Iraq Presidency Council vetoes provincial election bill

President Talabani objects to a provision delaying voting in Kirkuk, the northern city that Kurds seek to incorporate in their semiautonomous Kurdish region.

BAGHDAD — Iraq's Presidency Council vetoed a newly approved provincial election bill, casting doubt on the possibility that local elections will be held this year. U.S. officials have identified the vote as pivotal for stabilizing Iraq.

Iraqi President Jalal Talabani had denounced the measure, siding with fellow Kurds who walked out of parliament Tuesday over a controversial provision that would delay elections in the disputed oil rich city of Kirkuk and place it and its province under joint control of Kurds, Arabs and Turkmens, via a quota system.

Talabani and Shiite Vice President Adel Abdel Mahdi signed the veto letter. Sunni Vice President Tariq Hashimi was out of the country, parliament members said. Lawmakers said the bill would come to another vote within the next week, as the sides struggled to meet a deadline for starting preparations to hold the local elections by late December. But the chances of compromise looked slim as the various factions clung to their positions on Kirkuk.

The quarrel goes to the heart of tensions between Kurds and Arabs in northern Iraq. Saddam Hussein had displaced thousands of Kurds from Kirkuk and parts of Nineveh and Diyala provinces as part of a plan to settle Arabs in those areas. Whether the contested lands will join Iraq's semiautonomous Kurdish region or remain with the rest of Iraq is one of the most explosive issues of the post-Hussein era. Kurds insist that Kirkuk should be part of Kurdistan.

"The law in its passed form . . . chooses national and sectarian isolation and increases the [religious] fundamentalism," Talabani said in a statement explaining his reasoning for rejecting the legislation. He warned that the measure "hurt in a major way the national unity."

Now the bill will be handed back to parliament for another vote. If the Presidency Council rejects the legislation a second time, it will need a three-fifths majority to pass. Shiite lawmaker Qassim Dawood, who is sympathetic to the Kurds, said the sides must strike a compromise, or the country risked jeopardizing security gains made in the last year.

"It is a fragile status we have now. A delay could affect it negatively and we don't want this to happen," Dawood said.

Reacting to the veto, the White House urged the Iraqi government to hold the local elections by the end of the year, wires services reported.


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