Category: Iraq

  • Poor Richard’s Report

    Poor Richard’s Report

    Poor Richard’s Report                                                                         

     

                                                                                                    Over 300,150 readers

    My Mission: God has uniquely designed me to seek, write, and speak the truth as I see it. Preservation of one’s wealth while providing needful income is my primary goal in these unsettled times. I have been given the ability to evaluate, study, and interpret world and national events and their influence on the future of the financial markets. This gift allows me to meet the needs of individual and institution clients.  I evaluate situations first on a fundamental basis then try to confirm on a technical basis. In the past it has been fairly successful.

                                 SPECIAL BULLITEN:

     

                                 Our President is about to be Tested – Big Time

     

                The Middle East is about to blow sky high. We have now involved the UN Security counsel plus Germany (called P-5+1) to make Iran negotiate their nuclear weapons program. The due date is September 24, 2009.  To make matters worse the President promised Israel that if they did not take military action with Iran, he would deliver crippling sanctions with Iran.

    Big deal. What we withhold, China and Russia will deliver. This is now guts ball diplomacy that will reverberate across the whole world.

                Here is a scary and realistic scenario that could happen while everyone is concerned with what is going on in the kiddy pool of health care reform and economic recovery.

                ISRAEL will never, never allow itself to be at mortal risk. If and when their intelligence concludes the Iranians are close to getting a bomb, diplomacy will end. Russian expansionism has always been in the setting of somebody else’s war. Putin will ignite the match if he ever gets the chance. Imagine. They get Georgia without a contest, and open the door to secure Ukraine, and make trillions of Rubles selling “high test” to Europe after the Iranians close the Straits of Hormuz. It would stir up a real blizzard and they could retake the Baltic region while NATO is off figuring out how to get the gulf oil turned back on.           

     Buy GLD (NYSE-$99+) or CEF (NYSE-$13+) and top off your home fuel tanks.

     Have a strong cash position also.

     

    Richard C De Graff

    256 Ashford Road

    RER      Eastford Ct 06242     

    860-522-7171 Main Office  

    800-821-6665 Watts

    860-315-7413 Home/Office

    rdegraff@coburnfinancial.com

     

    This report has been prepared from original sources and data which we believe reliable but we make no representation to its accuracy or completeness. Coburn & Meredith Inc. its subsidiaries and or officers may from time to time acquire, hold, sell a position discussed in this publications, and we may act as principal for our own account or as agent for both the buyer and seller.

  • Iraq, Syria, Turkey to have water meeting

    Iraq, Syria, Turkey to have water meeting

    24 August 2009


    BAGHDAD: Iraq, Syria and turkey have agreed to meet in Ankara on Sept. 3, 2009, to discuss mutual water situation especially at the Euphrates River, the Iraqi Water Resources Ministry said Monday.

    “The Iraqi water resources minister met the Syrian irrigation minister and the Turkish energy minister in Damascus,” said a release issued by the Iraqi Ministry and received by Aswat al-Iraq news agency.

    “The three sides agreed to hold a meeting on Sept. 3, 2009 to discuss mutual water relations,” it said.

    Zawya

  • Poor Richard’s Report

    Poor Richard’s Report

    Poor Richard’s Report

    Over 300,001 readers
    My Mission: God has uniquely designed me to seek, write, and speak the truth as I see it. Preservation of one’s wealth while providing needful income is my primary goal in these unsettled times. I have given the ability to evaluate study, and interpret world and national events and their influence on future of the financial markets. This gift allows me to meet the needs of individual and institution clients. I evaluate situations first on a fundamental basis then try to confirm on a technical basis. In the past it has been fairly successful.

    Contact John Mauldin

    Print Version

    Volume 5 – Special Edition
    August 20, 2009

    Iraq Endgame
    By George Friedman

    As many of have heard, I had the pleasure of partaking in a weekend of fishing and intellectual jousting with some of today’s most brilliant minds. We spoke of war, politics, and of course, the economy. Their interconnection seems somehow much clearer sitting on a Maine lake fishing for bass. This week I offer you an article that’s key to understanding the U.S. role in Iraq. Futurologist and fellow aspiring fisherman George Friedman at STRATFOR lays out piece by piece U.S. options in the region. If your interests have anything to do with global energy markets — and whose don’t? — it’s enormously important that you grasp the relationships between various sectors in and around Iraq, and the possibilities moving forward.
    Staying aware of geopolitical imperatives around the globe is crucial to any comprehensive investment portfolio. I encourage you to check out STRATFOR’s Web site for whatever informs your investment area. Plus, my readers get a special membership rate.
    John Mauldin, Editor
    Outside the Box

