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Established in 2006 as a Community of Reality

Welcome to the Neno's Place!

Neno's Place Established in 2006 as a Community of Reality


Neno

I can be reached by phone or text 8am-7pm cst 972-768-9772 or, once joining the board I can be reached by a (PM) Private Message.

Established in 2006 as a Community of Reality

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Established in 2006 as a Community of Reality

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    The Arab Press: The political and electoral calculations in Kurdistan refuse to end the differences

    Rocky
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    The Arab Press: The political and electoral calculations in Kurdistan refuse to end the differences  Empty The Arab Press: The political and electoral calculations in Kurdistan refuse to end the differences

    Post by Rocky Sat Jul 15, 2023 6:08 am

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    The Arab Press: The political and electoral calculations in Kurdistan refuse to end the differences and write a new page


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    11:00  2023-07-15  5  Arab and international reports 0



    The renewed skirmishes between the two power partners in Iraqi Kurdistan revealed that the political and electoral calculations outweighed the will of the two main parties in the region to turn the page on the differences of the recent past and start a new page.
    And a report by Al-Arab newspaper, followed by Al-Muttallaa, stated the following: “The Kurdistan Democratic Party criticized, on Thursday, statements made by the President of the Patriotic Union of Kurdistan, Pavel Talabani, in which he described the relations between the two parties as bad.
    A spokesman for the Kurdistan Democratic Party said in a statement, "In a meeting outside the country, the President of the Patriotic Union of Kurdistan described the relationship between our party and his party as bad, blaming the Kurdistan Democratic Party for this," adding, "It seems that they (the Patriotic Union) have forgotten that in most of the stations they are Despite their partnership with the government, they were more interested than the opposition in creating problems for the work and activities of the government.”
    And the statement added that Pavel Talabani “discussed in his speech the problems of the province of Sulaymaniyah without revealing the facts, and he did not mention in his speech that his party is the main obstacle to reconstruction and the implementation of service projects until the issue reaches security and the seizure of the internal revenues of the province and the entire borders, and he does not explain that his party It has become an alternative to the government, and legitimate institutions are not allowed to play their role, and it is not mentioned from where he gets all these capabilities by spending instead of those institutions.
    And he continued the statement by saying that on the other hand, he forgot how to enter the federal government institutions and the Federal Court in the process of governing the region, and the complexity of solving a number of problems.
    There has been optimism in Iraqi Kurdistan since the two main parties agreed to sit at the negotiating table, paving the way for turning the page on the differences between them. However, analysts say that ending the differences between the two parties is very unlikely, as the issue goes beyond differences over some procedural issues, whether in relation to elections or issues of concern. Governmental affairs led to a struggle for influence between the two parties.
    The Democratic Party dominates, especially in Erbil, and assumes the presidency of the region and the presidency of the government. On the other hand, since the fall of Saddam Hussein in 2003, all the presidents of the Republic of Iraq have been from the National Union.
    And the competition between the two major parties over gaining the other political blocs is one of the most important reasons for the conflict between them, because both of them believe that winning over these blocs will pave the way for them to remove the competing “partner”.
    The leadership of the Democratic Party fears that the current conditions of conflict and the economic bottlenecks that the region suffers from, and the internal conflict between the two major parties over privileges and benefits, may lead to the emergence of a new political map. In the event that new alliances are formed, they could weaken the influence of the Democratic Party, even if it remains the largest party.
    Observers say that the Democratic Party is ready to make concessions to other Kurdish parties more than it is ready to make concessions to its partner in the coalition. The aim is that it seeks to weaken its positions, which the National Union is trying to remedy by various means after its share in parliament has declined, and it is now trying to strike back at the Democratic Party by forcing it to continue ruling without a parliament.
    On the other hand, observers say that the differences between the two parties are based on a struggle for influence within the region and over financial resources, pointing out that the suspension of oil exports, which is not yet known when to resume them in light of the Turkish procrastination, and the difficult financial situation of the region, all of this may push the two parties to a circumstantial calm.
    With Turkey approaching an agreement with Baghdad that would allow the return of Erbil's oil exports, skirmishes and disagreements resurfaced and confirmed the depth of the gap between the two poles of power.
    The two main parties have contradictory agendas that have further weakened the region's authority and influence with Baghdad.
    Source: Al-Arab newspaper, London
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