MESOP OPINION – MANY REASONS WHY ! / Kurdish National Convention Postponed For a Second Time

According to information obtained by Rudaw, the PKK is demanding that the largest number of seats must be allocated to the Kurds of Turkey and Syria, arguing that seats be assigned based on Kurdish populations in each country or region. The PKK wants more than 310 of the 600 seats

RUDAW – 5.9.2013 – (..) Khalil Ibrahim, a member of the preparation committee who represents the Kurdistan Islamic Union (KIU) and Kurdistan Islamic Group (KIG), said there were severe disagreements on the distribution of seats. “It is true that the main cause for the delay is the distribution of the seats. There have been a number of meetings, but no agreements have been reached,” he told Rudaw. Other issues of disagreement, he said, were over how the convention is run, its agenda, how it is organized and how decisions will be followed up.

“These are all serious matters over which we have not been able to reach an agreement,” Ibrahim said.

The KNC held its first meeting on August 22 with Kurdistan Region President Massoud Barzani, who initiated the long-awaited KNC, in attendance.

According to information obtained by Rudaw, the PKK is demanding that the largest number of seats must be allocated to the Kurds of Turkey and Syria, arguing that seats be assigned based on Kurdish populations in each country or region. The PKK wants more than 310 of the 600 seats.

In the last preparatory meeting on August 30, the PKK’s suggestion for seat distribution was rejected. The PKK had demanded that the Kurds of Turkey have 220 seats, Iraqi Kurds be given 150 places, 140 for Syrian Kurds and 90 for the Kurds of Iran.

The Kurdistan Region has suggested that all parts of Kurdistan must have equal representation, or 150 seats each. “It is true that one part of Kurdistan might have a larger population than another part, but we have to take the Kurdistan Region’s political position into consideration,” said Ibrahim.

“Different political parties should not impose their numbers on the convention. This is not an election; this is a convention for the Kurdish nation,” he said.

“We also support south Kurdistan’s suggestion that each part should have an equal number of representatives.” said Reza Kaabi, a member of the preparation committee from Iran.

The committee has decided on 600 individuals as members of the convention and 300 as guests. Membership will be distributed among all four parts of Kurdistan, as well as the Kurdish diaspora.  Twenty percent of the seats are equally divided between youth organizations and well-known personalities, 35 percent are for civil society organizations, and 45 percent will go to the political parties.

“Among political parties there are different views on the number and distribution of the seats,” admitted Kemal Kerkuki, a member of the preparation committee’s secretariat.

“These problems will be solved, but there are a number of other problems that need serious efforts to solve,” said Kerkuki, who represents the Kurdistan Democratic Party (KDP). Kaabi indirectly blamed the PKK’s demand for seat distribution as the main cause for the postponement.

http://rudaw.net/english/kurdistan/05092013