    Iraq Endgame

    August 18, 2009
    By George Friedman
    Related Special Topic Pages
    Iraq, Turkey and the Kurdish Position
    Iraq, Iran and the Shia
    Turkey’s Re-Emergence
    U.S. Military Involvement in Iraq
    Iraq’s Oil
    Though the Iraq war is certainly not over, it has reached a crossroads. During the course of the war, about 40 countries sent troops to fight in what was called “Multi-National Force-Iraq.” As of this summer, only one foreign country’s fighting forces remain in Iraq — those of the United States. A name change in January 2010 will reflect the new reality, when the term “Multi-National Force-Iraq” will be changed to “United States Forces-Iraq.” If there is an endgame in Iraq, we are now in it.
    The plan that U.S. President Barack Obama inherited from former President George W. Bush called for coalition forces to help create a viable Iraqi national military and security force that would maintain the Baghdad government’s authority and Iraq’s territorial cohesion and integrity. In the meantime, the major factions in Iraq would devise a regime in which all factions would participate and be satisfied that their factional interests were protected. While this was going on, the United States would systematically reduce its presence in Iraq until around the summer of 2010, when the last U.S. forces would leave.
    Two provisos qualified this plan. The first was that the plan depended on the reality on the ground for its timeline. The second was the possibility that some residual force would remain in Iraq to guarantee the agreements made between factions, until they matured and solidified into a self-sustaining regime. Aside from minor tinkering with the timeline, the Obama administration — guided by Defense Secretary Robert Gates, whom Bush appointed and Obama retained — has followed the Bush plan faithfully.
    The moment of truth for the U.S. plan is now approaching. The United States still has substantial forces in Iraq. There is a coalition government in Baghdad dominated by Shia (a reasonable situation, since the Shia comprise the largest segment of the population of Iraq). Iraqi security forces are far from world-class, and will continue to struggle in asserting themselves in Iraq. As we move into the endgame, internal and external forces are re-examining power-sharing deals, with some trying to disrupt the entire process.
    There are two foci for this disruption. The first concerns the Arab-Kurdish struggle over Kirkuk. The second concerns threats to Iran’s national security.
    The Kurdish Question
    Fighting continues in the Kirkuk region, where the Arabs and Kurds have a major issue to battle over: oil. The Kirkuk region is one of two major oil-producing regions in Iraq (the other is in the Shiite-dominated south). Whoever controls Kirkuk is in a position to extract a substantial amount of wealth from the surrounding region’s oil development. There are historical ethnic issues in play here, but the real issue is money. Iraqi central government laws on energy development remain unclear, precisely because there is no practical agreement on the degree to which the central government will control — and benefit — from oil development as opposed to the Kurdish Regional Government. Both Kurdish and Arab factions thus continue to jockey for control of the key city of Kirkuk.
    Arab, particularly Sunni Arab, retention of control over Kirkuk opens the door for an expansion of Sunni Arab power into Iraqi Kurdistan. By contrast, Kurdish control of Kirkuk shuts down the Sunni threat to Iraqi Kurdish autonomy and cuts Sunni access to oil revenues from any route other than the Shiite-controlled central government. If the Sunnis get shut out of Kirkuk, they are on the road to marginalization by their bitter enemies — the Kurds and the Shia. Thus, from the Sunni point of view, the battle for Kirkuk is the battle for the Sunni place at the Iraqi table.
    Turkey further complicates the situation in Iraq. Currently embedded in constitutional and political thinking in Iraq is the idea that the Kurds would not be independent, but could enjoy a high degree of autonomy. Couple autonomy with the financial benefits of heavy oil development and the Kurdish autonomous region of Iraq becomes a powerful entity. Add to that the peshmerga, the Kurdish independent military forces that have had U.S. patronage since the 1990s, and an autonomous Kurdistan becomes a substantial regional force. And this is not something Turkey wants to see.
