PUK intensifies efforts to settle disputes in Kirkuk, protect Kurdish language
kurdsatnews
Nov 23, 2022
Kirkuk Citadel.
Today, Wednesday, deputy chairperson of the PUK parliamentary group in the Iraqi Council of Representatives Karim Shukr told KurdSat English that "we as the PUK have had our card regarding the disputed territories when we negotiated taking part in the Al-Sudani government, and other allies with some terms regarding Kirkuk and the disputed territories." Traditionally, the PUK has gained majority of the votes in Kirkuk and disputed territories, and has come to represent a large majority of the people in the areas.
"Some demands that we put into the government agenda have been bringing back the high committee for article 140, that was ignored for a while," Shukr said. The article 140 of the 2005 Iraqi Constitution requires holding a plebiscite for the disputed lands between Baghdad and Erbil and have their people decide if they want to join Erbil or Baghdad.
"[we] have worked to transfer services of teachers serving in the disputed territories to the Federal Ministry of Education." The PUK MP added.
Most ministry education employees are serving with the Kurdistan Regional Government Ministry of Education, but for the past seven years the Kurdistan region has failed to properly pay for its employees, causing a set back for the Kurdish language education in the disputed territories.
Earlier this week, PUK President Bafel Jalal Talabani met with Iraqi Education Minister to address the problems facing Kurds in the disputed territories and issues effecting the people of the area, the education minister promised to followed up on PUK demands on Kurdish language education in the disputed lands.
"We also worked to return lands [that belonged to the Kurds] distributed to migrant Arabs in Kirkuk and disputed territories that were granted to Arabs by the Revolutionary Command Council (RCC),” the PUK MP noted. The RCC was set up after the 1968 Baathist coup and tried to Arabize people of the disputed territories.
Since the 2017 Kurdistan region independence referendum, Peshmerga forces have lost control of the disputed territories, and Kurdish rights in the area took a large hit, and many of their constitutional rights are ignored, such restricted use of the Kurdish language and its education, preventing Kurdish farmers from working on their fields and giving lands belonging to Kurds to other minorities.