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Analysis : Middle
East : Iraq
Shiite faction pushes for control over southern Iraq and its
oil
By James Cogan
13 September 2006
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The main Shiite fundamentalist party based on the clerical
and propertied elite in Iraqs south is stepping up its agitation
for the formal division of the country into federal states with
sweeping autonomy from the Baghdad central government. In doing
so, it is fuelling the sectarian and ethnic violence that is already
claiming the lives of more than 2,000 Iraqis a month.
Last Thursday the Supreme Council for the Islamic Revolution
in Iraq (SCIRI) attempted to present legislation to the Iraqi
parliament that will codify the means for combining two or more
provinces into a region. But the assembly broke up
in uproar as its opponents denounced the laws. SCIRI, which has
strong ties to the Iranian Shiite regime, has been centrally involved
in all the pro-US occupation governments formed since the 2003
invasion.
The following day, SCIRI leader Abdel Aziz Hakim made clear
that his party intended to proceed. He told Shiite congregations
in the city of Karbala that the nine predominantly Shiite-populated
provinces of southern Iraqwhich encompass more than half
the countrys territory and population, and 60 percent of
its oil industryshould emulate the northern Kurdish provinces
and combine into a single political entity.
Whoever accepts the Kurdistan region must accept the
region of the Middle Euphrates and the South... The example of
federalism in Kurdistan, which is witnessing a great renaissance,
is proof of the success of this form of government, Hakim
declared.
SCIRI is backed by other southern-based Shiite factions, including
the Daawa Party of Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki, as well
as the Kurdish nationalist parties, which already rule northern
Iraq through their own Kurdish Regional Government (KRG). Combined,
the advocates of federalism claim to have more than half the seats
in parliament and therefore the ability to push through the legislation.
The attempt to partition the country is being opposed by the
Sunni Islamic party, ex-Baathists, the pro-occupation secular
coalition headed by former Interim Prime Minister Iyad Allawi
and, most significantly, by the largely Baghdad-based Shiite movement
headed by cleric Moqtada al-Sadr. On Sunday, legislators belonging
to these organisations boycotted the rescheduled parliamentary
session, denying SCIRI the necessary quorum to call for a vote.
Debate on the federal legislation has been postponed until September
19.
The opponents of federalism are in most cases bitterly hostile
toward one another. They all, however, represent sections of the
Iraqi elite whose wealth and privileges are rooted in the central
and western areas of Iraq and, to a great extent, are entwined
with the maintenance of a centralised Iraqi state.
Within Iraq, SCIRIs federalist ambitions are understood
for what they are: a grab by the Shiite establishment to strip
the Baghdad government of revenue from the countrys vast
untapped reserves of oil and gas and establish a de facto Shiite
theocratic regime in the south. The new Iraq constitution, drawn
up in the consultation with the US embassy and adopted after a
referendum in October 2005, sanctions the establishment of regional
governments with significant powers.
To gain the support of the Kurdish parties, the constitution
only gave the central government control over existing
oil and gas fields. The regions and provinces wield all powers
not explicitly assigned to Baghdad. This enabled the Kurdish regional
government to declare its exclusive rights over all new oil and
gas projects within its territory. Transnational energy conglomerates
have signed lucrative production agreements and begun drilling
untapped fields. The central government has been denied any say
or share of the revenue.
Amid opposition to any broader federal partition, the constitution
did not define the process by which other regions could be established
outside of Kurdistan. Instead, it stipulated that the parliament
had to do so within six months of sitting, ostensibly to provide
time for the issue to be debated and the powers of new regions
to be modified.
The southern region advocated by Hakim would have the same
powers as the KRG and appropriate to itself the development rights
of some of the largest untapped oilfields in the world. Iraq has
an estimated 112 billion barrels of reserve oilthe second
largest after Saudi Arabia. In population, size and revenue, any
Shiite federal region would inevitably eclipse the central Iraqi
government. Moreover, it would have the constitutional right to
assemble its own security forces, similar to the 80,000 peshmerga
force that the KRG maintains independently of the Iraqi military.
SCIRI has foreshadowed its intention to table the legislation
on September 19 even if it causes an open rift with the Sadrist
movement in Baghdad. Shiite deputy parliamentary speaker Khalid
al-Atiya declared on Monday night: We will go with them
or without them.
SCIRIs push for a southern region poses the danger of
ethnic cleansing on a vast scale. It would inevitably be accompanied
by communal persecution of the Sunni minority in the south, as
well as the likely imposition of Iranian-style sharia law
against women and non-Muslims by a Shiite fundamentalist regional
government.
Communal tension is also rising in the north as Kurdish parties
seek to expand the Kurdistan region. The final draft of the Petroleum
Act published this month by the KRG claims rights over not
only all future oil and gas production within its existing borders,
but also in the disputed territories in the province
of Tamin and its oil-rich capital of Kirkuk, which has a large
Kurdish population.
Under the constitution, a referendum must be held by December
2007 in Kirkuk to decide whether it joins with the KRG. In advance
of the vote, there are widespread reports that Kurdish militia
are carrying out terror campaigns to drive out Arabs and Turkomen
who would be likely to vote no.
The de facto partitioning of the country would economically
marginalise the large Sunni population in central and western
Iraq, along with the millions of Shiites who live in that area.
An Associated Press journalist aptly wrote last week that they
would be left with little more than date groves and sand.
In Baghdad, with its mixed population of six million, the potential
implications are horrifying. It can only intensify the murderous
campaign underway by rival sectarian factions to establish homogenous
Sunni and Shiite districts. Much of the killing taking place in
Baghdad can be interpreted as an attempt to divide the city along
the Tigris River, with Sunni enclaves on the west bank and Shiite
enclaves on the east.
White House and Pentagon officials continually insist that
the Bush administration is committed to the creation of non-sectarian
democracy in Iraq. Ever since the 2003 invasion, however, US policy
has deliberately aggravated the countrys regional, ethnic
and sectarian divisions in order to prevent the emergence of a
unified movement against the occupation. Shiite and Kurdish parties
were elevated into power and the constitution was written to advance
their interests at the expense of the Sunni elite that dominated
under the Baathist regime. The ensuing sectarian carnage is continually
used to justify the indefinite presence of US forces, supposedly
to prevent an all-out civil war.
In the US, a growing number of figures are openly advocating
the partition of Iraq along communal lines as the means of securing
American interests. As their critics point out, however, such
a plan may well compound the problems facing the US occupation
in Iraq. A strong Shiite regional government in the south of Iraq,
with close links to Tehran, could cut across the Bush administrations
ambitions for regime change in Iran.
Whether Washington supports SCIRIs proposed legislation
or not, the move underscores the nightmare of communal and sectarian
divisions that the Bush administration has created in Iraq.
See Also:
Bush administration drags
Iraq towards the abyss of civil war
[1 March 2006]
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