    The broader Kurdish region is divided among four countries, Turkey, Iraq, Iran and Syria. The Kurds have a substantial presence in southeastern Turkey, where Ankara is engaged in a low-intensity war with the Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK), members of which have taken refuge in northern Iraq. Turkey’s current government has adopted a much more nuanced approach in dealing with the Kurdish question. This has involved coupling the traditional military threats with guarantees of political and economic security to the Iraqi Kurds as long as the Iraqi Kurdish leadership abides by Turkish demands not to press the Kirkuk issue.
    Still, whatever the constitutional and political arrangements between Iraqi Kurds and Iraq’s central government, or between Iraqi Kurds and the Turkish government, the Iraqi Kurds have a nationalist imperative. The Turkish expectation is that over the long haul, a wealthy and powerful Iraqi Kurdish autonomous region could slip out of Baghdad’s control and become a center of Kurdish nationalism. Put another way, no matter what the Iraqi Kurds say now about cooperating with Turkey regarding the PKK, over the long run, they still have an interest in underwriting a broader Kurdish nationalism that will strike directly at Turkish national interests.
    The degree to which Sunni activity in northern Iraq is coordinated with Turkish intelligence is unknown to us. The Sunnis are quite capable of waging this battle on their own. But the Turks are not disinterested bystanders, and already support local Turkmen in the Kirkuk region to counter the Iraqi Kurds. The Turks want to see Kurdish economic power and military power limited, and as such they are inherently in favor of the Shiite-dominated Baghdad government. The stronger Baghdad is, the weaker the Kurds will be.
    Baghdad understands something critical: While the Kurds may be a significant fighting force in Iraq, they can’t possibly stand up to the Turkish army. More broadly, Iraq as a whole can’t stand up to the Turkish army. We are entering a period in which a significant strategic threat to Turkey from Iraq could potentially mean Turkish countermeasures. Iraqi memories of Turkish domination during the Ottoman Empire are not pleasant. Therefore, Iraq will be very careful not to cross any redline with the Turks.
    This places the United States in a difficult position. Washington has supported the Kurds in Iraq ever since Operation Desert Storm. Through the last decade of the Saddam regime, U.S. special operations forces helped create a de facto autonomous region in Kurdistan. Washington and the Kurds have a long and bumpy history, now complicated by substantial private U.S. investment in Iraqi Kurdistan for the development of oil resources. Iraqi Kurdish and U.S. interests are strongly intertwined, and Washington would rather not see Iraqi Kurdistan swallowed up by arrangements in Baghdad that undermine current U.S. interests and past U.S. promises.
    On the other hand, the U.S. relationship with Turkey is one of Washington’s most important. Whether the question at hand is Iran, the Caucasus, the Balkans, Central Asia, the Arab-Israeli conflict, Afghanistan, Russia or Iraq, the Turks have a role. Given the status of U.S. power in the region, alienating Turkey is not an option. And the United States must remember that for Turkey, Kurdish power in Iraq and Turkey’s desired role in developing Iraqi oil are issues of fundamental national importance.
    Now left alone to play out this endgame, the United States must figure out a way to finesse the Kurdish issue. In one sense, it doesn’t matter. Turkey has the power ultimately to redefine whatever institutional relationships the United States leaves behind in Iraq. But for Turkey, the sooner Washington hands over this responsibility, the better. The longer the Turks wait, the stronger the Kurds might become and the more destabilizing their actions could be to Turkey. Best of all, if Turkey can assert its influence now, which it has already begun to do, it doesn’t have to be branded as the villain.
    All Turkey needs to do is make sure that the United States doesn’t intervene decisively against the Iraqi Sunnis in the battle over Kirkuk in honor of Washington’s commitment to the Kurds.
    In any case, the United States doesn’t want to intervene against Iraq’s Sunnis again. In protecting Sunni Arab interests, the Americans have already been sidestepping any measures to organize a census and follow through with a constitutional mandate to hold a referendum in Kirkuk. For the United States, a strong Sunni community is the necessary counterweight to the Iraqi Shia since, over the long haul, it is not clear how a Shiite-dominated government will relate to Iran.
    The Shiite Question
