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Interview
with PUK Leader Jalal Talabani
RFE/RL IRAQ REPORT
Vol. 7, No. 25, 10 July 2004
RFE/RL'S RADIO FREE IRAQ (RFI) INTERVIEWED FORMER
IRAQI GOVERNING COUNCIL MEMBER AND HEAD OF THE
PATRIOTIC UNION OF KURDISTAN JALAL TALABANI IN
PRAGUE ON 2 JULY.
RFI: Ladies and gentlemen, we have the opportunity
to meet Mr. Jalal Talabani, secretary-general of the
Patriotic Union of Kurdistan, a member of the
Presidential Board of the Governing Council of Iraq,
and a member of the Preparatory Committee of the
Iraqi National Congress. Welcome, sir.
TALABANI: Hello.
RFI: We are meeting now in the Czech capital,
Prague, and there are some issues on which we would
like to discuss with Mr. Jalal. Among them are: the
attitude of the Kurds towards the new cabinet, the
trial with Saddam, the Israeli presence in
Kurdistan, and the integration of the two Kurdish
administrations. Let us begin, Mr. Jalal, with the
attitude of the Kurds towards the new cabinet. Why
have the Kurds taken this extreme stance?
TALABANI: First, the Kurds have not taken an extreme
stance but, on the contrary, the Kurds have taken a
very tolerant stance. When they have been, in
contradiction to the Transitional Administrative
Law, deprived of the right to stand for two crucial
posts, that of the president of the republic and
that of the prime minister, they have tolerated it
and accepted it. But when the cabinet was formed
they demanded ministerial posts that would be
commensurate with the size of the Kurdish
population, with respect to their proportion in Iraq
and also to their role in overthrowing the
dictatorial regime. We were among those who have
supported the choice of brother Dr. Iyad Allawi for
prime minister and, consequently, we have cooperated
with him.
There are a number of Kurdish ministers: we have a
vice president of the republic, Dr. [Rowsch Shaways];
we have a deputy prime minister [responsible] for
specific issues, Dr. Barham Salih; we have Dr Fu'ad
Ma'sum, head of the Preparatory Committee of the
Iraqi National Congress; and we have six ministers
in the current cabinet.
Moreover, the contribution of the Kurds has been a
good one
and a tolerant one, and we have approved a lot
[despite not getting everything we wanted in the
interim government].
We wanted the Security Council resolution to include
a
mention of an independent, unitary, federal, and
democratic Iraq, and this has happened. There was
another paragraph, laid down by the prime minister,
the vice president of the republic, the finance
minister, the deputy prime minister, in which there
was a mention of the rights of the Kurdish people.
But the resolution does not included this mention.
Despite that, we have decided to participate in the
cabinet.
RFI: Another point we would like to discuss with Mr.
Jalal that currently looms large in the media is the
trial of Saddam. Of the charges made against Saddam,
three are related to the Kurds: bombardment of [the
town of] Halabja with chemical weapons, the
[coordinated genocide known as the] Anfal
operations, and the killing of a vast number of
people from the Barzani family. According to what
you said in an interview, you do not agree with, or
do not support, the death penalty for Saddam.
TALABANI: I think that Saddam is a [horrendous] war
criminal. The crimes that Saddam committed surpass
even the crimes of Hitler and Mussolini. Some of the
crimes that Saddam has committed are unique in
history.
For instance, it was the first time that a ruler has
used chemical and biological weapons against his own
people, against the people he rules. Also, it was
the first time that a ruler has buried hundreds of
thousands of his own people in mass graves, as
happened in Iraq. Saddam has committed the worst
crimes for which he deserves the strongest, the
ultimate, and the hardest sanction. But as a lawyer
and signatory to an international appeal to stop
capital punishment worldwide, I cannot stand in
contradiction with myself. I think that it is up to
the Iraqi tribunal to issue the sentence to Saddam.
This is exactly what I said [earlier].
RFI: You refuse the capital punishment in general,
but say at the same time that Saddam has committed
very serious, unpardonable crimes that compare with
any previous dictator in history. Would you not
change your opinion [on the death penalty for him]?
TALABANI: In fact, I belong to those who are
convinced that we should end [the practice of]
capital punishment in the world. Special regard for
the Iraqi situation is also proper, and it is up to
the court to impose the severest punishment on
Saddam. I think that execution means a quick death,
a death in one moment. But staying in prison for a
lifetime, he would see developments in Iraq; the
progress, and the prosperity in Iraq after the end
of his dark, criminal rule -- in every such moment
there is death for him. I think that this
continuous, repeated death is much more painful than
a quick death in a single moment.
RFI: Don't you expect, Mr. Jalal, the restoration of
the death penalty in Iraq? This possibility has been
discussed. It has, in fact, happened in general.
TALABANI: Yes, the Iraqi cabinet has, I think,
restored the death penalty. This restoration of the
death penalty is, I think, for fighting terrorism
and for imposing sentences on major criminals like
Saddam Hussein.
RFI: Is this the suitable time, Mr. Jalal, to hold
such a trial? There are various opinions saying that
this is not the suitable time and that Iraq is
witnessing sabotage actions, violence, and that the
feelings of the Iraqi public towards Saddam may
change.
TALABANI: In fact, what is going on currently is not
a trial. The world has misunderstood it.
What is going on currently is an inquiry. An inquiry
led by
an Iraqi judge in preparation for the trial. This
Iraqi judge is at the moment conducting a fair and
complex inquiry with a number of major criminals.
