was badly neglected under Saddam Hussein and which still lags behind although there is a widespread appreciation that infrastructure and investment have to be improved and increased. There is a need to improve primary health care and preventative medicine to reduce the footfall in more expensive hospital settings as well as reducing over-prescribing – similar debates to the UK.

The traffic isn’t all one way. The UK health professionals gain a great deal from the experience themselves. It improves their understanding of diversity and acceptance of other cultures, their knowledge of global health issues, improves team spirit by sharing a common goal and allows them to acquire new skills.

Such sterling work is undertaken in their own time and saves the KRG much money. The APPG applauds their work and is seeking to make sure that its value is recognised more widely as an example of how people-to-people co-operation can work wonders for the UK and the Kurdistan Region, as it builds its health system almost from scratch.

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