    The Shiite-dominated government led by Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki is no puppet of Iran, but at the same time, it is not Iran’s enemy. As matters develop in Iraq, Iran remains the ultimate guarantor of Shiite interests. And Iranian support might not flow directly to the current Iraqi government, but to al-Maliki’s opponents within the Shiite community who have closer ties to Tehran. It is not clear whether Iranian militant networks in Iraq have been broken, or are simply lying low. But it is clear that Iran still has levers in place with which it could destabilize the Shiite community or rivals of the Iraqi Shia if it so desired.
    Therefore, the United States has a vested interest in building up the Iraqi Sunni community before it leaves. And from an economic point of view, that means giving the Sunnis access to oil revenue as well as a guarantee of control over that revenue after the United States leaves.
    With the tempo of attacks picking up as U.S. forces draw down, Iraq’s Sunni community is evidently not satisfied with the current security and political arrangements in Iraq. Attacks are on the upswing in the northern areas — where remnants of al Qaeda in Iraq continue to operate in Mosul — as well as in central Iraq in and around Baghdad. The foreign jihadists in Iraq hope such attacks will trigger a massive response from the Shiite community, thus plunging Iraq back into civil war. But the foreign jihadists would not be able to operate without some level of support from the local Sunni community. This broader community wants to make sure that the Shia and Americans don’t forget what the Sunnis are capable of should their political, economic and security interests fall by the wayside as the Americans withdraw.
    Neither the Iraqi Sunnis nor the Kurds really want the Americans to leave. Neither trust that the intentions or guarantees of the Shiite-dominated government. Iraq lacks a tradition of respect for government institutions and agreements; a piece of paper is just that. Instead, the Sunnis and Kurds see the United States as the only force that can guarantee their interests. Ironically, the United States is now seen as the only real honest broker in Iraq.
    But the United States is an honest broker with severe conflicts of interest. Satisfying both Sunni and Kurdish interests is possible only under three conditions. The first is that Washington exercise a substantial degree of control over the Shiite administration of the country — and particularly over energy laws — for a long period of time. The second is that the United States give significant guarantees to Turkey that the Kurds will not extend their nationalist campaign to Turkey, even if they are permitted to extend it to Iran in a bid to destabilize the Iranian regime. The third is that success in the first two conditions not force Iran into a position where it sees its own national security at risk, and so responds by destabilizing Baghdad — and with it, the entire foundation of the national settlement in Iraq negotiated by the United States.
    The American strategy in this matter has been primarily tactical. Wanting to leave, it has promised everyone everything. That is not a bad strategy in the short run, but at a certain point, everyone adds up the promises and realizes that they can’t all be kept, either because they are contradictory or because there is no force to guarantee them. Boiled down, this leaves the United States with two strategic options.
    First, the United States can leave a residual force of about 20,000 troops in Iraq to guarantee Sunni and Kurdish interests, to protect Turkish interests, etc. The price of pursuing this option is that it leaves Iran facing a nightmare scenario: e.g., the potential re-emergence of a powerful Iraq and the recurrence down the road of the age-old conflict between Persia and Mesopotamia — with the added possibility of a division of American troops supporting their foes. This would pose an existential threat to Iran, forcing Tehran to use covert means to destabilize Iraq that would take advantage of a minimal, widely dispersed U.S. force vulnerable to local violence.
    Second, the United States could withdraw and allow Iraq to become a cockpit for competition among neighboring countries: Turkey, Iran, Saudi Arabia, Syria — and ultimately major regional powers like Russia. While chaos in Iraq is not inherently inconsistent with U.S. interests, it is highly unpredictable, meaning the United States could be pulled back into Iraq at the least opportune time and place.
    The first option is attractive, but its major weakness is the uncertainty created by Iran. With Iran in the picture, a residual force is as much a hostage as a guarantor of Sunni and Kurdish interests. With Iran out of the picture, the residual U.S. force could be smaller and would be more secure. Eliminate the Iran problem completely, and the picture for all players becomes safer and more secure. But eliminating Iran from the equation is not an option — Iran most assuredly gets a vote in this endgame.