Then, he will pass the results of the inquiry to the
tribunal that will conduct the court process. The
trial may come immediately after that.
But for now there is an inquiry, because when a
criminal or someone accused of a crime is handed
over from the occupational authority to the Iraqi
authority, the latter authority must delegate or
nominate a lawyer who conducts the initial inquiry
with the accused. So, what is going on currently is
an inquiry, not a trial.
RFI: Going to another topic, in both the Arab and
world media accusations have appeared regarding an
Israeli presence in Kurdistan. What do you think
about this?
TALABANI: To begin with I would like to comment on
two crucial points. First, these are false,
fabricated reports, and there is absolutely not a
shred of truth [in them]. As Kurdistan is an open
[land] with broad democratic freedoms, there are
dozens of foreign journalists and dozens of
representatives of companies and organizations
there. I challenge anyone to say that a single
Israeli has been found there. Therefore, these
reports are fabricated and false and they aim to...
RFI: Inflict harm on the Kurds?
TALABANI: No, I wouldn't say inflicting harm, they
have other goals. And my second comment on this: Why
all this pressure on the Kurds?
Are there no Israelis in Cairo? Are there no
Israelis in
Amman, in Jordan? Are there no Israelis in Lebanon,
in Libya, in the Arab countries of North Africa or
the Gulf? Why this talk just about the Kurds?
There are Israelis. Their flag flies in Cairo. Their
flag
flies in Amman. Their flag flies in Qatar. In many
places. Well, there is another point: The
Palestinian brothers negotiate with the Israelis.
Brother Yassir Arafat kisses the cheeks of the
daughter of a former minister who was fiercely
combating Palestinians. Fine, why are they allowed
to do so? Should we be more Palestinian than Mr.
Yassir Arafat? Should we be more Palestinian than
the Palestinian prime ministers and officials who
negotiate with the Israelis? Why [are such actions]
allowable for them when it is them who are concerned
by the [Israeli-Palestinian] affair, who have been
involved in the conflict and who suffer daily from
Israeli occupation? Why is it not allowed to us when
we are distant from all of these problems? I think
that there is a chauvinist, anti-Kurdish tendency.
There is another example, if you allow me to state
it.
RFI: Yes, please.
TALABANI: The federalism. In Sudan, federalism has
been established in a much broader form than in
Kurdistan, in Iraq. The Sudanese federalism
guarantees the division of [income from] the
[natural] riches. It guarantees the division of gas.
It includes a paragraph that after two years it is
possible to hold a referendum on the
self-determination by the people of southern Sudan
in which they can even separate if they wish.
I consider this a good agreement. I congratulate the
Sudanese people and the signatories of this
agreement. I hope it is not understood from what I
have said that I have some objections to this
agreement. But, why are there no objections from any
Arab country against this treaty and this
federalism?
However, when it comes to the topic of federalism in
Kurdistan or in Iraq as a whole...Federalism has
been established in Iraq as the arrangement of a new
Iraq, including Iraqi Kurdistan. Some Arab countries
and some of Arab press have stirred up a big fuss,
and have not yet calmed down. Is this not a
chauvinist stance, hostile to the Kurdish people?
If they were against federalism [in Iraq], why don't
they oppose federalism in the United Arab Emirates?
Parts of the United Arab Emirates have much greater
rights than Iraqi Kurdistan. I think there is an
intentional, hostile, and sinister campaign from
some Arab circles against the Kurdish people. They
allow to themselves what they want and they prohibit
the Kurds what we want. This is duplicity, a double
standard...
RFI: Yes.
TALABANI: Or it is, in fact, a hostile, chauvinist
attitude against the Kurdish people.
RFI: Another topic -- is there any difference in
attitudes between the two Kurdish administrations,
in Irbil and Al-Sulaymaniah, and when will these two
administrations integrate? Is there still some
tension?
TALABANI: Yes, both administrations will integrate
soon, God willing. There have been serious efforts
on this issue. We have too, on our part, presented
projects and proposals. The last thing we have done
is that when brother Dr. Barham Salih resigned after
completing his task as prime minister with complete
success and then moving to the post of deputy prime
minister in the current cabinet, where I hope he
succeeds as well, we have not nominated a [new]
prime minister but a deputy prime minister.
RFI: Yes.
TALABANI: He would assume the tasks of the prime
minister. We hope that this will make the
integration with the Kurdish administration of Irbil
easier. This is first. And second, we think that
this requires a thorough study and careful
consideration because during this period both
administrations have designated [their own] general
directors, special directors, clerks...so this
integration needs some time to solve this problem in
a smooth way.
We have taken steps towards this achievement and I
think that the relations are at present very good
between the Kurdistan Democratic Party and the
Patriotic Union of Kurdistan, as well as between me
and brother Mr. Mas'ud Barzani [the leader of the
Kurdistan Democratic Party]. They have reached the
stage of a common leadership of both parties and of
common positions with respect to neighboring
countries, Baghdad, the future constitution, and the
present tasks for Iraq.
There has been an agreement between the two sides on
principal issues. There remains the question of
unifying the administration, which will be done, God
willing, before the end of this year.
RFI: We give many thanks to Mr. Jalal Talabani,
secretary-general of the Patriotic Union of
Kurdistan. Thanks.
TALABANI: Thank you very much.
(Interview by Ferial al-Sheibany. Translation by
Petr Kubalek)
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