    John F. Mauldin
    johnmauldin@investorsinsight.com

    You are currently subscribed as rdegraff@yahoo.com.

    To unsubscribe, go here.

  • ‘CIA and Mossad paying $1,000 to Christian converts in northern Iraq’

    ‘CIA and Mossad paying $1,000 to Christian converts in northern Iraq’

    christianzionismIran’s Fars news agency claimed Tuesday that the CIA and the Mossad were actively promoting Christianity in the Kurdish region of northern Iraq.

    According to the report, the Americans and Israelis were offering $1,000 to any youngster willing to convert to Christianity.

    The news agency further claimed that several Christian organizations had translated the Bible into Kurdish and were distributing them to young Kurds.

    Source:  www.jpost.com, Aug 4, 2009

    CIA, Mossad Promoting Evangelism in Northern Iraq

    christianzionism2TEHRAN (FNA)- The US and Israeli spy agencies are trying to promote evangelism in Iraq’s Kurdistan region, sources said.

    According to a series of information obtained by FNA, the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) and Israeli Secret Services (Mossad) are striving to promote Christianity among the youth in Iraq’s northern region of Kurdistan.

    According to FNA dispatches, the two intelligence agencies have also allocated heavy funds for the task and pay $1,000 to every young person who turns to Christianity.

    The plot began from the very beginning of US military aggression against Iraq and occupation of the country after ousting former Iraqi dictator Saddam Hussein and even earlier, sources said.

    Head of the Islamic Group in Kurdistan Ali Bapir warned about the development, saying, “The international organization for evangelism in Iraq will pay 1,000 US Dollars to those who convert to Christianity.”

    Member of the Islamic Unity Movement of Kurdistan Babakr Ahmad told FNA, “Islamic parties have felt the danger. Unfortunately, the international Christian organizations are actively promoting Christianity given their available huge funds.”

    Kurds who have recently embraced Christianity hold annual meetings in Arbil, the capital of the Kurdistan autonomous region.

    Ali Bapir strongly criticized the authorities of Kurdistan autonomous region for their inaction in the face of the development and for issuing the required permission for holding such meetings.

    According to FNA dispatches, other evangelist institutions like ADS Institution are funding translation of Bible into the Kurdish language.

    An informed source from the evangelist institution in Arbil told FNA on the condition of anonymity that the main mission of the institution is distribution of Bible in Kurdish language.

    The source said the manager of the institution is a British who uses an alias name, “Eskandar” (Alexander), to escape identification.

    The source underlined that the institution’s books are coming from England and Greece and that the translated books are distributed among the people for free.

    Source: english.farsnews.com,  2009-08-04

  • U.S. general wants to move troops to northern Iraq

    U.S. general wants to move troops to northern Iraq

    McClatchy Newspapers

    The top U.S. general in Iraq wants to place more American soldiers along the fault line between Iraqi Kurds and Arabs, two groups who have appeared on the verge of civil war at times over the past year.

    Gen. Ray Odierno has discussed his proposal with Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki and Kurdish President Massoud Barzani, two leaders who have been at odds for the past year over how to determine which group should govern the oil-rich city of Kirkuk and the Ninevah plains near Mosul.

    A spokesman for Multi-National Force Iraq said Monday that Odierno is proposing a temporary deployment that would not affect the planned withdrawal of American forces by Dec. 31, 2011.

    The intent is to partner American soldiers with Kurdish-controlled peshmerga and Iraqi forces who answer to al-Maliki’s government in Baghdad “to prevent the disputed areas from being used as a seam.”

    “If approved, this change in security posture would be a temporary measure to improve confidence in the security situation and pressure terrorist networks,” said the spokesman, who asked not to be identified as a matter of policy.

    Resolving the dispute between Kurds and Arabs over Kirkuk and the Ninevah plains is one of the top remaining priorities for Americans in Iraq. Defense Secretary Robert Gates visited the country last month and urged al-Maliki and Barzani to settle the matter before U.S. forces leave.

    Al-Maliki’s Cabinet, meanwhile, has submitted a proposal that would give Iraqi voters a chance in January to hasten the withdrawal of American forces from their country by as much as a year, sending all remaining U.S. soldiers home by the end of 2010 instead of 2011.

    The plan, en route to Iraq’s parliament, would set a national referendum on Jan. 16, giving voters a say on the security agreement that defines the pace of the drawdown.

    That vote would take place on the same date that Iraqis choose their next parliament, their first national vote since 2005.

    It’s not clear whether parliament will support the date, but it’s likely that Iraqis – exhausted by more than six years of war and occupation – would elect to send Americans home earlier if they had an opportunity to vote on it.

    The pact took effect Jan. 1. Its key date so far was June 30, when American soldiers were required to leave their bases in cities and towns. Al-Maliki designated the date “National Sovereignty Day,” and it was celebrated with parties in the street.

    That success could persuade Iraqis to support the withdrawal agreement, said Abdul Karim al-Samarrai, a prominent lawmaker from the Iraqi Islamic Party.

    “The people now have a better idea about what the agreement holds for them, especially as they have seen the actual withdrawal of American troops from their cities. Maybe they have more faith in it,” he said.

    About 131,000 American soldiers remain in Iraq. That number is expected to decline to 50,000 by next August.

    The security agreement, drafted last fall between the Bush administration and al-Maliki’s government, says either side must give the other a year’s notice before changing the pact, meaning that the U.S. would have at least that much time to exit Iraq if voters reject the agreement.

    Al-Maliki agreed to put the agreement to a vote to appease critics in parliament who insisted that all Iraqis have their say. The referendum was supposed to take place at the end of July.

    The Ministry of Planning also announced a delay in another election-related issue Monday. It’s postponing a planned census because of fears that the results would stir violence in the northern provinces that are the focus of Odierno’s new security proposal.

    The Kurdistan Regional Government wants to annex both areas. The census was supposed to be a step toward votes on whether the territories would join the semiautonomous Kurdish region or continue to be controlled by Baghdad.

    Barzani’s government controls three provinces and views both Kirkuk and the Ninevah plains as essential parts of the Kurdish homeland.

    Kurds grew especially sensitive to threats against the territories late last year when the central government deployed an army division near Kirkuk, an ethnically mixed province believed to have roughly equal populations of Kurds, Arabs and Turkomen.

    Meanwhile, the Ninevah plains outside Mosul have seen some of the most violent attacks on civilians in recent weeks. More than 20 Yazidis, a religious minority, were killed Thursday. A village outside Mosul was leveled by two truck bombs Aug. 10, which killed more than 30.

    (Ashton reports for The Modesto (Calif.) Bee. McClatchy Newspapers special correspondent Sahar Issa contributed to this report.)

  • Lessons learned and challenges to implementing indigenous people’s right to education.

    Lessons learned and challenges to implementing indigenous people’s right to education.

    Expert Mechanism on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples
    Council of Human Rights

    2nd Session / 10th – 14th August 2009
    Switzerland – Geneva

    Agenda Item 3: Lessons learned and challenges to implementing indigenous people’s right to education.

    Date: 04 August, 2009
    No: Sta.19-H0409

    Title: Obstacles preventing the use of mother tongue in Iraqi Turkmen education

    Iraq is well-known for its multiethnic multi-religious population; Arabs, Kurds, Turkmen, Chaldea-Assyrians, Yazidis, Shabaks and Mandaeans comprise the rich cultural mosaic that is the Iraqi population.

    The Turkmen represent the third largest ethnic group in Iraq after the Arabs and Kurds. Unfortunately, they are constantly marginalized and their population size has always been underrepresented for economical and political reasons.

    Iraqi Turkmen live mainly in a region that stretches over a thousand kilometers from Telafer in the Northwest to Badra and al-Aziziyya in the al-Kut province in mid eastern Iraq. They populate the following provinces: Kerkuk, Mosul, Erbil, Salah al-Ddin, Diyala, Kut and Baghdad.

    Although the federal constitution of Iraq guarantees the rights of all Iraqis to educate their children in their mother tongue in accordance with educational guidelines, or in any other language in private educational institutions, [1] these obligations have yet to see full implementation.

    The Government of Iraq does not fully guarantee its obligations to recognize and guarantee rights under the international treaties that it has signed reflecting those principles (the right to accessible education, the need for cultural adaptation of education, and the right of indigenous peoples to establish and control their educational systems).

    The Turkmen of Iraq have been denied education taught in their native language, since the establishment of the Iraqi state in 1921. In Erbil city, education in Turkmen was financed by the Iraqi Turkmen Front (ITF) until 2005, when all possessions of the Turkmen political institutions were confiscated by Kurdish authorities. In other provinces Turkmen schools are founded by the local governmental education offices and the Iraqi Turkmen Front. These schools are still predominantly financed by the Iraqi Turkmen Front, a non-profit political organization. The total number of Turkmen schools exceeds 500 and is operative in most of Turkmen regions.

    The political instability and state of insecurity after the 2003 occupation has exposed the indigenous peoples to brutal human rights violations; intimidations, marginalization and distortion of demography of their regions. [2-4] The right to provide education in the Turkmen native language meets many obstacles, as the revised Iraqi constitution promotes protection of such rights but vaguely formulate the terminology, which constitutes an important impediment. After occupation, the general political atmosphere adopted a new religious and ethnic strategy which inevitably influenced the constitution writing committee. Kurdish attempts to emphasize their ethnic role within Iraq can be considered the dominant factor that contributed to discrimination outlined in article 4 of the constitution. Article 4 differentiates Arabs and Kurds from other indigenous Iraqis. [1]

    Article 4, first, The Arabic language and the Kurdish language are the two official languages of Iraq. The right of Iraqis to educate their children in their mother tongue, such as Turkmen, Syriac, and Armenian shall be guaranteed in government educational institutions in accordance with educational guidelines, or in any other language in private educational institutions.

    Article 4, Item 4 ambiguously refers to a notion which further complicates the use of mother tongue by the Indigenous peoples. It demands a population density to establish a language official in a region. This necessitates another authority to approve if a community has a population density in a region. In present nationalist atmosphere of the Iraq politics, making a decision in favor of the vulnerable Indigenous communities is not easy. Worth noting that the Iraqi Parliament endorsed Iraq’s obligation to the League of Nations in 1932 that Turkmen, in addition to other languages would be officially recognized in several Turkmen regions, such as Kerkuk, Kifri and Erbil. [5]

    Article 4, fourth: The Turkmen language and the Syriac language are two other official languages in the administrative units in which they constitute density of population.

    The Kurdish authorities claim vast Turkmen regions, where they dominate the administration in most of these regions. Relaying on ambiguous terminology in the constitution, the Kurdish authorities prevent the Turkmen language to be officially recognized. This hampers use of mother tongue in education. In the case of Kerkuk, despite the fact that this province is well known for its Turkmen nature, [6 & 7] the decision making Kurdish authorities refused to use Turkmen as an official language.[8] It took four years until the federal court approved Turkmen as an official language in Kerkuk, but still the application of the law is limited.

    Turkmen schools and the critical difficulties

    It was a huge mission to start education in Turkmen (Turkish) native language for such a large community. Millions of Turkmen spread hundreds of kilometers wide, require expert staff and governmental offices, professional teaching, and a plethora of resources most of which are denied due to administrative and financial restraints.

    The two main factors deteriorate Turkmen education come from political conflicts and the Iraqi Ministry of Education’s refusal to make funds available. Large numbers of schools in Turkmen regions are still not able to use their mother tongue or it offer only one lesson in Turkmen language. The number of schools that provide all lessons in Turkmen is extremely small.

    The difficulties of Turkmen education can be divided into three categories:

    1. Schools in Kurdish Region

    Erbil city and Kifri district are two historical Turkmen regions under the authority of Kurdish administration. Although Turkmen constituted more than half of the population in both these regions in the first half of 20th century, after continuous Kurdish migration, the percentage of Turkmen has now decreased to 1/3 of the Erbil population and 20% of Kifri city.

    Turkmen schools in the Kurdish region were established in the mid 1990s by the Iraqi Turkmen Front. There are 15 Turkmen schools in Erbil city, 2 Kindergarten, 9 primary schools, 2 intermediate and 2 secondary. In Kifri there is one primary and one secondary school. All lessons are taught in Turkmen in these Kifri schools.

    In 2005, the Kurdish authorities seized all of these schools along with 12 other factions of the Iraqi Turkmen Front, including a print house, a newspaper and local television and radio stations. The print house was closed since that time which increased the shortage of books in Turkmen schools.

    The major difficulties facing these schools:

    • These schools are administered by non-expert Kurdish staff who are not qualified in Turkmen language and/or Turkmen culture
    • The school curricular is devised by Kurdish specialists
    • Kurdish language is imposed on students from the first year of primary school
    • Mainly, Kurdish history is studied
    • The Syllabus is monitored by Kurdish supervisors
    • Kurdish directors are appointed to these schools
    • The content of the curricular, the explanatory drawings, and the activities are all reflect the Kurdish heritage and culture instead of Turkmen.

    The Turkmen education have been deliberately neglected by Kurdish authorities, consequently, registration of new students is currently significantly decreased and about to be terminated.

    2. Schools under central government

    This region includes immense Turkmen districts in Mosul, Kerkuk, Salah al-Din, Diyala and Kut provinces. The schools in these regions are divided between two types:-

    A. Schools which lecture in Turkmen language, and
    B. Schools which lecture in Arabic, and provide one lesson in Turkmen language and literature.

    The latter type of school exists in Kerkuk province, Erbil and Kifri city.

    The major difficulties within these schools are that a large percentage of teachers and all school materials are not paid by the Iraqi ministry of education.

    3. Shared difficulties by schools under both authorities:

    • Absence of Turkmen education directorate in the Iraqi ministry for education and in the Education directorates of provinces, except Kerkuk province.
    • The absence of cultural institutions. Consequently, there are no official authorities which publish books related to Turkmen.
    • Insufficiency of teaching staff and facilities
    • Shortage of experts and supervisors of Turkmen language and literature
    • Many schools are old and needs renovation.
    • Shortage of materials and resources: including books, science equipment, computer and internet facilities, photocopying facilities, temperature regulating systems
    o For example, there are 148 schools in Telafer districts which study only Turkmen language and literature. The ministry of education doesn’t pay for 28 teachers. The shortage in the number of teachers is 35. In 2008, the students had received only 4000 school books from 35.000.

    Turkmen education still could not be introduced into the large Turkmen communities in Diyala and Kut provinces, location of important and large Turkmen districts. These regions have been exposed to Arabic and Kurdish immigration for a long time. Aggressive assimilation policies have been practiced against Turkmen in these regions.

    Demands:

    The Declaration requires that “States, in consultation and cooperation with indigenous peoples, shall take the appropriate measures, including legislative measures, to achieve the outcome of this Declaration” (art. 38). This general mandate is further elaborated on in other provisions, with specific affirmative measures required from States in connection with almost all the rights affirmed in the Declaration.

    1. The directorate of Turkmen education, without which Turkmen studies are impossible to organize, should be established in the Iraqi ministry for education and in the province’s directorate for education.

    2. The Kurdish authorities should abandon their assimilation policies against Turkmen and return the Iraqi Turkmen Front buildings which were confiscated in 2005; particularly, the schools, Turkmeneli newspaper, and print house should be retuned to the Iraqi Turkmen Front.

    3. The Expert Mechanism on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples created pursuant to UN Human Rights Council Resolution 6/36 of December 14, 2007, has the mandate to “provide the Human Rights Council with thematic expertise on the rights of indigenous peoples […]”. In September 2008, the Expert Mechanism was given the more specific mandate of preparing a study on the lessons learned and challenges to achieve the implementation of the right of indigenous peoples to education. To that end, the Expert Mechanism was to request submissions from indigenous peoples’ organizations and civil society organizations (Human Rights Council Resolution 9/7). As part of this process the Iraqi Turkmen Human Rights Research Foundation (SOITM) presents this submission.

    ———————
    1 Article 4 of the Iraqi federal constitution
    2 Press Release of SOITM Foundation, “To the international community: The Iraqi people are in severe need of your help”, 13 July 2008, http://turkmen.nl./1A_soitm/PR.20-G1308a.doc
    3 SOITM Foundation, “Kurdish authorities and Iraqi Indigenous populations: the suppression of Iraqi Yazidis”, 27 October 2008, http://turkmen.nl./1A_soitm/Rep.29-J2708.doc
    4 SOITM Foundation, “Summary Violation of the human rights of the Iraqi Turkmen since the Establishment of the Iraqi State”, January 27, 2007, http://www.turkmen.nl/1A_soitm/Rep.9-A2707.doc
    5 Arshad al-Hirmizi, “The Turkmen Reality in Iraq”, Publication of Kerkuk Foundation 2005, P. 16 http://www.turkmen.nl/1A_Others/EH2_english.pdf
    6 David McDowall, “A Modern History of the Kurds”, (I.B.Tauris & Co Ltd Publishers, London & New York 1996), Page 329) and
    7 Hanna Batatu, “The old social classes and the Revolutionary Movements of Iraq”, (Princeton University Press, New Jersey 1978), p. 913
    8 Iraqi Federal Court, Decision number 15/federal/2008 which was made on demand of Kerkuk province council, at 21/4/2008,
    emblem-of-soitm-s2emblem-of-soitm-s3